The Gadgets Page

August 9, 2007

Swatch Puzzle Motion Watches

Filed under: Watches — Laura Moncur @ 5:00 am

As a teenager, my favorite watches were made by Swatch. I could barely tell time on them, but they were so cool, I owned several of them. I STILL own them today and most of them are still running. That’s how well-made they were.

Swatch is still ticking along. They just released a new line of watches called Puzzle Motion. They are like a kaleidescope of color moving on your wrist.

Here are their videos showing how the watches look:

Click here to see the video

Embed this video on your websiteDownload this video for your iPod

If I have to have a watch that doesn’t do anything but tell time, at least it should show me pretty pictures.

Here is a video of the Swatch Puzzle watch in person:

Retro Swatch Ads after the break: (Continue Reading…)

August 6, 2007

Suunto Lumi: Good Try, Still Useless

Filed under: Watches — Laura Moncur @ 5:00 am

Suunto Lumi TerraI have to give Suunto some credit. At least they’re trying to make a women’s digital watch that isn’t ugly. This is a pretty good looking watch for a digital, unfortunately, it’s not the kind of watch that will help me. I don’t need an altimeter, barometer, four languages or a compass. If I did need those things, I would wear the big ugly Casio digital that does all that for half the price. I don’t need my watch to be beautiful when I’m hiking.

I need my watch to be beautiful all the other times of my day: walking around town, going to work, having dinner with friends. I want a pretty digital watch that will tell me the time and date on the face. I want an elegant digital watch that will time me with a stopwatch and give me a countdown timer. I want a lovely digital watch that will tell me what time it is in Vegas AND back home. And I want it to be small. I KNOW the watch manufacturers can do all of this, but for some reason they don’t.

Good try, Suunto. Thanks for thinking of me. I really appreciate it. Game over, man. Try again.

Via: Shiny Shiny: Sunnito Lumi – ‘An outdoor sports instrument for women’. Huh?

July 2, 2007

Seiko Almost Creates A Watch That Doesn’t Suck

Filed under: Watches — Laura Moncur @ 5:00 am

This bracelet looking bangle could be the watch of my dreams.

Seiko Almost Creates A Watch That Doesn't Suck

Unfortunately, Seiko has nothing on their website about it. I only have a simple press release from Seiko to find out anything:

According to the press release:

If the wearer is at work, it can be set to its ‘efficiency’ mode; the display is informative and easy to read. If, however, the watch is set to its ‘mystery’ mode, the panel expresses the time in a more imaginative, evocative style. Just pick the style to reflect your mood!

That’s all well and good as long as I can pick a style that shows the time, date AND day all at once. If not, then it’s just a bracelet. Additionally, if there is no illumination to see the time at night, then it’s just a pretty piece of jewelry. Sadly, it looks like Seiko is ignoring my need to see its watch in the dark:

The display is readable under very low light conditions, so no backlighting is required.

Very low light conditions and total darkness are two very different things. I want a watch that can get me out of the World Trade Center when the lights go out like the IndiGlo watch did.

Sorry, Seiko. You’re really close, but it looks like you’ll create a watch that’s just a piece of jewelry. I need more.

Via: Popgadget Personal Technology for Women: Seiko Electronic Ink Watch

June 12, 2007

Watch 3.0 Is Out of Beta

Filed under: Watches — Laura Moncur @ 9:51 am

I wrote before about Watch 2.0, but it still wasn’t perfect.

Once I started working with beads, I was able to start on Watch 3.0. I have finally perfected it and I’m extremely happy with the outcome. The complete pattern is here for you to enjoy!

Watch 3.0 Is Out of Beta

If you’re not crafty, but would like to buy a watch like this, please visit my store on Etsy:

April 2, 2007

Watch 2.0 is out of Beta

Filed under: Watches — Laura Moncur @ 5:00 am

For years, I have been complaining about how I hate the watch designers of the world. They cannot create a digital watch that is both pretty and useful. In the end, I have been wearing my Armitron watch that I got for about fifteen bucks about five years ago. It has all the features that I love, but it’s ugly.

The other night, I had an idea. I would make my ugly Armitron watch beautiful. Here is the story of Watch 2.0:

Watch 2.0 is out of Beta

(Continue Reading…)

February 23, 2007

Linde Werdelin’s Biformeter

Filed under: Watches — Laura Moncur @ 5:00 am

BiformeterLinde Werdelin’s Biformeter watch is EVERYTHING that is wrong with the watch industry right now.

Let’s look at some of their ad-copy:

“The BIFORMETER watch that carries the Instruments is manufactured, assembled and tested in Bienne, Switzerland using the highest quality components… Highly acclaimed – and already launched in a special edition – a very select group of people already own a very special BIFORMETER, each one individually made for its owner.”

It continues like that for NINE paragraphs and doesn’t tell me ANYTHING about the digital portion of the watch.

It’s kind of a novel idea. The digital portion of the watch clips over the analog watch. Most of the time you can have your snooty watch, but when you’re skiing, you can use your digital portion. Of course, I’m only guessing that the digital portion might have anything to do with skiing since they haven’t told me anything about it.

Someday, a watch company is going to stumble onto what I have been saying for years. They are going to design a digital watch that is beautiful and be completely perplexed when they sell it out.

Via: Dream Watches Blog

February 22, 2007

The Return of the Pocket Watch

Filed under: PDAs and Phones,Watches — Laura Moncur @ 5:00 am

New RARE Dragon Eragon Red Eye Mens Pocket Gold WatchI have been on the search for the perfect watch for a LONG time now. You can see my frustration here:

Mike and I were talking about why watches have become completely useless pieces of jewelry instead of beautiful AND helpful timepieces. He nailed it right on the head,

“It’s because cellphones have replaced watches for most people.”

He’s right. I’ve seen the nervous habit of the youth in my area: the constant checking of the cellphone. When he said that, I realized that they are probably checking the time, not for messages. Cellphones are perfect for timekeeping. They tell the time, date, month and day of the week. They also tell you where your friends are and how to find them if you use services like Dodgeball.

The cellphone has sparked the return of the pocket watch.

No wonder I can’t find a good wrist watch to save my life…

January 8, 2007

CES 2007: Aigo Video Watch

Filed under: Watches — Laura Moncur @ 5:00 am

This watch is first on my list of things I want, but can’t buy. It’s a small watch from Aigo that plays MP3s, movies and even has eBook reading capability. I played with it for a few minutes before I even asked if it could tell time. Fortunately, it tells time.

The only catch? You can’t buy it yet (if ever).

It’s pretty obvious why we were clamoring for it when you see the list of features:

  • Video player
  • E-Book reader
  • Digital voice recorder
  • Photo and file browser
  • Clock interface with time and date dislayed on the same screen.
  • MP3 player
  • Rechargeable Li-ion battery

It’s the best product that I can’t buy that I’ve seen at CES so far this year. We even asked if we could buy the displays after the show. The few displays at their booth are the only ones that exist, however. They couldn’t sell us their prototypes. This is what I love about CES: I get to play with prototypes and talk to the people who invented them.

November 9, 2006

Sony Ericsson Bluetooth Watch

Filed under: PDAs and Phones,Watches — Laura Moncur @ 5:00 am

The Sony Ericsson Bluetooth WatchPC Magazine has gotten its hands on the new Sony Ericsson bluetooth watch and are completely incapable of telling me whether it’s a good watch or not.

They were able to tell us that you would need to charge your watch about once a week, and that it’s the easiest-pairing Bluetooth device they’ve ever used, but they can’t give me the basics.

Is there a stopwatch?

Is there a daily alarm?

Is there dual time?

Can I change the digital display to show me the date and day of the week instead of the dorky icons?

Can I change the digital display to show me the time instead of trying to read the analog hands?

If the Bluetooth battery goes dead, does the analog watch keep telling time correctly or does it stop too?

Sadly, this looks like it’s just a toy for executives. Go ahead, Mr. CEO, buy the Sony Ericsson watch and it’s matching phone. You don’t ever need a stopwatch, anyway…

Via: Sony Ericsson’s MBW-100 Bluetooth watch reviewed – Engadget

October 24, 2006

Review: Oceanus 5-motor atomic solar chronometer dress watches

Filed under: Watches — Matthew Strebe @ 4:28 am

Oceanus OCW600TDBA-7AV

Oceanus is the high-end dress watch brand of Casio, the famous Japanese maker of digital instrument watches. Seiko and Citizen, the other two major Japanese watchmakers, long ago gave up on trying to sell digital watches to the public, leaving the market almost entirely to Casio. Oceanus is Casio’s attempt to compete seriously against Seiko and Citizen in the analog dress watch market, and to do so they knew they’d need to make watches that were both beautiful and compelling for the $500 and over price point.

Citizen has its extraordinary Eco-Drive movements that are driven by solar energy and never need a battery. Seiko has its very nifty Kinetic watches that are powered by the movement of a weighted pendulum that drives an electrical generator. Both use low power movements (often eschewing the power-sucking second hand) to make sure they have enough battery reserve to last many months without recharging.

I’m a big fan of the high-end Japanese dress watches because they have every advantage of the Swiss mechanicals with an order of magnitude better accuracy. So of course I’ve been excited about Oceanus watches since I first heard of them.

Unfortunately, there are no Oceanus retailers in my home city of San Diego. I’ve never considered buying watches online because you can’t tell from a photograph whether you’re going to like a particular watch and you won’t be able to size the bracelet yourself unless you happen to own specialty watch repair tools. But a recent road trip afforded me the opportunity to stop at an Oceanus retailer (Modern Watch Company in Glendale, CA, who were extraordinarily helpful) so I picked up a titanium Oceanus 5-motor, which is a completely analog chronometer that is nearly indistinguishable from a Swiss chronometer except by brand.

To compete in this price category (which is also populated by Swiss automatic mechanical watches) Oceanus decided to up the ante: They’d produce a dress watch equal to Seiko and Citizen in visual detail, include solar power to eliminate the battery, and produce higher accuracy than a typical Quartz movement by automatically synchronizing the time to the radio signal put out by the Fort Collins atomic clock. I’ve always wanted an atomic timekeeping watch, but every one I’d seen prior to Oceanus used a plastic case and frankly looked quite cheap despite the fact that they cost over $150. This signal can be received over most of North America, and by synchronizing to it nightly, the watch will always be exactly accurate simply by knowing which time zone it’s located in. Or, at least, that’s the theory.

It took a while to get the watch synced to the atomic clock signal. And by a while, I mean five days. Firstly, the signal is only receivable late at night. Secondly, your watch actually has to be somewhat facing the direction of Colorado and with a clear view through a window and sitting upright. Nothing else really works. Even with those conditions on my night stand, I only receive the sync signal about every third night. More than enough for accuracy, but it takes a long time just to determine if you’re ever going to get it. And in coastal areas, I was never able to receive it probably due to thermal ducting caused by the warm marine layer.

That said, the watch is still a reasonable watch, but it’s got one exceptionally incongruous problem:

The second hand isn’t a second hand.

It’s there, but it doesn’t indicate seconds. It indicates the time zone. The actual second hand is on a small dial at the 6-o’clock position. Why? Because moving a large second sweep hand takes a lot of power. The much smaller second hand below takes far less torque to move, which is important in a low-power watch mechanism run by a solar cell. To be fair, the new Citizen Eco-Drive’s do the same thing—I don’t like it in them either.

The small second hand as an additional complication is an innovation that some Swiss Chronometers have moved to in order to increase their power reserves. But those Swiss chronometers don’t also include a hand that confusingly looks exactly like a traditional second hand. So what you wind up with is a watch that appears to be stopped, unless you notice the tiny hand moving at the 6-o’clock position. Now, I know you can get used to it, but unless this was the only watch you were going to wear, I wouldn’t want to.

They use the hand to indicate the time zone (and a few other things) in the dual-time mode. It’s not a bad idea (they have to use something, after all) and I completely understand why they thought it was a good engineering trade-off, but going against the grain of a century of watch-making tradition for a nebulous feature that could have been solved another way is a really poor design decision. People expect devices to work according to standards. We don’t want to have to re-learn individual devices. We especially don’t want to have to explain to people what’s wrong with our brand new watch.

At the end of the day, I love the way the watch works, and the accuracy and ability to automatically change for daylight savings is awesome. If not for second hand issue, I’d say it’s the perfect watch.

Product Reviewed: OCW600TDBA-7AV

Similar Products: OCW600TDBA-1AV OCW600TDA-2AV OCW600TDA-7AV OCW600TLA-1AV OCW600TLA-7AV

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