Found via Adewale on Google+ of all places..
Watered-down smartphone apps are spreading like weeds on Google’s new wearable platform. If you want an example of everything wrong with smartwatch apps right now, just look at all the Android Wear calculators.
Since I got the pebble smart watch, I have been asked again and again why not get a Android Wear? For me besides the questionable battery life and overkill on screen size, I also haven’t seen much which makes me want one. Yes Google Now is compelling but not enough to fork out serious money.
However the questionable app question does apply across the board. There are some very questionable apps on the pebble too. They can do with looking at the recommend developer list.
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Does the app provide a useful service in specific situations where taking out a phone is impractical?
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Does the watch show users something important that they’d miss if they didn’t take out their phones in time?
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Does the watch app save significant time without sacrificing significant functionality?
These are pretty good points… And some of the examples make sense.
Delta’sAndroid appis another example of a wearable app done right. If you check into a flight on your phone, the watch automatically provides up to date gate information right on your wrist (question two) and presents your boarding pass to use at the gate (question three).
Similarly,Allthecooks’ Android Wear functionscan save time by showing recipe instructions on your wrist. Having those instructions follow you around the kitchen makes a lot more sense than having to constantly look back to your phone or tablet for reference.
The pebble has little to no input but I have already seen apps which try and input data via a bluetooth back channel from a bluetooth headset via the phone. For goodness sake, leave it alone!
The pebble is great for notifications and to be honest I wouldn’t want to see it used for much more. Getting developers to accept its limits should be easier than Android wear but you know what people are like, push and push.
As Adewale says…
The future isn’t about trying to do everything with one device – it is about finding therightdevices to do thingsyouwant to do, and to do them in thebest possible way. Forcing an app onto a form factor it is ill suited for does injustice to both you, the concept of the app, the platform, and worst of all – your users.
Couldn’t agree more…