LG Replaces Android Wear: Adds LTE, GPS and NFC to the Watch Urbane
by Stephen Barrett on February 26, 2015 11:45 AM EST- Posted in
- Wearables
- LG
- LG Watch Urbane
Today LG pre-announced significant additions to their high-end wearable, the LG Watch Urbane, via a new edition called the LG Watch Urbane LTE. Both devices will officially launch at Mobile World Congress next week. From a feature standpoint, the LG Watch Urbane LTE adds more wireless functionality via the inclusion of LTE, VoLTE (not 3G voice), GPS, and NFC.
These additions dramatically expand LG's ability to cover the movement use case of wearables and places the Watch Urbane LTE alongside the Samsung Gear S as the only devices to include cellular functionality. This provides a safety net when making a fitness excursion, as emergency calls are now possible. LG had this use case in mind specifically as they included a single key press to initiate an emergency call. Additionally, the inclusion of NFC enables mobile payments, although LG has not yet provided details on how this works. Finally, LG has dramatically increased the battery size from 410mAH to 700mAH, which will help immensely with powering the LTE radio. I should note this is the largest battery I have seen to date in a wearable.
From an industry perspective, the most interesting part of this announcement is that LG has ditched Android Wear which was used for the non-LTE edition of the Watch Urbane. As Android Wear does not support NFC payments or cellular, this was a necessity to bring the Watch Urbane LTE to market, but it highlights that device makers like LG and Samsung are not waiting for Google to add functionality. Google needs to improve the pace of Android Wear updates if they want to keep their partners using the platform.
LG Watch Urbane LTE | LG Watch Urbane | |
SoC | Qualcomm Snapdragon 400 1.2GHz | Qualcomm Snapdragon 400 1.2GHz |
Memory | 1GB LPDDR3 | 512MB LPDDR3 |
Display | 1.3" plastic OLED (320 x 320, 245ppi) | 1.3" plastic OLED (320 x 320, 245ppi) |
Storage | 4GB eMMC | 4GB eMMC |
Wireless | LTE, NFC, Bluetooth 4.0 | Bluetooth 4.0 |
Ingress protection | IP67 | IP67 |
Battery | 700mAH | 410mAH |
Sensors | Gyro, accelerometer, compass, barometer, heart rate, GPS | Gyro, accelerometer, compass, barometer, heart rate |
I/O | Touch screen, buttons, speaker, microphone | Touch screen, buttons, microphone |
OS | "LG Wearable Platform Operating System" |
Android Wear |
Update: It appears the watch might not run a customized Android distribution but rather something more custom. LG describes it as "LG Wearable Platform Operating System". Other news are reporting this as WebOS derived but nothing has been confirmed from LG. WebOS would be impressive considering we haven't seen a version including VoLTE.
Price and availability remain unknown. Look for additional details as Mobile World Congress 2015 begins next week.
Source: LG Newsroom
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peterfares - Sunday, March 1, 2015 - link
Or maybe juts the much larger base section?sonicmerlin - Sunday, March 1, 2015 - link
I don't think they could manage a 70% capacity increase just by widening the base. Plus the device render looks like it has the same shape as their other watches.Also I have to say this render looks pretty good. Attractive even.
serendip - Sunday, March 1, 2015 - link
Not another proprietary platform that'll exist for one or two devices before being canned. Pebble's strength is it was first to the smartwatch game and has open APIs and a big following of third party developers. Android Wear survives because of Google's backing and the Apple Watch will leverage Apple's existing development and distribution platform.Would app developers learn LG's new language and environment just to target a few thousand units? And what happens when LG kills it for Web OS or Android Wear?
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Best voice GPS Navigation for search short way of your locations and search street view.https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com....