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Showing posts with label Wearable. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wearable. Show all posts

News Tech Gadget Update : Check Out the World’s First Pain Relieving Wearable

Not every wearable is about sleep tracking or counting steps. Among the many wearables showed at CES 2015, a useful one was called Quell. It is a drug-free service that helps in relieving chronic pain. The technology used for this device has been developed by Neurometrix, a company from Harvard Medical School which specialises in Neurotechnology.
This device consists of a strap that is worn around the affected part of the body, with its electrode touching the skin. When activated, it stimulates the nerves, in turn sending a message to the brain to release endogenous opioids- the body’s natural defence against pain. This brings relief within 15 minutes.

The main advantage of this device is that it is portable and can be carried along almost anywhere. The correct stimulation has to be attuned the first time, and Quell then automatically selects the same each time. iOS already has a supporting app and Android one is on its way.
The only shortcoming would be the user will have to keep on buying the electrodes periodically. Normally, this would cost $250 (approx Rs. 15,773), but pre-ordering would cost $199 (Rs. 12,555). Details about its mass availability is still uncertain, though the device is currently up for pre-order on Indiegogo. The device has already reached $250,000 in pledges.

News Apple Watches Update : Apple Expels More Wearables From Store To Make Room For Apple Watch Next Month

Although no one can decide whether the Apple AAPL +2.07% Watch will be a huge success or failure at this point, it looks like Apple wants to give its device the best chance of succeeding in its stores.


In a report from Re/code, Apple has stopped selling the Jawbone Up and Nike+ FuelBand. An attempt to find the two fitness trackers on the West Coast as well as in New York came up short for the tech news site.  And the Mio heart-rate tracker is now only in Apple’s online store.
I have reached out to Apple and will update this post if I hear back.

At Apple’s “Spring Forward” media event on Monday, CEO Tim Cook went into some detail around the company’s retail strategy. The Apple Watch will go up in its stores on April 10 where customers can preorder one. They’ll be viewable in special glass cases–similar to a jewelry case. Apple will also start selling the watch in high-end retail shops like Selfridges in London and Galeries Lafayette in Paris.


Over the past year, Apple has been slowly ramping down the number of wearables it offers in its stores. Soon after the Apple Watch was first announced, Apple took down Fitbit’s activity trackers from its stores.


Jawbone’s clip-on pedometer can still be found in stores, but that’s not going to compete for the limited space on your wrist.


Removing competing wearables from the Apple Store may not mean much for these wearable companies in terms of unit sales. Mio CEO and founder Liz Dickinson told Re/code that her company did not sell a large volume through Apple Stores, though it did help with the prestige factor.


Many are expecting the Apple Watch to completely remake the nascent wearables industry and bring it more into the mainstream. Strategy Analytics expects Apple to ship 15 million of its watches in 2015, giving Apple a 55 percent share of smartwatch shipments out of the 28 million smartwatches expected to ship in 2015. Meanwhile, Forrester Research estimates that Apple will sell 10 million watches this year.


Fitbit has been going more towards the smartwatch side of wearables with the recently introduced Fitbit Surge, which has a screen for getting notifications from your phone. The Surge has constant heart-rate monitoring and an advertised battery life of seven days–compared with only 18 hours for the Apple Watch. Fitbit, which currently has the largest market share of fitness trackers, is not worried about Apple.


“General purpose smartwatches have been struggling to find a good use case for people. If anyone’s going to figure them out, I’m guessing it will be Apple,” Fitbit CEO and cofounder James Park told me at this year’s Consumer Electronics Show in January. “But I still feel like the price point is pretty high for most consumers. I think being limited to iOS ecosystem is also going to constrain that. Given those things and size and form factor of the Apple Watch, there’s clearly an opportunity for coexistence. It’s not one or the other. People have a lot of different preferences. It’s good to have a lot of options for the consumer out there.”

News Apple Watch Update : Invest In $17,000 Apple Watch? Face Reality, Some Advise Buyers

1. Apple Watches, being dependent on processors, are likely to be susceptible to obsolescence — unlike a mechanical Rolex that’s handed down for generations.
2. The Apple Watch will be available in April 2015. Prices begin at $349. Pictured here, the 18-karat rose gold case with white sport band. For more info: www.apple.com/watch
3. Cook wears a demonstration Apple Watch on his own wrist at a September 2014 event at Flint Center in Cupertino.
4. Apple CEO Tim Cook (center) speaks with model Christy Turlington Burns (right) at the Apple Watch demonstration area during the event at Yerba Buena Center unveiling Apple’s newest attempt to create a consumer sensation.
Thinking about spending $10,000 or more for the top-shelf edition of the new Apple Watch? Enjoy an aesthetic the company describes as “timeless and thoroughly modern,” but don’t count on passing it down to your kid.

Apple’s most expensive timepiece — named the Apple Watch Edition — features an 18-karat gold case and a display protected by polished sapphire crystal. Retailing for as much as $17,000 when it hits stores in April, that version aims at the same customers as Rolex and other luxury watchmakers.

While costly mechanical watches have a history of holding, and sometimes gaining, value, today’s smart watches are likely to lose it because obsolescence is written into digital technology. When the Apple II debuted in 1977, it was a marvel of modern computing. Today, it goes for $50 on eBay — less than many typewriters.

For buyers of Apple’s most expensive watches, what will happen when, presumably, the Apple Watch II hits shelves, or furthermore, if iPhones — which the smart watches largely depend on — go out of vogue?

Bound for recycling?
“It’s something you’re going to wear and use, and the new one’s going to come out and you’re going to recycle it out,” speculated Jacek Kozubek, a partner at H.Q. Milton, a watch dealership in the Mission. (His store doesn’t sell any digital watches.)

Though often seen as an indulgence for those who can afford it, Rolexes — highly valued in a collectors’ market — are more likely to hold their value than an Apple Watch in the same price range, Kozubek said.

In an extreme example, Kozubek said, “There’s pieces that we have bought that sold in 1968 for $400, and then we sold that watch for like $120,000.”

Wearing well

In a sense, mechanical watch technology has already been optimized: High-end watches are filled with tiny, highly engineered gears perfected over the centuries that keep them ticking for a long time. Kozubek said he recently bought a watch that is still remarkably accurate, considering it hadn’t been serviced since 1958.

“There’s this soul in pieces like that,” Kozubek said. “It’s something that was meant to be used and given to the next generation, as opposed to a lot of things that are designed now. There’s an obsolescence that’s engineered into” the smart watch.

Smart watches, on the other hand, are still new, and their underlying technology is still evolving. Unlike typewriters, landlines and mechanical wristwatches, computers, smartphones and smart watches are powered by processors. And processors get better and faster every couple of years, making anything that isn’t of the current generation feel comparatively ancient.

“Try to sell your first-generation iPhone — there’s nothing cool about it,” Kozubek said.

When technology doesn’t become obsolete fast enough, that can also be an issue for high-profile tech companies. Take the iPad, whose sales may have declined partially because early versions of the product simply work fine today, and consumers haven’t felt a need to replace them.

Apple isn’t the only high-end brand to take a mechanical product digital.

Leica’s example


In 2006, the high-end German camera manufacturer Leica released its first digital camera, aimed at replacing its iconic film camera. The digital M8 hit stores priced around $4,800. Now, a used M8 — with fewer megapixels than some phones — can be found online at less than half that price.

“The M8 is a pretty dated camera,” said Richard Wilson, the camera sales department manager at Adolph Gasser Photography in San Francisco’s South of Market neighborhood. When it comes to the older digital models, “People want to buy Leica mostly because of the little red dot on there, because it comes with a certain prestige,” he said.

Leica’s film cameras, on the other hand, have retained more value on the used market — even as the film photography industry has shrunk.

Most Apple Watch buyers won’t go for the costliest versions — meaning they likely won’t object to replacing the wearable in a few years when the next new thing comes out. Considering that the watch starts at $350, they might treat it just like they do a phone.

The question is whether the opulent Apple Watch Edition also winds up shoved in the back of the drawer, beside the old iPhones.

News Gadgets Update : Moto Maker Goes Live, Lets You Customise The Moto 360 Smartwatch

Just a day after Apple launched its highly anticipated Watch, Motorola has unveiled the Moto Maker design studio that allows users to create custom versions of the Moto 360 smartwatch.
Moto Maker allows users to choose from different coloured watch cases, wristbands (leather and metal) and watch faces. Overall, it lets users choose from three case finishes, nine bands and 11 watch faces. However, these come at an extra charge ranging from $30 to $50, which would also mean paying higher than the $250 price tag that the Moto 360 carries.
The official Motorola blog states, “Choose from three case finishes: dark metal, light metal or champagne gold. Then pick one of nine bands, including leather, metal, and our new mono-link design, a modern take on the classic metal band style. Complete your design by choosing one of 11 watch faces. Once you get your watch, it’s easy to swap watch faces from our collection or through Google Play.”
The Motorola Moto 360 is available on Flipkart. It sports an circular backlit display with a diameter of 1.56 inches and comes with a 320 x 290 resolution that uses a pixel density of 205ppi. It also gets a layer of Corning Gorilla Glass 3 and is powered by the TI OMAP 3 processor coupled with 512MB RAM. It also gets 4GB internal memory for saving music and photos. For tracking activities, it is fitted with a pedometer and optical heart rate monitor (PPG). The IP67-certified Moto 360 is water-resistant and also supports wireless charging.

News Gadgets Update : Time Check: Smartwatches Before Apple Clocks In

EW YORK — As the tech world's attention turns Monday towards Apple's big press event, it is important to remember that the upcoming Apple Watch is far from the only smart timepiece in town. Dozens of smartwatches, fitness bands and other wearables have come to market over the past few years sporting various designs and a variety of different platforms.

Here is a breakdown of the current state of wearables and some of the devices the Apple Watch will compete with.

*Android Wear. Google officially entered the smartwatch space last year with its Android Wear devices. Priced between $199 and $329 "Google watches" can do many of the things Apple promises its device will do including voice search, notifications and the ability to monitor a person's heart rate.
Samsung, LG, ASUS, Sony and Motorola have all released devices for Google's platform with LG's G Watch R, Motorola's Moto 360 and ASUS's ZenWatch in particular getting positive reviews for their designs. Devices still suffer from weak battery life and a lack of compelling apps, and sales have been poor. According to Canalys only 720,000 devices running Google's smartwatch platform shipped in 2014

Android Wear makers are preparing a new slate of devices for 2015 to compete with Apple's watch. In an interview with Recode, Motorola president Rick Osterloh promised that his company will release new products in the "later part of the year." Chinese giant Huawei announced this week its first Android Wear smartwatch, featuring a sharp, circular screen.
 
*Samsung Gear Samsung has been experimenting with smartwatches since the launch of the original Galaxy Gear in the fall of 2013 though it has yet to release a device with a lasting impact on the market. Limited apps, uninspired designs and compatibility solely with Samsung phones have sorely plagued early models.

Samsung made progress with last year's Gear S, a device with a stylish two-inch curved display. The watch runs Samsung's Tizen software. It still however only works with Samsung phones and remains pricey at $299 without a contract (the device also has a 3G modem for use when not near your phone).
Out of the six wearables Samsung has released so far, Gear S is the most encouraging sign that the company is learning from its past mistakes.
*Pebble. Next to Android Wear the most direct threat to the Apple Watch comes from Kickstarter darling Pebble.

Pebble's current watches, the Pebble and Pebble Steel, have been among the more popular smartwatches to date thanks to a growing app catalog, seven days of battery life and compatibility with Android and iOS devices. The watches have also traditionally been much more affordable, priced at $99 for the original Pebble or $199 for the Pebble Steel.

The company recently announced two new devices, Pebble Time and Pebble Time Steel. Unlike prior models the new Pebbles are faster, sleeker and utilize a color e-Paper display with customizable 'smartstraps" that promise added functionality. The Time Steel in particular seems poised for battle against Apple's Watch, what with its enhanced display, premium design and 10 days of battery life.
Pebble Time is priced at $199 ($179 for Kickstarter backers) and ships in May while Pebble Time Steel will be available in July for $299 ($250 for Kickstarter backers). Both are currently available on Kickstarter.

* Fitness bands and other wearables. In addition to the defined category of smartwatches, the Apple Watch will also be competing against various fitness bands that offer some same functionality but are more health focused. They track steps, check your heart rate and monitor your sleep. Fitbit, Jawbone, Microsoft, and have all released devices in the space, with others like HTC (and partner Under Armour) about to plunge in.

Such wearables generally boast longer battery life and work with iOS and Android.

*"Less as more" smartwatches. Not all smartwatches on the market feature big digital displays. Withings and Martian are adding slight modern touches to traditional analog watch faces. Martian, which recently partnered with Guess to offer more stylish designs, incorporates a small screen underneath an analog watchface to display notifications from your smartphone. Withings forgoes a digital display entirely opting solely for an elegant analog watch face on its Activité watches to track steps and sleep.
While limited in functionality both watches work with Android or iOS devices and have long-battery life, up to 8 months on the Withings watches.

Apple has made no secret that it hopes its device will appeal to the health and fitness crowd as well. The base $349 Apple Watch Sport, will come with a more durable watchband designed for use while exercising. All models will feature heart rate sensors and integrate with the iPhone's Health app.

Apple CEO Tim Cook has also been quite vocal about his health aspirations for the new watch. Speaking at conference recently he offered the hope that the Apple Watch will cure the "new cancer," that is sitting for long periods of time.

Many questions still surround the Apple Watch, from battery life concerns to the pricing for its higher-end variants. One thing remains abundantly clear: the market for smartwatches is wide open.
 
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