If its waterproof - i wouldnt mind that as a motorbike accessory.
When ever i feel my phone go off i have to wonder if its worth stopping to check or not :)
Qualcomm’s Toq smartwatch – something of a vanity project for the company’s display division – will go on sale on 2 December direct from the mobile processor giant’s website. On the day, Android smartphone owners will be able to order a Toq for a whopping $350 (£217). Qualcomm Toq Qualcomm began talking Toq back in …
"Job done. Browse the web etc. with your tethered tablet (or to play Angry Birds / Candy Crush)"
Spoken like someone with no idea how e-ink displays work with frequently updating content. They're great for displaying static "pages" like text, but not for playing games/scrolling/etc..
I think you missed the point. He said he wanted the e-ink display in a small "mostly dumb" phone, with a WiFi hotspot for the "screen intensive" stuff could by outsourced to a tablet or the like. I agree _that_ would be desireable, so I may be mis-reading as well, but I doubt it. Phone for connection. Tablet for webgrazing and Angry-birds. Or, in my case laptop for "research" (webgrazing) and a pile of xterms running ssh.
Mobile phones are in the 'pocket watch' phase and are headed inexorably to a 'ubiquitous' phase. It might skip the wrist, but I doubt it.
I would like a wrist device with a wide** touch-screen display or similar, moderate smarts and the ability to connect to a local server like a traditional phone or notebook. I expect that the teenagers that drove adoption of mobile phones in recent years will be all over this once it becomes a fashion item as well as a useful tool.
The current showstopper for a lot of this stuff may be battery life. Having Bluetooth activated all the time has a noticeable impact on battery life here.
**1440x900 or something like that. The current 4:3 screens just make me scratch my head.
A weather FOREcast implies that it's predicting what the weather will be like in the future.
Quite handy if you want to know if you need to wear a coat etc.
That said, the larger display of a phone or computer allows one to see if it's going to rain all day, or just at the times when one will be walking outside, a bit more useful than a single icon on a watch.