Smartwatches may not be the most useful tools, but most today offer a way 
to connect to digital assistants like Google Now or Siri. You’ll soon be able to 
add Amazon’s Alexa to that list, if iMCO and Cronologics have their way.
  The CoWatch is a smartwatch designed by Chinese company iMCO Technology, 
and it runs Cronologics OS. If the latter sounds familiar, that’s because 
they’re the same team providing the operating system for the popular Blocks 
modular smartwatch, which received more than $1.6 million in funding from its 
Kickstarter campaign.
  The smartwatch, which is now on Indiegogo, more or less offers the same 
features as most smartwatches today. It tracks your fitness activity, including 
your heart rate, and it lets you customize your watch face.
  Where it stands out is its integration of Amazon’s cloud-based voice 
assistant, Alexa. If you can get past talking to your wrist, you can quickly and 
easily ask Alexa questions, get a traffic report, call an Uber, and control your 
connected home.
  Ceramic and metal
  iMCO has opted for a round smartwatch design, and is featuring a stainless 
steel silver or black design. It will also boast a Super AMOLED display, at a 
resolution of 400 x 400 pixels. That’s all powered by a dual-core 1.2Ghz 
processor, with 8GB of flash. iMCO claims the watch will last up to 32 hours of 
“normal use,” even with an always-on screen.
  NextPreviousThere’s also a ceramic ring on the underside of the watch, 
which Eric Jin, co-founder of iMCO, says can be customizable by color. Jin says 
the CoWatch is the first smartwatch to use ceramic — an up-and-coming trend with 
ceramic being utilized in Xiaomi’s Mi5, and the OnePlus X.
  Along with customizing your watch face, you can also opt for a different 
band, like a leather variant. The CoWatch can be paired via Bluetooth with an 
Android or iOS device.
  Cronologics Operating System
  Cronologics OS still has a far way to go to offer a smooth experience. 
There were a few hiccups when Cronologics CEO and co-founder Leor Stern gave us 
a peek at the Android-based operating system, but as he reminded us the software 
isn’t done yet, and will be more refined as the product nears launch.
  The OS is similar to what some other Android Wear launchers offer right 
now, such as Pujie Black. Tapping on a sub-dial on your watch face will open an 
app, and you can set each sub-dial to whatever app you like. Swiping right or 
left on the watch face will run through more apps you have pre-set in those 
dials.
  The OS lets you send messages (in the demo Stern used canned responses) and 
offers the standard “garden variety” fitness tracking features. Alexa is the 
highlight here, and Stern simply had to tap a button to ask a question.
  “Remind me to get toner,” Stern demanded — and Alexa said she added “toner” 
to his to-do list. He then told Alexa to turn his “bedroom off,” demoing how he 
can control his smart home.
  Stern, who helped found NianticLabs at Google, says Alexa is the best 
solution that’s cloud-native. Google Now works best for Android devices, and 
Siri works only on iOS.
 
No comments:
Post a Comment