Defying
scepticism and geek-stigma, mobile phone firms are determined this year
to sell you a wristwatch wirelessly connected to your mobile phone.
Numerous
models have hit the market over the past year but 2015 will see an
explosion, analysts say, with manufacturers making their watches and
other wearable connected devices more elegant and useful.
US
giant Apple’s release of its first “smartwatch” — expected by April —
is set to make 2015 a “tipping point for wearables”, research group CCS
Insight said in a report.
In
anticipation of that launch, Apple’s Asian rivals scrambled to unveil
their own connected wrist gadgets in Barcelona on Sunday on the eve of
the World Mobile Congress trade show in Barcelona.
South
Korean manufacturer LG released the Urbane LTE, its first fully
connected luxury wristwatch which can make and receive calls — either
with a wireless headset, or by speaking into your wrist like the comic
book detective Dick Tracy.
Unlike
most smartwatch models, the chunky Urbane LTE version has its own
network SIM card with a mobile connection and so can be used for calls,
without needing to be linked to a smartphone.
Chinese
telecom giant Huawei also unveiled a deluxe smartwatch: a round
stainless steel creation that it says can receive text messages, email
and call notifications as well monitoring your heart rate and calories
burned.
The
industry is watching keenly to see whether smartwatches will be the
first mobile phone-linked “wearables” to really take off in the mass
market — a tough call, according to analysts.
“In
the end-user research that we’ve done, we asked people what a
smartwatch is for and they had no idea,” said Ben Wood, head of research
at CCS Insight.
- Technology and fashion -
With
the big phone companies piling in alongside smaller smartwatch
specialists such as Pebble, fashion brands are doing their bit to try
and design a more desirable product.
Several
Swiss watchmakers and fashion brands such as Guess have unveiled
designs, while jeweller Swarovski has encrusted smartwatches with its
crystals for a deluxe look.
“The
vast majority of smartwatches on the market are bulky and look more
like a piece of technology than a fashion item,” however, said Kevin
Curran, a telecom specialist at the University of Ulster.
“That’s going to change as companies focus more on design and making devices that are more discreet.”
With
their new circular watches, LG and Huawei positioned themselves at the
luxury end of the market, differentiating themselves from the
square-faced design revealed in previews by Apple.
“We
set out to create smartwatches that could contend for a spot on your
wrist with a luxury mechanical watch,” said LG’s head for Britain and
Ireland, Andrew Coughlin.
The launches in Barcelona risk being overshadowed by Apple’s release, however.
The Californian company is reportedly planning to ship five million of its Apple Watch in the first batch.
“Everyone
is watching to see what happens with that. Apple is the massive
elephant in the room. We are estimating they could sell 20 million
watches this year,” said Wood.
That would dwarf the hundreds of thousands of other types of smartwatches that experts estimate have been sold so far.
- Smart sex toys -
Watches
are just one of a variety of “wearables” which mobile companies are
trying to sell to customers to use with their phones.
Designers
have come up with all manner of bands, pendants — and even connected
sex toys such as the remote-controlled vibrators produced by US-based
company OhMiBod.
So
far, the most successful wearables have been fitness trackers: bands
that measure heart rate, calories, sleep quality and other data and send
it to an application on the wearer’s telephone.
Huawei and another big Chinese firm, HTC, on Sunday unveiled new “fitness bands”.
Curran said that about 90 million wearables were sold in 2014. He forecast that figure could soar to 200 million this year.
The
companies refused to cite consumer prices for the new products. Top-end
smartphones and smartwatches typically cost several hundred dollars
(euros).
Posted by : Gizmeon
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