All Episodes

July 17, 2013 33 mins

What was the first smartwatch? How have smartwatches evolved? Will smartwatches be the next big trend in tech?

Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.com

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:04):
Get in Touch with Technology was tech Stuff from how
Stuff Works dot com. Hey, Lauren, welcome to tech Stuff.
I'm Jonathan Strickland and I'm Lauren welcole Bam and the
hour has come to conclude our discussion about smart watch. So, yeah,
we recorded an epic episode and I made so many

(00:26):
jokes about time that I broke Lauren, And uh, that
epic episode, as you know, was with into two episodes.
If you don't know, go back and listen to the
earlier episode where we have part one. And now we're
going to really focus on the evolution of the smart watch.
When we started seeing connectivity right right, Yeah, we we
we We've come up through the history of how talks
and watches happened a little bit and um, and now

(00:47):
we're getting ready to talk about what we would start
considering smart. Yeah, let's get to it smart. We pretty
much covered like these digital watches that have interesting additional
features to them. Again, I don't know that we would
call any of them smart. You might argue that being
able to program your watch doing some some basic programming

(01:09):
makes it sort of a smart watch because it does
go beyond the level of telling time. It could technically
do whatever memory could hold and whatever you could program.
To be fair, do not know how much memory that
that first uh you see two thousand hadn't right, and
probably not very much. But we've covered the basic kinds

(01:30):
of watches, digital watches, the sort of stuff they could do.
Once we began to figure out, hey, you know, there
there are other things that transistors can do besides just
have us tell time. Let's figure out these other options
we might be able to give people. When we hit nine,
that's when time X comes out with a watch that

(01:51):
actually has some connectivity features in it, and they use
a really weird implementation to do it. Yeah. They it
had an optical sensor on to watch his face. Yeah,
this is the data link one fifty. And it was
the first watch that allowed you to transfer information from
a PC to the watch. So let's say that you
want to use the watch to keep track of your contacts.

(02:13):
You're essentially using it sort of like a very primitive
pa uh. And so what you do is you would
go on the PC. You would use some proprietary software
that came with the watch. So this is something that
you would install on your computer. It's not something that's
on the watch. Itself. You type out whatever it is
you want to store on the watch, and then when
you were ready to transfer the information, it would transmit

(02:35):
that through a series of flashes on your monitor and
you would hold you'd physically hold the watch up so
that it was next to your monitor so it could
catch that flashing information and that would be translated into
whatever it was you had tight. So it was kind
of like, you know, the old semaphore approach to communication,

(02:57):
except in this case you're talking about it's all digital
once it goes through the flashes of light. Um, it
was very tiny lighthouse. Yeah, it was. It was pretty
cool idea in the sense that you know, you didn't
have to have any cables or anything you or technology. Now,
I imagine that if there were any like I can,
I can easily imagine that there were probably issues with

(03:19):
this watch whenever you had certain lighting situations like if
you're if you're if your desk or office was lit
in a certain way, it might not transmit the information accurately,
that kind of thing. But it still was an interesting
approach to fixing this. I wonder how long it took
to transmit information, Like if you were to type a
particularly long list. Like let's say that you were hitting

(03:40):
the capacity for what the watch could hold. I wonder
how long it would take to transmit. I honestly don't
have the information, but it does make me curious if
you had to hold the watch up for like a
half hour while your mondor just flashes seemingly at random
at you. Yeah. That also, Um, we started getting into
some infrared technology in transferring data between two watches. This

(04:04):
was the Cassio Infraceptor. It was it was a gaming
watch that you could you could use this little infrared
gidget to uh to play a little multiplayer games with
someone else who had the same right, So you have
two people And this is not unusual. We've seen lots
of proprietary approaches to h to mobile gaming window does

(04:25):
this very similar thing where you're using not necessarily infrared,
you're using radio waves in that case, but in this
in this case, it's it's infrared uh waves kind of
like kind of like what you would have with a
remote control, and uh, it wasn't that's you know, very
innovative approach, especially for sure. Yeah, certainly, I'm I don't
think that. In our Digital Pets episode, I don't think that, um,

(04:49):
that those started happening until almost a decade later. It
was a little bit later. Yeah, in two thousand one,
IBM hit the scene with the watch pad. This was
a Linux based watch. So this this watch has its
own little operating system. It was a stripped down version
of Linux, and it had a q v G A
l c D screen. Uh. It included Bluetooth and an

(05:12):
accelerometer in it. UM. So it had a lot of
the basic features that we think of and some of
the more advanced smart watches that we're starting to see
hit the market today. It did have a slight disadvantage, uh,
with all of this equipment. Um, it was a little
power hungry and not in the Doctor Evil I'm going
to Conquer the world kind of worry, but rather a

(05:34):
battery lasted about two hours, which is when you have
a time piece and you need to know what time
it is, which problematic. I feel like that's about average
for for maybe the p d a's of the time. Yeah,
because well, I mean, you know, you wouldn't be normally,
you wouldn't be operating a p d A consistently for
two hours, but of a watch, you might, you know,

(05:55):
very well, be required to use it quite a few times.
So if it only lasts a couple of hours, I
guess you could tell time by how frequently you had
to charge it. Uh, not terribly useful. Yeah, yeah, that's
that's much much like the quartz mechanism. That's that's a
really really accurate not not not necessarily the way you
want to tell time, but but it works. Um. As

(06:18):
of two thousand two, Cassio came out with a wrist
camera that that that was that was the name of
the watch. It was the wrist Camera um And and
this had a fancy fancy pixels square pixels. Yeah, that's
how that's the resolution you could get on this thing.
And it was not in colors gray scale. Yeah, so

(06:38):
you you could take very primitive photos with this risk cameras,
but like a proof of concept. Sure sure, but yeah,
you know, telling time and taking pictures. Yeah, simultaneously. It was.
It was also the same year that the Fossil wrist
PDA came out, and it came out in two different versions.
There was one that's that supported the Palm operating system

(06:58):
and there was one that supported pocket piece see, which
was Microsoft's mobile mobile approach. Yes, It had a hundred
and ninety kites of memory that could store up to
around well over one more than I should say, more
than one thousand contacts or around three fifty memos, depending

(07:19):
upon what else you wanted to put in there. You know,
you could have some combination thereof but that's about the
the full extent of its storage capabilities. Uh. Moving up
to two thousand five five was the first eat inc
watch that was again by Saco now eat Inc. One
of the reasons why e ink is so attractive to

(07:40):
electronics manufacturers is that it has a very low power
consumption rate. It only consumes power whenever it has to
change the display. So if you have a display that's
not changing frequently, then et inc ends up saving you
a lot of a lot of power. So let's say
that you know, there's no second indicator on the watch.
If it only indicated once a minute, then then it's

(08:02):
not so bad. It can actually the battery can last
a very long time. It's much more efficient than l
c D display, even l E ED display. I mean,
you know, depending of course on how the ink is lit,
because if it's got a backlight going all the time,
then that that will that will drain power. So a
lot of eating displays don't have any backlighting at all.
They might have light that will come in from the

(08:24):
side to eliminate the screen. If it's because you know,
clearly you want to have a watch that's going to
be able to work even if you are in the dark,
right you can't. I need to know what time it
is even when there are no lights on. Yeah, and
and a lot of a lot of these early early
watches we should we should say also did include um,
you know what, would only have the backlight turn on
if you press a button to But it wasn't like

(08:46):
it was because yes. In two thousand and six, Microsoft
introduced the SPOT, which stands for Smart Personal Objects Technology UH.
It was a smart watch that was meant to auto
adjust to time zones by using FM radio signals. It
would actually receive radio signals to determine where you were

(09:07):
and UH and these these radio signals would have within
it whatever the local time was, so it would automatically
adjust to the local time zone. And it could also
display information like traffic warnings or even things like messages
from your outlook email. But it had a fairly small
screen and the battery life was very limited, so they

(09:28):
weren't seen as being terribly useful. By two thousand eight,
Microsoft had shuttered the program, so it only lasted for
about two years, but it was one of those early
attempts by Microsoft to enter the smart watch space. In
two thousand seven, sony Ericson introduced the mb W one fifty,
which paired with other sony Ericson products, specifically sony Ericson

(09:51):
phones um via bluetooth. It could display a single line
of text. So this is a This was a watch
that if you looked at it wasn't a digital watch.
It actually had watch hands and it had a watch face.
But there was a little blank, tiny screen that could
display one line of text, and that one live text
could be something like if you had an incoming phone call,

(10:12):
it would tell you the name of the person who
was calling you, or it could give you an other
alerts uh. And it also could vibrate. It had a
little motor inside it that would allow it to vibrate
whenever you've got a call. So that way like I
missed calls all the time because as the I T
crowd would say, my vibrate sit it's a little weedy.
So I don't tend to notice when my phone is vibrating. Um.

(10:36):
But if I, you know, had a watch that would vibrate,
then I would either think I was having a heart
attack or that I was actually getting a phone call.
And maybe once I realized I was getting a phone call,
I would then have a heart attack because no one
calls me. I'm so lonely, so um, then I think
I have a note. In two thousand nine, two thousand nine,
that's when Samsung came out with the S nine one

(10:57):
ten That was a watch that was also a phone.
Now it's not the only watch phone that came out
that year, but it was a one point seven six
inch touchscreen phone watch. It used Bluetooth, it could connect
with other devices, it could get email, and it could
do MP three playback at forty megabytes of internal memory.

(11:17):
And uh, the other watch phone that came out that year,
or that debut that year cut the attention of c
E S the former Consumer Electronic Showcase. Now it's our show.
Now it's just CE. But in two thousand nine, I
attended that year and I remember seeing this in person.
I was not allowed to touch it at the time.
Only LG representatives were allowed to wear it. It was

(11:40):
the l G watch phone also known as the lg
G d N and uh. It was one of those
darlings of the show Flour along with the Palm pre
So don't get too attached to stuff at ces is
the moral of this tale. It's sold in other parts
of the world, in Europe and in Asia, but never
came to the United States. But it was actually a

(12:01):
phone just like the Samsung one was. They had a
cellular chip inside it that would allow you to make
phone calls and it would work on cellular networks, So
it's not something that you would pair with another device, um,
which was an interesting approach it was. You know, again,
it never came to the US, so we can never
really test it out. I imagine that the battery life

(12:21):
on this was probably pretty limited to UM and I
imagined also that a lot of devices go now with
pairing with a smartphone as opposed to having all this
technology crammed into it in order to avoid things like
battery life that only last a few hours. Right sure. Also,
you know, just the advancements in say Bluetooth are such

(12:41):
that it makes it makes it a lot easier these
days to you know four point now is much more
energy efficient than earlier versions of Bluetooth. That is a
good point. And also the the other thing that the
watchphone had was voice recognition capabilities, So in this case
it actually did have the capacity to take voice commands,
which interesting again and just as you would expect when

(13:04):
I saw this at CEES. What was the example everyone
gave Dick Tracy? Exactly right, Dick Tracy. Everyone's like, yes, Tracy,
wrist watch and uh and I'm thinking, like, how many
more years are we going to have? While that's still
a valu valid reference. When I think of of voice
commands to a watch, I think of, um, Glitch from

(13:26):
from that show Reboot Reboot, thank You, which which I
don't think. I think you still haven't watched. But but
I'm not going to insult Glitch by calling him a
watch because that would be a terrible, terrible thing to do.
I'll take your word for it. Moving on in that
was the year that iPod sixth generation Nano came out

(13:47):
and it became this phenomenon of watch use. It's at first,
um there, you know, you could pull up a clock
face on it, but it wasn't really a function that
had been in pended for but a couple of third
party people started putting together these, um these watch bands
and cases for it. Watch band is probably the one

(14:08):
that most people are familiar with. Sure, sure, um, you
know it's it's And then and then Apple started to
realize that people were using this this for this purpose
and started updating the firmware with lots of lots of
fun stuff to different watch faces and things like that.
You know it was it was one point five inch
two forty pixel multi touch display and um, you know

(14:29):
it's it seemed really great, Like I I remember a
lot of people being so excited about this right up
until when they released the seventh generation Nano that was
in a vertical format and basically killed it as far
as I can tell, strategically on purpose for potential future

(14:49):
development of their own stay tuned. The the sixth generation
Nano again, you know, depending on your definition of smart
watch might not apply because it was again mostly self
contained as MP three player. They could do other stuff
besides till the time, but it wasn't it was you
could I think that you could sink it to um, well,

(15:12):
I mean you could think it to a computer too. Yeah,
you could sink it. You could not update remotely like
you had to have it sink. So depending upon your definition,
you might not call it a smart watch. I mean,
first of all, it wasn't marketed as a smart watch.
It was smarketed as an MP three player. But using

(15:32):
it as a time piece and an MP three player,
uh made a lot of sense. And and in fact,
the first time I saw it, that was the first
thing I thought was that, gosh, you just put that
on a watch band and you've got yourself a uh,
you know, essentially essentially a smart watch in my mind,
Like I don't. I'm not so strict as to say
that it has to have uh. It has to be

(15:53):
completely free of any other material and a refretative counts
of smart watch. It has to be self reliant, because
a lot of smart watches that I like pair up
with another device, you know, without that pairing, they don't
have the functionality that you would you know, associate with
a smart watch. And and it is certainly easier yes
to uh, to to pair something to a to a

(16:14):
UM either iOS or Android system or UM you know.
My Microsoft is I think thinking about it is rumored
to be thinking about getting into the smart watch game
as well. And of course, you know, there are a
lot of other companies that are building out devices like
watches that that already hook up into existing platforms, both

(16:35):
Android and iOS. Uh, and we'll talk about a couple
of them in whom that's w I MM had an
Android watch that was just meant as a developer kit.
It wasn't a consumer product, um and UH. You know,
it was really designed to kind of get Android developers
into thinking about designing app specifically for a smart watch

(16:55):
form factor. And whom entered into a secret and exclusive
partnership with a company that I don't know what the
identity is because they never said, but anyway, it's still secret.
The developer kits no longer are available. UH. Is also
the year that Sony came out with their first smart

(17:17):
watch design YEP and UH and Motorola came out with
the Motto Active, which was part smart watch, part athletic
activity tracker, so it had the accelerometer. It also had
a GPS sensor in it so it could even track
your location for those US who aren't so worried about that, um.
But anyway, it also had Bluetooth four point. No I'm

(17:39):
not gonna I'm like, there's a whole other podcast that
we're gonna do about about privacy and and and being
tracked and it doesn't belong here, but anyway, it also could.
It also could connect to other types of sensors. So
if you had a sensor attached to your bike, for example,
that recorded how far you had traveled through Bluetooth, you
could connect your auto Active with that sensor, and the

(18:01):
Moto Active would essentially become your window for all things
activity related. Um and it also had uh could play
MP three's. It could act as a second screen for
a phone and give you things like your you know,
color I D or text messages. It could run Android apps,
but uh, the functionality was somewhat limited because again Android

(18:25):
apps were designed for smartphones and for tablets, not for
watches at this point, so trying to use some of
them was more trouble than what they were worth. From
what I understand, I never actually had a chance to
really play with one. I got to play with one
briefly at a ce S, but I didn't get a
chance to really dive into it. It did have eight
gigabytes of flash memory gigs. Yeah, you know it wasn't

(18:49):
that long ago we were talking about kilobytes and now
we're into the gigabytes, so we could actually hold as
much as uh some MP three players, so it could
hold you know, a library's worth of music. Yeah, Yeaheve
is also the year that um that the Pebble kickstarter happened.
And this this is a point that that Jonathan as
of like today has a little bit of of added

(19:11):
bitterness towards because all right, so so so just the
gig in case for some reason you did not hear
about how Pebble was the smart watch that had a
hundred thousand dollar goal earned over ten million. It's the
most point two million dollars, the most successful project to
date in Kickstarter history, and as of July seven, available

(19:36):
in certain best buy stores and and that's and that's
great for Pebble. Um. The problem, the problem is, Jonathan,
do you want to take this or do you do not?
Do not have the words? Here's the problem. In January,
certain unstruggling put in a pre order for cherry red
Pebble and he's very much looking forward to wearing this

(19:58):
cherry red Pebble everywhere. Phaps on episodes of Forward thinking
where the entire world could see him wearing a cherry
red pebble. But Jonathan has not received his cherry red pebble,
even though he dreams of it every night, and instead
has learned that it will be available and Best Buy,
and that he could have walked into a brick and
mortar store and bought the pebble, although technically I don't
think it was cherry red. I think the cherry red

(20:19):
ones won't be available till a little bit later in July.
But anyway, the point that he could have bought a
black one, they will only have black ones available at
best Buy for now, but it's just assume until they
actually fill their pre orders, seeing seeing that they that
it was coming to brick and mortar stores before I
finally get my Now, let's let's be clear, I was

(20:39):
not a Kickstarter backer, so I totally agreed with the
company's decision that they wanted to fulfill all backers orders
first before going into pre order. I thought that was
the right decision to make. It was the thing that
rewarded the people who believed in the company from the
very get go. I totally understand that, and then I
pre ordered. See when I pre order the pre part.

(21:02):
It's red, You're getting a red one. Um. But but okay,
this being said that I was not. I was not
really convinced about the Pebble until I went again to
see Yes, and there I saw the founder of the
company talking about the Pebble, giving a demo of it,
explaining what their project was, explaining how they came about it.

(21:23):
I got to to take a really close look at them.
I was really impressed by the company. I was impressed
by the product. And that's when I went and put
in a pre order. And while I'm I'm grousing right now,
it's really just out of the desire to have it,
I don't. I don't actually have any ill will towards
the company. That's mostly played up for laughs. Um so really,

(21:46):
if anyone from Pebble was listening, I'm not actually upset.
I just eager to get one because But anyway, this
is something that pairs with a smartphone. It pairs with
either an Android device or an iOS device right to
provide kind of like like push notifications basically for for
for for emails, for text messages, for phone calls, um yep.
And it uses an e paper display which is a

(22:08):
little different from eat ink. It's not, it's not exactly
the same thing. Is proprietary and any paper doesn't E
paper is again another uh technology that makes it look
like it's you know, paper, just like eating displays do.
It doesn't have a backlight unless you press the little
and even I don't think it's backlead. I think it's
left from the side. It might be backlead, but I'm

(22:29):
not active unless you press a button. Uh. So that
helps concerned. It does hook up through Bluetooth, and I
remember them saying that this would in fact impact the
battery life of your smartphone, so UM by about five
so you're going to have five to percent less time
available on whatever device you have paired to the pebble.

(22:49):
It also will give you notifications, like you were saying,
neat neat device, you know, one of those things that
was sort of an upstart company and really captured a
lot of those interests, obviously from the fact that they
raised hell so much a million dollars dollars. Just recently,

(23:18):
Eating themselves announced um a flexible at one point seven
three inch touch display called the Mobius for future release.
I haven't seen this. That sounds cool. And um and
and and and and lots of lots of companies are
rumored to be getting into this game. Um, I think
now I will say before we get into the rumors,

(23:39):
there are a couple that I want to talk about
are available right now this year. Yeah, Sony just announced
earlier in June. We were recording this the very beginning
of July. But in in June they announced that they
were coming out with the smart watch too, to arrive
in September. So that's they're they're obviously their successor to

(23:59):
their earlier smart watch. And again it's an Android powered
smart watch. It also has NFC connectivity near field communication connectivity,
so that that sounds like it's got some early buzz
behind it, so that sounds pretty cool. Also, the Martian
Watches launched the Martian Passport, the Martian Victory, and the

(24:20):
Martian G two G smart watches. Uh they have voice
controls and they can actually act as a speaker phone.
They pair with a smartphone, but they can act as
a speaker phone, and they allow you to use services
like Sirie over the watch. Uh s Net did not
give a very positive review. It was a three star

(24:41):
review out of five, saying that there were some problems
with the voice quality that both listening to a speaker
phone conversation or trying to interact with Sirie there No
Sirie on a good day can be a little taxing
depending upon series mood. But apparently Sirie over a speaker
phone gets even. It just has trouble understanding what as

(25:04):
you want? Right right? Yeah, whenever any of these microphones
don't have um sufficient alority clarity or blocking technology for
all the ambient noise. Yeah, this is why I often
get stairs whenever I walked down the street and I'm
screaming at my wrist. Where do I hide the body? Can't?

(25:25):
I can't imagine why that's that's on Peach Tree. I
fit right in. Um, that's that's just a little joke
for anyone else who who has been in Atlanta. Al Right,
so in our office off of Peach Tree, it turns out.
So anyway, we're talking about rumors now, so getting into
the rumored smart watches that we have heard about this

(25:46):
year but have not yet been unveiled in an official capacity. Uh.
Two big companies have smart watches that are rumored to
be on the horizon. Yeah. Yeah, Google as of had
filed a path for a smart watch looking thing. This
wasn't the first pattern for a smart watch. They have

(26:06):
also filed for other ones that kind of had an
augmented reality aspect to them. I remember seeing one that
even had a little flip up screen, so you would
flip like the watch face up so it's vertical on
your wrist and then you would gaze through it monocle
style at the world around you to get augmented reality data.
But it looks like this since Google Glass is coming out,

(26:27):
maybe yeah, yeah, well well this, uh, this, this new
patent has um Google glasses, uh touch pads on the
sides of the screen. Yeah. In fact, I've seen some
speculation that this watch would actually interact with Google Glass,
so that you would become another means of controlling Google,
so that maybe you're not shouting at yourself, right and

(26:47):
I wouldn't be saying Google instead of Google. Yeah. Yeah,
it's been along day, folks. Uh yeah, So that's that's
one possibility. And then there's the other big company. Apple
has already um filed a patent in Japan, I registered
a trademark, right, Yeah, they haven't as far as I know.
I mean, there may be patents out there. There probably
are patents out there, but it's been registering the trademark

(27:11):
I watch. Not a big surprise, but trademarking the the
word I watch in various countries, most recently in Japan,
but in other countries as well, which again suggests that
the company is looking into developing its own smart watch.
This is something that's been rumored for a while. Keep
in mind, the iPad was rumored to be a big,

(27:32):
big project for about two or three years before it
finally came out, So that might mean that it may
be another three years before we see an eye watch.
Maybe not, maybe it'll be much you know. Like like
I said about about that that I Pod Nana, the
six gen I, I really do think that they started
counting down from M and saying, you know, we need

(27:55):
to stop making them this way because otherwise to them
later on in up cannibalizing our our smart watch market
if we keep selling something that's uh slightly less capable
and perhaps less expensive electronic device. Yeah, that one, um,
I've I've I've heard I've heard rumors. I've read rumors
that added Samsung is thinking about it a Galaxy smart

(28:16):
watch to go along with their their Galaxy Note and
Galaxy smartphone lines. So yeah, I mean we're just getting
into it now, and I think really it's the wearable
computer aspect that's that's getting to a level of sophistication.
And the innovation around how you you use the user

(28:37):
interface has really helped it a lot, because touch touch
screens are so important for this, because even voice controls
and and maybe we'll get to just your controls. Like
I can imagine having a watch that has uh the
kind of accelerometers in it so that it only displays
the time when you hold your arm up as if
you're looking at the watch, because then it could end up, say,

(29:00):
being a lot of energy whenever you're not doing that. Although,
to be fair, depending upon how some of us look
at our watches, that might just be frustrating because we
might be like I could totally see what time it
was right now if my watch were lit up, but
that would be that that would be pretty cool if
you could, if you could direct your your watch by
making increasingly ridiculous gestures. I would be glad to give

(29:23):
someone a broken watch and tell them that's how it worked,
just to see, like what kind of crazy muppet moves.
We would get out of that note to self. Something
to do with Josh. We we do, by the way,
we we we got it. We got a reader letter
in and and I I want to say real quick
that that we love all of our fellow podcasts. We

(29:43):
honestly have zero animosity towards any of them. We like
giving everyone grief on air, but because they're so agreevable
and trust us, trust us. If you were to to
see the interactions that happened within our office, you would
realize this is all that kind of you know, one
upsmanship that's come completely meant ingest. But none of us
really intend any others uh any ill will except for

(30:07):
me against Josh. But apart from that, he's I'm still
kidding mostly Pebble, send me my watch. Um, yeah, no,
it's just because I'm hurt. That's all all right? Well,
I think that kind of wraps up this discussion. Lauren.
Let me ask you this. You don't do you normally
wear a watch? I do not, Okay, I also do
not normally wear a watch. Is there is there a

(30:30):
smart watch out there, a design you've seen that you've
actually liked or do you just not? Is that just
not something for you. I've been I've been thinking about
getting a watch actually because I they look cool. Yeah, um,
that's the same thing. I've been thinking, like, I've got
a phone that tells me what time it is, and
I've always got my phone on it, right, But at
the same time, I think I kind of want a
fashion accessory. And that's really what how watches started off.

(30:54):
When you think about it, I think for me it
would take, um, it would take one of these devices
being it's exty enough, it's it's having that fashionable appeal
of and and and some of the fitness trackers are
starting to get really really cool looking. Um, and I
think it would take a device, um, you know, look
looking like like like the Misfit Shine for example. You know,

(31:14):
like like just something very sleep So you want you're
you want the aesthetic to be just right. Like for me,
a little bit kind of clunky and geeky works for
me because let's face it, I'm clunky and geeky, So
I think it works well. But I've actually got three
different smart watches pre ordered and I haven't received any

(31:36):
of them yet. Actually technically one is not a smart watch.
One of them is just a super cool watch design,
which I'll show you after the episodes over. But it's uh,
it's not a smart watch because it really just tells
the time. It doesn't have any other extra functionality to
it anyway. Uh Yeah, I see this as being a
market that's just going to continue to get more and

(31:57):
more competitive, especially when we start to see ing uh
flexible screens, you know, more like eat ink displays that
are flexible that kind of stuff. Um, or we see
uh flexible oh led displays come down in price, and
that's gonna be a while obviously, But once we start
seeing that, then you're gonna see the form factor for

(32:17):
watches just go crazy because it can be molded to
any shape at that point. And while we are used
to watch as looking a certain way, there's no guarantee
that that's how they're going to look ten years from that.
And if they get more comfortable and more a wearable,
then that's obviously. I can't wait for them to look
like like arm bracers. You know, it's over your whole

(32:38):
forearm and can give you a full read out of everything.
And dude, I would buy one in heartbeat. I'm not
even joking. I would buy those all right, Well, that
wraps up this episode of tech Stuff. Guys. If you
have any suggestions for future topics, let us know. You
can write us our email addresses tech stuff at Discovery
dot com or drops Lan on social are handle at

(33:00):
both Facebook and the Twitter is tech stuff, H. S
W and Lauren and I will talk to you again. Relation,
but more on this and thousands of other topics. Is
it how stuff works dot com

TechStuff News

Advertise With Us

Follow Us On

Hosts And Creators

Oz Woloshyn

Oz Woloshyn

Karah Preiss

Karah Preiss

Show Links

AboutStoreRSS

Popular Podcasts

Dateline NBC

Dateline NBC

Current and classic episodes, featuring compelling true-crime mysteries, powerful documentaries and in-depth investigations. Follow now to get the latest episodes of Dateline NBC completely free, or subscribe to Dateline Premium for ad-free listening and exclusive bonus content: DatelinePremium.com

Bookmarked by Reese's Book Club

Bookmarked by Reese's Book Club

Welcome to Bookmarked by Reese’s Book Club — the podcast where great stories, bold women, and irresistible conversations collide! Hosted by award-winning journalist Danielle Robay, each week new episodes balance thoughtful literary insight with the fervor of buzzy book trends, pop culture and more. Bookmarked brings together celebrities, tastemakers, influencers and authors from Reese's Book Club and beyond to share stories that transcend the page. Pull up a chair. You’re not just listening — you’re part of the conversation.

Music, radio and podcasts, all free. Listen online or download the iHeart App.

Connect

© 2025 iHeartMedia, Inc.