Garmin Approach S1 is the first GPS watch for golfers, sends that caddy back to the shack

Garmin Approach S1 is the first GPS watch for golfers, sends that drunken caddy back to the shack

Pack a lob wedge or extra utility iron? Punch and run or flop and drop? Crush a five iron or hit a three-quarter four? These are just a few of the questions that amateur golfers wish they had to ponder as they instead devote their time to rummaging through the brush trying to find what could be their fourth lost ball in three holes. Maybe Garmin‘s new Approach S1 watch can help. It’s loaded with every hole from over 14,000 golf courses and, from anywhere on the course, will give you precise yardage to the front, back, and middle of the next green — meaning it won’t help your lay-up but could be just the ticket for nailing that approach. Its integrated odometer will even track how many miles you covered through the course of the day and, we’re presuming, not tell your significant other whether you spent those drinking in the cart or walking at a brisk pace. The Approach S1 is available now for $249 and is subtle enough that your buddies might not even notice your new wrist-borne advantage.

Continue reading Garmin Approach S1 is the first GPS watch for golfers, sends that caddy back to the shack

Garmin Approach S1 is the first GPS watch for golfers, sends that caddy back to the shack originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 28 Oct 2010 08:39:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |   | Email this | Comments

Phosphor’s latest watch can E Ink its way through 24 time zones

Tired of waiting for Seiko to produce an E Ink watch that mere mortals can touch, much less afford? A little company by the name of Art Technology has been delivering mass-market wearables using the technology since 2007 — and its latest model dials up the functionality factor just a smidge by adding support for twenty-four time zones, two of which can be displayed simultaneously. Granted, it’s using a segmented display, not dot matrix — which means it bears a closer resemblance to that Timex you owned in the late ’80s than Seiko’s wild active matrix model — but again, like we said, this one’s actually quite affordable and it’s available right this second. Depending on your choice of band style, you’ll pay anywhere from $150 to $195; follow the break for the full press release.

Continue reading Phosphor’s latest watch can E Ink its way through 24 time zones

Phosphor’s latest watch can E Ink its way through 24 time zones originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 08 Oct 2010 10:45:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourcePhosphor Watches  | Email this | Comments

Garmin updates GPS watch line with Forerunner 210 and 410, data-craving runners rejoice

Garmin updates GPS watch line with Forerunner 210 and 410, data-craving runners rejoice

Runners love to tell you about their post-workout highs, but they rarely mention the mid-workout delirium that comes when muscles deprive your brain of blood, leading to doubts about how long you’ve been running, what your target heart rate should be, and indeed how to get home again. Garmin’s updated Forerunner 410 (above) can help you out with all those things, and the larger touch bezel means oxygen-deprived cardio hounds can easily scroll through data describing things like pace and heart rate, even when it’s raining — or you’re sweating excessively. Once back home and showered this $325 watch automatically syncs to a USB dongle via ANT+, uploading data to Garmin Connect, just like its predecessor the 405. Then there’s the $300 210, pictured below, a follow-up to this spring’s 110 and providing a more simple display of real-time distance and heart rate without a bunch of other confusing data. Both models will be on display at the upcoming Chicago and New York City marathons before pacing themselves into stores this fall.

Update: The 410 can indeed help you find your way back home thanks to a simple navigation mode that will direct you from one waypoint to the next. Great for finding new routes — or new tactical insertions.

Continue reading Garmin updates GPS watch line with Forerunner 210 and 410, data-craving runners rejoice

Garmin updates GPS watch line with Forerunner 210 and 410, data-craving runners rejoice originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 04 Oct 2010 11:56:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceGarmin 410, 210  | Email this | Comments

Tokyoflash reaches new heights of unreadability with latest concept watch

Technically speaking, the maze-like array of diagonals you see above is actually showing you the time. But, as is Tokyoflash‘s wont, the point here isn’t so much about time itself as it is about the journey of figuring it out. Well trained ninjas might be able to decouple the numbers from their unhelpfully similar background, but for the rest of us this “Optical Illusion” LED watch will be an enigma of random black lines wrapped inside a lime green mystery. Thankfully, it does come with a button to clear away the mists of confusion if you ever need to, you know, actually tell the time. The watch remains a concept for now, but if enough people vote in favor of its unnecessarily convoluted design, Tokyoflash might just go ahead and build a few. So why not jump off the fence and make your voice heard in the source below?

Tokyoflash reaches new heights of unreadability with latest concept watch originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 28 Sep 2010 06:34:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Wired  |  sourceTokyoflash  | Email this | Comments

Entelligence: Putting a spotlight on the invisible

Entelligence is a column by technology strategist and author Michael Gartenberg, a man whose desire for a delicious cup of coffee and a quality New York bagel is dwarfed only by his passion for tech. In these articles, he’ll explore where our industry is and where it’s going — on both micro and macro levels — with the unique wit and insight only he can provide.

When Apple refreshed the latest version of the iPod nano, the combination of the square form factor, touch display, clip and cool clock app made me think it would make a great watch. I was not alone. I’ve already seen a number of vendors scrambling to create straps and wrist cases for the nano. While Apple stopped well short of calling it a watch replacement, there’s no doubt Cupertino will be looking carefully to see if there’s an iWatch in your future.

From Microsoft’s Smart Personal Object Technology devices to watches that ran Palm OS, vendors have tried and failed to push high-tech watches every few years. I personally think the watch space and the larger invisible space hasn’t been exploited properly beyond the core feature of telling time. Here’s why.

Continue reading Entelligence: Putting a spotlight on the invisible

Entelligence: Putting a spotlight on the invisible originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 19 Sep 2010 17:30:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |   | Email this | Comments

Jakks Pacifics Spy Watch is Pretty Neat

JAKKS SpyNet Video Watch.jpg

I’ll be honest with you–I love the Jakks Pacific Night Vision Infrared Stealth Binoculars. Honestly. When I first got a pair, I showed them to pretty much anyone I talked to–an actual working pair of night vision goggles. Man, if I had a pair of those things when I was a kid–well, let’s just say that it was lucky for the rest of the neighborhood that I didn’t.

Granted, the things haven’t gotten all that much use since the first couple of weeks, but then, for better or worse, I’m not actually 10 anymore.

I suspect that any actual kid who got a real kick out of the Night Vision Infrared Stealth Binoculars would also genuinely appreciate the company’s Spy Net Video Watch. The watch features, among other things, a built in video camera, which lets kids capture up to 20 minutes of video, three hours of audio, or still photos. The watch also has a 1.4 inch color TFT video screen built-in for image viewing and video playback.

Video, audio, and images can be transferred to a PC via USB and uploaded to Jakks’
SpyNetHQ.com. content can then be analyzed with lie detector software and more.

The watch, like the goggles, runs $49.99. There’s also a separate Spy Net Snake Cam watch attachment for $29.99, which seems like the perfect tool for at-home colonoscopies.

Incipio Linq keeps the iPod nano watch craze going with $25 ‘carrying solution’

Did you find the iLoveHandles iPod nano wrist strap a little bit too restrained? Never fear, Incipio has served up this new Linq case, which swells up the 6th-gen nano with an ostentatiously rugged shell, a velcro strap, and a couple of daring new color options. Whether you’re a fan of baby pink or macho blue, there will be a Linq… just for you. Damn, you can build a whole advertising campaign around that. Anyhow, this new take on the iWatch concept will be available early next month for $25 with additional straps setting you back another $10. Or you can just buy a real watch — the choice, as always, is yours.

Continue reading Incipio Linq keeps the iPod nano watch craze going with $25 ‘carrying solution’

Incipio Linq keeps the iPod nano watch craze going with $25 ‘carrying solution’ originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 16 Sep 2010 01:29:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceIncipio  | Email this | Comments

iLoveHandles turns nano iPods into oversized watches

Digg What happens when Apple introduces a square-shaped new iPod and adorns it with an analog watch face for a lock screen? A whole new cottage industry sprouts up, whereby entrepreneurial types dust off old and mostly worthless watch straps, cut out an iPod nano-shaped compartment in them, and charge you $19.99 for the privilege of turning your tiny PMP into a somewhat bulky wristwatch. The saddest part about this is that we’ve got a feeling they might be on to a winner here.

iLoveHandles turns nano iPods into oversized watches originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 10 Sep 2010 05:59:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceiLoveHandles  | Email this | Comments

Seikos E Ink Watch for the Masses

seikoeink.jpg
No stranger to E Ink wristwatches, Seiko finally brings its “active matrix” watch out of concept and onto retail shelves. Unlike previous E Ink watches that can be viewed when looking down on the dial, this watch offers a full 180-degree viewing angle.

Despite its retro look, the “Future Now” EPD watch packs plenty of future tech inside. It utilizes E Ink on an electrophoretic display. Boasting 80,000 pixels, each pixel can display four shades of grey. Solar cells frame the display.

The watch is controlled by radio movement and gets local time from the nearest atomic clock.

While exact pricing is still unknown, it’s expected to be affordable, and not sky-high luxury prices like Seiko’s previous E Ink watches. Seiko says these watches will be on retail shelves by the end of the year.

Seiko’s ‘active matrix’ E Ink watch will be on sale by end of 2010

It’s always good to see a concept, particularly one as appealing as Seiko’s “active matrix” E Ink watch, make it to retail product. The company’s had a thing for E Ink timepieces for a while now, but what sets this new one apart is the supposed 180-degree viewing angle it affords — and, of course, those retro good looks do it no harm either. Then there’s also the radio-controlled movement, which receives its time from the nearest atomic clock, and the solar cells framing that electrophoretic display. All very nice and neat, but the best news is that it might (might!) be priced within reach of regular Joes and Vlads like us. We’ll know soon enough, a retail release is expected by the end of the year.

Seiko’s ‘active matrix’ E Ink watch will be on sale by end of 2010 originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 08 Sep 2010 10:55:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourcea Blog to Read  | Email this | Comments