Perhaps more than any other tech gadget, smartwatches should reflect the wearer's personality. If you are thinking of gifting one, you'll have to weigh both technological and fashion questions. Does the recipient want to make calls through it? Do they want a touchscreen? How much does style matter? Not everyone who wants the functionality of a smartwatch loves that calculator-watch aesthetic after all.
No matter where they fall on that spectrum, consumers are spoiled for choice here this holiday season. New products seem to be announced every day, from both fashion and tech firms. And you can't rely on the price to tell you how technologically advanced they are.
Movado showed off the Bold Motion this week a super-stylish $695 (roughly Rs. 45,800) connected watch that has a traditional watch face, with just a few added tricks. Lights around the edge of the timepiece glow in different configurations to let you know when you have an e-mail or incoming call, but don't display more information than that. Tag Heuer also recently announced its first smartwatch, a $1500 (roughly Rs. 99,000) model called the Connected Watch, which sports a touchscreen and runs on Google's Android software. It offers Google maps, notifications and features you'd find on much cheaper smartwatches but with the style and price tag you'd expect from the high-end brand.
At the other end of the scale are offerings from technology companies LG, Apple, Samsung and the like which aim to fulfill all of your Dick Tracy fantasies. These pair with your smartphone to let you take a peek at snippets from your email messages, look at photos, make calls and listen to music. They also tend to cost about as much as mid-tier smartphone or more and have the benefit of full-feature mobile software and apps from Uber, OpenTable, and Pandora that only make them more useful over time.
But these super-connected watches have their limits, too. Those with touchscreens tend to have shorter battery lives, which gives you yet another thing to juice up at the end of the day. And sometimes they are too smart for their own good; their screens are too small for all the smartphone functions you want them to be able to do.
If your budget for a smartwatch is less than $150 (roughly Rs. 9,900), some of the fitness bands offer pretty good value. The Fitbit Charge gives you notifications, the time, health stats and a long battery life for less than $130 (roughly Rs. 8,580). Similarly, the Garmin vivofit 2 is right at $100 (roughly Rs. 6,600).
Of course, many people may still be wondering if they need a smartwatch. The answer, at least in my opinion, is still no for most people. (Though, full disclosure: I do have an older one, a Pebble Time.)
Is it nice to have one? Sure. There are lots of moments in my day where I hear my phone or feel it buzz and dive into my bag on the off-chance that there's something of dire importance that needs my attention. Having a smartwatch is a nice way to (somewhat) discreetly assess what actually needs my attention and what I can safely ignore. But is that a $200 (roughly Rs. 13,200) or $1500 problem in my life? Probably not. As more developers build useful smartwatch apps and the tech and fashion worlds learn from each other, the smartwatches appeal will likely grow. But, as cool as they are, this year's crop are still solutions in search of problems. Expect to be tempted again by better offerings this time next year.
As this season goes, that might be a good thing; gifts should be slightly impractical splurges anyway, right? Just be sure to do your research both on the watch and the person you are buying it for.
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