The Sony SmartWatch 2, model SW2, was launched in late September 2013.The SW2 supports working together with any Android 4.0 (and higher) smartphone, unlike Samsung's competing Galaxy Gear smartwatch, which only works with some of Samsung's own Galaxy handsets. The watch features an aluminum body and comes with the option of a silicone or metal wristband, but can be used with any 24mm wristband. It is 1.65 inches tall by 1.61 inches wide by 0.35 inch thick, weighs 0.8 ounces and sports a transflective LCD screen with a 220x176 resolution. The SW2 connects to the smartphone using Bluetooth, and supports NFC for easy pairing. It is rated IP57 so it can be submersed in water up to a metre for 30 minutes and is dust resistant.[2][3]

This watch has been through all of my smartphones, from my original sony ericsson live with walkman, to my current galaxy A7 (2018). However, I'd stopped using it due to a broken wristband. I just bought a galaxy fit 2, but that's just a fitness band to me. Doesn't have the same classiness that my original Sony watch i own has :)


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I've downloaded the apk for the Sony smartwatch 2 App directly from the Sony page for it and I've used the Aptoide app store to download a few apps for it, like calendar and notification passthrough, but I can't seem to get it anywhere close to working on it and I'd really like to because, again, i really like this watch.

After setting up everything full again (including connecting my smartwatch to my phone), I installed and set up the Facer app from play store and waited for the Facer to show between available faces on my watch (when I long pressed the original face on it).

The company has shown no intention of releasing a Sony SmartWatch 4 either, so if you want a smartwatch from Sony you may be disappointed and you can also take a look at our guide to the best Wear OS watches right now.

Its 1.2GHz quad-core processor and 512MB of RAM pack it with power, even to today's standards. And with GPS built in, it's a more fully-functional fitness accessory than most other smartwatches available.

Being transflective makes it easier to read in direct sunlight than most competing smartwatches. Or it should anyway, December in England and New York City didn't prove the optimal time to test this, but I certainly had no problem reading the screen when outside.

My ideal scenario for the SW2 is to pair it with a decent bluetooth headset, and a cellular capable tablet, such as the international version of Samsung Galaxy Note 8.0. You can read emails, IMs, answer and make calls with the smartwatch and the buletooth headset while keeping the tablet in your bag, and take it out only when you need to reply to an email or IM.

In the boxThe Sony Smartwatch comes with little more than the bare essentials. You get the watch, a rubber wrist band, charging cable, and a metal piece that can be attached to 20mm watch straps to allow the smartwatch to be used with those. Both the rubber wrist straps and the charging cable can also be bought as accessories, which is a necessity since the charging cable is proprietary.

Design

 Even more than a phone, a watch is a personal fashion statement. Strapped to your wrist for much of the day, watches must complement various articles of clothing as well, everything from buttoned-down suits and ties to casual jeans and T-shirts. That makes designing an aesthetically compelling smartwatch a risky endeavor, even for a consumer electronics giant like Sony.

Notifications

 In my view, the primary purpose of a smartwatch is to push important alerts to your wrist so you can mess with your phone less and have more time to actually live your life. To this end, the Sony SmartWatch 2 will funnel updates from Twitter, Facebook, along with Gmail messages to your wrist as they hit your handset. Not only will the device display a notification on its screen with a brief summary of message contents, the watch haptically buzzes, too.

The line between fitness trackers and smartwatches seems to blur more each day, and the Sony SmartWatch 2 is no exception to this trend. Indeed, Sony has partnered with exercise app developer Runtastic to offer SmartWatch 2 owners the pro version of the Runtastic application for free. Don't get too excited, since this software won't transform the SmartWatch 2 into a 24-hour pedometer like the Fitbit Force or Nike FuelBand SE. Runtastic is meant to manually log workout periods, not to automatically compile a complete portrait of your overall activity.

Unfortunately, as many a smartwatch before it, the SmartWatch 2 isn't a joy to get up and running. Sony brags that its new wrist gadget is "the perfect Android wireless accessory," but in my experience that's only true if you're using a recent Xperia smartphone.

THis is not a problem of smartwatch. It is a problem of Spotify not providing decent app on Android Smartwatch. Google Music is already providing this service on smartwaches. I hate google and love Spotify, therefore I demand Spotify offline on Smartwatches!!!!

The Sony SmartWatch 3 is an Android Wear smartwatch designed for a fitness oriented lifestyle. This wearable device offers the standard bundle of Android Wear features, such as voice search, weather, push notification, reminders and navigations. In addition, the Sony SmartWatch 3 includes an impressive array of standalone functions such as music, GPS, movement, and WiFi functionality. To cap it all off the device features a removable core which can be placed in other compatible wrist straps and is IP68 water and dust resistant. The display on the SmartWatch 3 is a 1.6" Transflective TFT LCD panel which runs off of a Quad ARM A7, 1.2 GHz processor with 512MB RAM, 4GB storage and a 420 mAh battery.

This concept is all about utilizing the back panel of a flagship Xperia device into a dock for a smartwatch dial. Dubbed Sony Smart Switch Ecosystem, the proposed Xperia WX710 phone here makes judicious use of reverse charging, while getting a cool secondary display. When the smartwatch dial is secured to the back of the phone, the visual interface changes to show only important phone notifications. This prevents you from religiously checking the main display for any missed notifications, and eventually getting stuck down the rabbit hole wasting time scrolling down content.

With the Apple Watch leading the smartwatch pack, Pebble hot on its heels, and heavy hitters like Samsung, Motorola, Asus, and even Fossil throwing their products into the smartwatch arena, it may be a little hard to get excited about yet another product in this interesting but not quite booming category. Why all the hype over the Sony Smartwatch 4?

Well, for starters, the previous iterations of the Smartwatch (a term that Sony trademarked several years ago) were popular, though they were not without their problems. Industry buzz suggests that Sony appears to have gotten it right on the fourth try. Additionally, the release of the Apple Watch last year, along with the release of Android Wear in 2014 (and its subsequent upgrades) have brought more awareness to the smartwatch market. You can also make the case that fitness tracker owners are discovering the limitations of their fun but somewhat flimsy wearables and are looking for a more powerful replacement.

Sony is both early to the smartwatch game, and late at the same time. The SmartWatch 3 puts aside some of the lessons of Sony's previous wearables, but manages to learn some valuable lessons from the competition.

Secondly, while Sony is later to the game than Motorola, LG, and Samsung, the SmartWatch 3 still feels like a wearable that belongs in that first wave of Android Wear devices. It suffers from many of the flaws that you will find in the existing Android Wear devices, although it does address two concerns that (just about) lift the Sony SmartWatch 3 to the lofty heights of 'best Android Wear smartwatch'.

This is where the second advantage of the SmartWatch 3 comes in to play. It charges directly from a microUSB cable. Other smartwatches have a proprietary cable or a charging dock to supply the power. Sony has gone with a vertically mounted USB port on the back of the watch, covered by a tight-fitting rubber gurney flap. The flap is used to keep the watch integrity in place. With dustproofing and waterproofing (to IP68 standards), the SmartWatch 3 should be comfortable immersed in water for up to thirty minutes.

The Sony SmartWatch 3 runs the latest version of Android Wear, and the companion software on your Android device will check for the latest version and update the smartwatch over-the-air if required (I'm testing with Android Wear 5.0.1). It's worth noting that Android Wear 5.0 allows custom watch faces to be downloaded from the Google Play store, and this has opened up a number of looks and choices that increases the value of every Android Wear unit, including the SmartWatch 3.

Getting music on to the smartwatch also requires you to either sync a playlist from Sony's Walkman app (there's no option to send over a single album or track except to put it on a playlist and sync that), or download music from Google Play and have Google's music app try to sync everything it can with no filtering. Neither option is at all graceful. They feel like hacked together demonstrations of what could be done, and not a process that is in a commercial product.

The primary utility of Android Wear is to make notifications more accessible so you can triage your incoming communications. How you handle your notifications will determine if a smartwatch in general, and Android Wear in particulars for you.

It's important to remember that almost all of this UI is mandated by Google, so Sony has not been able to change or tweak the UI with its own experience of wearables. All it can do is provide a number of additional functions to slightly bias the device to its vision (in this case standalone operation and fitness). But the simple argument is that Sony has not been able to make the SmartWtch 3 as useful as its SmartBands, and adding its own niche on top of the niche methodology of Android is not going to create a million selling smartwatch. ff782bc1db

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