LG Watch Urbane review: big, shiny, expensive

LG Watch Urbane review: big, shiny, expensive

Hi, this is Wayne again with a topic “LG Watch Urbane review: big, shiny, expensive”.
There’S a new version of Android wear that does a bunch of clever things, but thankfully doesn’t over complicate the watch. It’S actually pretty good, but right now it’s only available on one watch. The LG watch urbane this thing right here and yeah. It’S huge. The urbane is slightly bigger than last year’s G watch are with basically the same specs, it’s way bigger than the Apple watch, it’s shiny and silver.

And to me it looks like a cheap watch, pretending to be an expensive watch, but at $ 349 it is not a cheap watch. Some people like the style, but I am NOT one of them and if you have small wrists forget it, the urbane has a round face and an always-on OLED screen and it does the usual Android SmartWatch things. You’D expect it to it easily lasts a full day. It accepts spoken commands. It plays music over Bluetooth for your workouts.

It shows you, your notifications and Google. Now cards. Android wear is the same on all the watches it’s on, and so it’s the same here except that right now the urbane is the only watch running the newest version of Android, so it does a few new things.

Google isn’t sitting still now that the Apple watch is here. You could say that these new features are the sort of thing any wearable needs, but you can also kind of see how some of them are designed to match apples features. It gives you faster access to apps, either by tapping the watch face or holding down the side button. Those apps are getting better too. You can start a run or check your heart rate. You can record audio and then shop for Gatorade on Amazon.

You know for the next run. It also gives you faster access to a list of recent contacts by swiping over from the main menu. It puts your favorites and your most contacted people there. But since this is a Google product and Google is terrible at contacts, you’re gon na see duplicates it lets apps run on the ambient screen. So you don’t have to activate the watch to see them, but only a few apps support this. For now, like Google keep, but we should see maps and more apps support it soon. It adds Wi-Fi support. So your notifications and voice commands sync over the cloud, even if you’re not on the same Wi-Fi network as your phone, which is really impressive, but the new feature, that’s the most fun is that it lets you draw emoji when you send a text message. You literally draw the emoji you want to send on the screen and then Google guesses what it is and gives you a list of options to choose from. I I send a lot of poop emoji anyway. That’S about it did experience some weird crashes and slowdowns, but hopefully those will get addressed soon. Overall, it is a really nice update for Android, where it keeps things simpler than the Apple watch, but it moves Android, wear beyond just being a watch with Google.

LG Watch Urbane review: big, shiny, expensive

Now Google says that the update should be coming to every Android wear watch soon, but for the moment you really have to like big kind of ostentatious watches to get it because it’s only on the LG watch urbane, which is big and ostentatious .