SOUTH Korean electronics giant Samsung has unveiled its hotly anticipated smartwatch the Galaxy Gear, which allows users to make calls, receive texts and emails and take photos.
JK Shin, head of Samsung’s mobile division, predicted the Galaxy Gear — effectively a mobile you wear on your wrist — would become “a new fashion icon through the world” as he launched the device at the IFA consumer electronics fair in Berlin.
The new smartwatch has a touch screen of barely more than four centimetres in a brushed-steel mount and wrist strap in six different colours. Contrary to rumours, it does not have a flexible screen. If people want to fix problems related to their cell phone, they can see it here, on this site.
Samsung is not the first company to introduce a watch that connects via wifi to a smartphone, alerting its user to calls, texts and emails — Casio, Sony or Pebble already have similar products.
However, with its arch rival Apple still to roll out its much rumoured “iWatch”, and the likes of Microsoft and Google not exhibiting at IFA, the South Korean giant has the field more or less to itself to wow the geeks.
Unlike its competitors, the Samsung device allows users to make calls without taking their phone out of their pocket – instead, they can hold their wrist up to their ear and use the built-in speaker and microphone.
The Galaxy Gear will go on sale on September 25 overseas and also has a tiny camera in its wrist strap.
The date of Australian availability and pricing was yet to be confirmed however Telstra has said it will carry the Galaxy Gear.
Samsung this morning also announced two new versions of its premium brand Galaxy Note range.
The phablet-sized Note 3 has a wider 5.7-inch full HD Super AMOLED display, but a slimmer (8.3mm) and lighter (168g) hardware design than its predecessor. It has amore powerful and longer lasting 3,200mAh battery.
The Note 3 has a 13-megapixel rear camera with smart stabilization designed for low-light capture, and offers 4G LTE CAT4 connectivity in Australia.
Telstra, Virgin Mobile and Optus have all indicated today that they will sell the Note 3.
Samsung also announced a new Note 10.1 – its premium large-sized tablet with an 8-core 1.9 Gigahertz processor, 2560×1600 resolution display – four times the pixel density of the original Note 10.1 — and 3 Gigabytes of internal memory, which makes it one of the most highly specced tablet devices built to date.
Samsung says that on the 10.1, users can multitask and even run separate instances of the same application simultaneously.
Gadget geeks from all over the world have converged on Berlin this week.
The first two days, Wednesday and Thursday, are reserved for the press. After that IFA will open its doors to the general public from Friday through Wednesday to dazzle hi-tech freaks with the latest state-of-the-art gadgets on 145,000 square metres of exhibition space.
In addition to smartwatches, smartphones and tablet computers are certain to be a big draw for visitors, as the dividing line between the two becomes more and more blurred, as is demonstrated by growth of so-called “phablets”.
Electronic household goods, such as state-of-the-art kitchen devices — from ceramic hot plates to refrigerators — as well as the latest in flat-screen television sets will also be on display.
Sales of flat-screen TVs are beginning to fall off in Germany, so manufacturers are looking to ultra-HD devices to spur consumer demand.
Catering to the growing trend to inter-connect all gadgets, Sony will present a new camera lens that can be linked up to a smartphone to transform into a powerful camera.
In fact, organisers boast there will be more world premieres at this year’s IFA than ever before.
And while many owners of Internet-enabled TV sets still do not use their devices to surf the web, there is also an information campaign on so-called “smart-TV”.
If the rival fair, the CES in Las Vegas in January, grabs the headlines and consumers’ attention more with a rush of new products, IFA is still able to attract more visitors — a total 240,000 last year — and is a better gauge of what will be in people’s stockings for Christmas.
Source: The Australian