Kisai Polygon LCD Watch
Why wear a watch when our ever-present smartphones provide the same time-telling service? Tokyoflash Japan believes the answer is in the presentation. Their website, which sells high-tech watches from multiple designers, states their goal is to โturn time into art,โ and Kisaiโs Polygon watch does so beautifully. The designer ditches the numeric watch face in favor of geometry by using a series of lit polygons to communicate the hour and 10-minute mark. A single numeral skirting the inside edge of the center hexagon subtly indicates the minute mark and when you put it all together you can gladly reply, โWhy, yes, I do have the time.โ $129.
Qlocktwo W
Try reading the timeโliterally. In place of numerals, Qlocktwo Wโs 35-millimeter-by-35-millimeter display uses a grid of 110 letters to spell out the time. The polished, brushed or black stainless steel case reports the time as we might say it, such as โhalf past sixโ or โten to five.โ What at first appears to be a word search strapped to your wrist also provides the calendar day at a push of the button. Some may find the watch face a little large for their wrists, however, thereโs no denying the font exudes a simplistic confidence that lands somewhere between James Bond and Don Draper. Those who find the watchโs price tagโapproximately $770โa bit unreadable may opt for the hourly wageโfriendly iOS app, which comes in under a dollar.
iโm Watch
The iโm Watch knows the wristwatch canโt beat smartphones, so it joins them. With a version of the Android operating system, iโm Watch offers access to Facebook, Twitter, a music player, phone calls, news and photos. Using the iโm Droid open source OS, iโm Watch will support any app, so the possibilities are limitless. The user interface is cleanโkeeping the apps simple and unclutteredโand smartphone operating systems should take note of the straightforward approach. Rumors suggest that Januaryโs Consumer Electronics Show will see the debut of a new OS version, but until the price drops, the iโm Watch will remain as much of a dream to the average consumer as Dick Tracyโs 2-Way Wrist Radio was in the 1940s. Starting at $399.
