. Military Space News .
TIME AND SPACE
Smartphones set to keep wristwatches timely

by Staff Writers
Basel, Switzerland (AFP) March 24, 2011
With the younger generation opting to use their smartphones to tell time, the watch-making industry is being forced to get smart and high-tech to recapture consumers.

On show at the industry's biggest watch and jewellery fair Baselworld this year are not only diamond-encrusted mechanical watches with complex movements, but an increasing number of timepieces that combine with the smartphone.

Some watchmakers unveiled luxury phones that incorporate mechanical watches, others were featuring watches with touchscreens. Japanese digital watchmaker Casio premiered watches that are able to communicate with smartphones.

"Many young people don't wear watches anymore these days. They use their mobile phones to tell time," Fabrice Gonet, designer from Slyde Watch SA, told AFP.

Gonet and his business partners decided to create an electronic wristwatch with a touchscreen, which "lets people download photos, personalise their watch face," although it does not have the telephone function.

"We thought of making this watch to recreate the link between horlogery and young people," he explained.

Asked if Apple could be a potential competitor, Gonet said that his company has taken out a patent for a virtual mechanic movement.

"The first thing we did was a feasibility study, and we found that there was no patents for this. It was surprising but it convinced us to go into it," he added.

His company is not the only one tapping the smartphone market.

Ulysse Nardin, a Swiss luxury watchmaker, launched what it claimed is "the world's first luxury hybrid smartphone," integrating a mechanical watch rotor into the mobile phone.

The automatic rotor also creates energy to provide additional power to the phone.

Bobby Yampolsky, co-founder of UN Cells which make the phones for Ulysse Nardin, admitted that it is insufficient to act as the sole power supply for the phone.

"If you wind it for four, five minutes you can make about a 30 second phonecall or a few texts," Yampolsky told AFP.

Nevertheless Yampolsky believes that such hybrid phones are the way forward.

"I feel this is the future. The watch world is over 300 years old. Cellphones are 30 years old. Before cellphones, watches were mobile technology. this is now mobile technology," he said, holding up the phone, each of which costs between $12,800 and $130,000.

Mobile phones are "never going to take over completely, but it's going to take up a huge part of the marketplace," he added.

"The philosophy for us when we made this phone is, we asked ourselves, what do men have as a status symbol? We have our watches and we have our cars.

"This is basically the Ferrari that you can bring into a restaurant and put on the dining table," said Yampolsky.

But Casio, a long-term player in the watch industry that championed the quartz technology which almost brought about the demise of the mechanical watch, believes that there is still a place for the wristwatch.

This year, it introduced a watch that communicates with the mobile phone.

Casio's managing director Hiroshi Nakamura explained that if the mobile phone rings during a meeting, a tap of the watch would stop the ringing.

Likewise, an email arriving on a smartphone would also prompt a message on the wristwatch that a mail has been received.

"You don't always keep a mobile phone in your hands, you'll put it in your bag. So it's easier when you're receiving a call to just tap on the watch," Nakamura told AFP.

"We don't think that the iphone will take the place of a watch. We see more possibilities for the watch," he added.

"If you have a bluetooth watch and a smartphone then you don't have to adjust the time when you're travelling," he noted.

Casio's latest watch will be available by the end of the year, with a launch due in the domestic market before broadening to other markets.



Share This Article With Planet Earth
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit
YahooMyWebYahooMyWeb GoogleGoogle FacebookFacebook



Related Links
Understanding Time and Space



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


TIME AND SPACE
Large Hadron Collider Could Be World'S First Time Machine
Nashville TN (SPX) Mar 21, 2011
If the latest theory of Tom Weiler and Chui Man Ho is right, the Large Hadron Collider - the world's largest atom smasher that started regular operation last year - could be the first machine capable of causing matter to travel backwards in time. "Our theory is a long shot," admitted Weiler, who is a physics professor at Vanderbilt University, "but it doesn't violate any laws of physics or ... read more







TIME AND SPACE
Israel to deploy 'Iron Dome' anti-rocket system

Israel deploys 'Iron Dome' anti-rocket system

US Welcomes Mutually Reinforcing Missile Defense Cooperation With Russia

Satellites track complete missile flight

TIME AND SPACE
Rocket slams into Israel city as Gaza violence spirals

Taiwan missile test flops again

Russia to double missile production from 2013: Putin

China aims new missile at Taiwan: intelligence chief

TIME AND SPACE
Northrop Grumman Ships First Broad Area Maritime Surveillance Fuselage

Dassault, BAE press ahead with drone plan

Mexico defends decision to use US drones in drug war

Death toll up to 24 in NW Pakistan drone strike: officials

TIME AND SPACE
Raytheon BBN Technologies To Protect Internet Comms For Military Abroad

Gilat Announces New Military Modem For Robust Tactical Satcom-On-The-Move

Advanced Emulation Accelerates Deployment Of Military Network Technologies

Tactical Communications Group Completes Deployment Of Ground Support Systems

TIME AND SPACE
Ballistic helmet offers tougher shield

Qatar eyes three more AW139 choppers

Four charged in plot to export jet engines to Iran

PEO Ammo Picks Up 155mm Lightweight Howitzer Program

TIME AND SPACE
Russia To Revamp Air Defense With S-400, Pantsir-S Systems

Typhoon's Libya debut seen as sales boost

Elbit And IAI Establish Joint Company

Iranian on trial in Nigeria lacked arms licence: statement

TIME AND SPACE
Crucial EU summit split on Libya, upset by Portugal

China extends reach in S.Asia with Nepal aid deal

Putin's animal antics questioned in Russia

Obama, Rousseff take up security concerns

TIME AND SPACE
Scientists Build World's First Anti-Laser

Yale scientists build 'anti-laser'

'Air laser' could find bombs at a distance

ONR Achieves Milestone In Free Electron Laser Program


The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2010 - SpaceDaily. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement