Earlier this month,
Connect Nigeria reported that Samsung and
Nissan launched smartwatches, which were just a few days apart. While Nissan is mostly known for its expertise in automobile design and manufacture, Samsung isn’t exactly a new player with mobile communication technology. The South Korean company has been producing mobile phones for some time now and is reputed to be the “world’s largest mobile phone maker by unit sales with a global market share of 25.4%”, according to
BBC. Award-winning author, Peter Nowak, considers smartwatches to be a fad that will not catch on. He shares his thoughts below;
Samsung has finally announced its smartwatch, the Galaxy Gear, and the initial thoughts from analysts
aren’t good. Forrester analyst Sarah Rotman Epps says “smartwatches are sci-fi inventions that are already anachronisms in this modern world,” while Gartner analyst Carolina Milanesi says the Gear is “more an overpriced toy than a device that really drives value to consumers.”
No kidding. Samsung’s device is overpriced, at $299, and underpowered – it has a 1.6-inch display and 1.9 megapixel camera and you can make Bluetooth calls through it with newer Galaxy phones. But it lacks the biometric sensors, such as a heart rate monitor, that many had been expecting.
Odds are good the Gear will go down as one of the fastest forgotten products of 2013, right up there with the Microsoft Surface tablets and Ouya game console. And oh yeah, Qualcomm
has also announced a similar soon-to-be-a-memory device. Over all, there are at least five good reasons why smartwatches on the whole will be quickly forgotten as a category.
1. Aesthetics. Have you seen these things? They’re positively giant and ugly and entirely reminiscent of those
calculator watches nerds used to wear in the eighties (my apologies if you were one of them). Sure, someone with a high degree of design sensibility – perhaps Apple – could come along and make something sexier looking, maybe with a flexible glass display. But even then, Moore’s Law can only currently cram the needed components and operating system down so much. Judging by the size of the smartwatches we’ve seen so far, we’re not there yet. And let’s not even talk about even smaller smartwatches for women – those might be decades away.
2. Battery life. Samsung says the Gear will have a full day’s worth of battery life. Even if – and that’s a mighty big if – that estimate turns out to be accurate, it’s still nowhere near good enough. How often do you have to recharge your regular watch? Oh right, almost never. It will only take owners forgetting to recharge their smartwatches a few times before deciding they’re not worth the hassle.
3. Margins. The watch business is pegged at about $60 billion a year, with good profit margins of about 60 per cent. The problem is, high-priced luxury watches from the likes of Rolex and Omega make up much of both those numbers. Smartwatches are coming across more like cheap, commoditized gizmos rather than high-end precision instruments, which is why analysts are saying $300 is too expensive. If that’s too much for such a device – and it probably is – prices will quickly drop, at which point the question for the makers becomes: why bother?
4. Market. It’s funny that observers are upset about the Galaxy Gear not having the sorts of biometrics found in gizmos such as the Fitbit and Jawbone, because there’s no real evidence that the people who use those devices are interested in a smartwatch. Sure, fitness gadget owners are also likely to own a smartphone, but that probably means they’re even less inclined to carry a third device. Fitbits, Jawbones, Nike Fuelbands and the rest all tell time, so users are already pretty well covered in that department.
5. Brand. The real problem with smartwatches and all such “wearable” computers is fashion. The likes of Adidas, Rolex or even Ray-Ban are established and desirable accessory brands. Samsung and Apple may have good reputations in the world of technology, and their phones are accessories of a sort, but that doesn’t automatically translate over into what people wear. In fact, the tech companies have the opposite working for them, at least in the West. Anyone spotted wearing a Samsung or Apple smartwatch will clearly be marked as a tech nerd. It’ll be fun to watch the companies fight this fight, but I have a feeling they’ll lose. The only way they’re likely to make any inroads into what is already
a small market is to allow their own brands to be subsumed by the established fashion brands, like Ray-Ban sunglasses with Google technology under the hood, for example. Will the tech companies go for that? Maybe, but I’m guessing it won’t be worth their hassle.
Peter Nowak is an award-winning journalist, best-selling author and syndicated blogger. From 1997 to 2004, he was an editor and writer at Canada’s national newspaper,
The Globe and Mail, followed by a year-long stint as a freelance writer based in China. While there, he wrote for the
Boston Globe, the
Sydney Morning Herald, the
South China Morning Post, the
Vancouver Sun and the
Toronto Star, among others.
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This article was first published on 17th September 2013
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