Gadget

Gadget of the Week: The new watch word

What is it?

The Huawei Watch 3 Pro brings the smartwatch closer to the smartphone than we could have imagined just a few years ago. It has eSIM functionality, which means it can receive and make calls independently of a smartphone.

When such capability was first proposed for smartwatches, the media buzzed with comparisons to the iconic Dicky Tracy two-way wrist-radio from 1940s comic books. But the Dick Tracy device was utterly primitive in comparison to what we now have available. For one thing, it was only capable of making and receiving calls. Eight decades later, we expect the device to manage our entire lifestyles.

If that sounds like an exaggeration, it is exactly what Huawei promises for the Huawei Watch 3 Pro, and pretty much what all flagship smartwatches offer today.

Consider these features:

The eSIM service allows one to have the same phone number on the Huawei Watch as on one’s smartphone, with the same data and voice tariff plans as on the phone.

Battery life is finally being addressed on high-end smartwatches, bringing them in line with the 3-6 day lives to which Fitbit accustomed the market. The Huawei Watch 3 Pro runs for up to five days in smart mode and up to 21 days in ultra-long battery mode.

It uses 3D curved glass to offer a clear and vibrant, scratch-proof and fingerprint-resistant display, and is made of aerospace-grade titanium fused with a sapphire glass lens.

In short, it looks good and offers the leading edge of smartwatch innovation.

How much is it?

Starts at R7,999.

Why should you care?

According to the International Data Corporation (IDC), demand has been slowly shifting away from wristbands towards watches as consumers increasingly want a more capable device and as the gap in pricing narrows. Growth among Indian and Chinese brands has been leading the low-end watch space, while Apple, Huawei, and Samsung maintain a hold at the high-end.

“While the entire wrist-worn wearable market declined year over year, the market for watches actually grew 4.3%,” says Ramon T Llamas, research director for IDC’s wearables team.

While the category has recently been led by Xiaomi’s low-cost bands, the company was dethroned by Apple and Huawei in the third quarter of 2021, as they tied for first place in the wrist-worn segment.

Biggest negatives

Biggest positives

* Goldstuck is founder of World Wide Worx and editor-in-chief of Gadget.co.za. Follow him on Twitter on @art2gee

* Read how this segment is growing in IDC’s latest Worldwide Quarterly Wearable Device Tracker here.

Exit mobile version