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The Android Wear Book 2015 (An exciting new technology that you definitely have to think serious to have)


If you want more about what is about smartwatches or if you are interested on buying new one but dont know witch model, brand is suitable for you, this is definitely the book can help you to decide or incite you to merge inside the smartwatch arena.

In an age of smart phones, tablets and computers that are too intelligent for their own good it seems strange that smartwatch technology is only now becoming a reality. We’ve imagined it for decades, but if you have ever fancied feeling like James Bond, now is your time. One major asset of Android Wear, is its ability to measure your health and fitness, helping to keep track of your improvements, your daily steps and your heart rate. It can even help you improve your sleeping patterns. Beyond that, you can use your watch to answer your phone calls, message your friends and even play the occasional game. Like all other Android devices, Wear smartwatches are completely hackable, allowing you to create ROMs and enter into a whole new world of freedom inside your device. Read on to get started and utilise your Android Wear today



Dream of the future
Since the inception of science fiction and secret-agent media, there’s been one type of technology throughout the eras and across mediums that has always been used – communicator watches. Someone, invariably our heroic protagonist, lifts a watch to their face when no one is looking and talks to someone on the other side of a phone or their own snazzy watch for information or support.

They’re cool. They’ve always been cool. From Dick Tracy’s two-way radio watch from the Forties to Billy the blue Power Ranger’s wrist communicators in the Nineties, the idea has always captured the hearts of kids and adults alike. When we entered the age of smartphones, our childhood dreams of watches that we could talk through seemed just around the corner. With all the power our magic pocket boxes had, couldn’t we make a magic wrist box that could do the same?



We were right! From 2010, we started to see phone-connected smartwatches. The Sony LiveView was one of the first, but limited to texts and emails with no way to talk through your wrist. Same with the original Pebble and the other smartwatches that came after it. Unfortunately, phone watches seemed like something that would stay in our imaginations for the time being.






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