Kisai Polygon LCD Watch

Tokyoflash.com

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 โ€œturn time into art,โ€ and Kisaiโ€™s 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, โ€œWhy, yes, I do have the time.โ€ $129.

Qlocktwo W

Qlocktwo.com

Try reading the timeโ€”literally. In place of numerals, Qlocktwo Wโ€™s 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 โ€œhalf past sixโ€ or โ€œten 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, thereโ€™s no denying the font exudes a simplistic confidence that lands somewhere between James Bond and Don Draper. Those who find the watchโ€™s price tagโ€”approximately $770โ€”a bit unreadable may opt for the hourly wageโ€“friendly iOS app, which comes in under a dollar.

iโ€™m Watch

imwatch.it/us-en

The iโ€™m Watch knows the wristwatch canโ€™t beat smartphones, so it joins them. With a version of the Android operating system, iโ€™m Watch offers access to Facebook, Twitter, a music player, phone calls, news and photos. Using the iโ€™m Droid open source OS, iโ€™m Watch will support any app, so the possibilities are limitless. The user interface is cleanโ€”keeping the apps simple and unclutteredโ€”and smartphone operating systems should take note of the straightforward approach. Rumors suggest that Januaryโ€™s Consumer Electronics Show will see the debut of a new OS version, but until the price drops, the iโ€™m Watch will remain as much of a dream to the average consumer as Dick Tracyโ€™s 2-Way Wrist Radio was in the 1940s. Starting at $399.

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