Introduction and display
When PH Technical Labs (PHTL) launched a Kickstarter for its $179 (£116, AU$230) Hot Watch back on July 31, 2013, it championed individuality through revolutionary innovation. This was a smartwatch that would transform your hand into a handset phone with palm-based calling.
Eager investors would eventually quadruple the initial $150,000 goal for the Kickstarter, thus driving development into full swing. It was believed that the Hot Watch would become so hot it would dethrone the popular Pebble, destroying multiple aspects of smartphone dependency.
The "most complete smartwatch ever created" would not only turn your hand into a phone, but respond to gesture controls (a feature most smart watches lacked), and voice recognition. Using only your hand, you could answer incoming calls, hang them up, illuminate a backlight; your voice could command both Siri and Google, all while reading notifications in the shower.
The Hot Watch first shipped in December 2013, and comes in four different styles:
Basic ($179, £116, AU$230), Edge (about $208, £134, AU$266), Classic (about $208, £134, AU$266) and lastly, the Curve (about $236, £153, AU$303).
I got my hands on the Hot Watch Edge, the more professionally styled edition of the bunch.
Display
Hot Watch has an always-on black and white E-paper display (made by Sharp), which gives off a high contrast presentation of clarity. Like its rival, Pebble, the Hot Watch has a 1.26-inch (144 x 168 pixels) screen. Unlike Pebble, however, the Hot Watch has a touchscreen and bears only one button.
The LCD graphics face reminds me of electronic organizers or Tomogachis from the '90s. The retro style might not suit more modern tastes for colorful displays, like the Android Wear bunch. Though colored displays are a standard, Hot Watch justifies its lack of rainbow hues for efficiency.
Hot Watch features anti-reflective Gorilla Glass 3, claiming to (but failing in) reflecting an intrusive sun. Despite this, the crisp visuals of bold, black digital ink seeps in deeply enough to where it's noticeable in virtually any light.
LED illumination does a standard wrist watch lighting job, enough to get the job done. A bigger disappointment was the promise of smudge-proof touch glass. The Hot Watch is the king of smudge, enough to where you can feel it.
Displayed text and numbers are not only legible, but aesthetically pleasing to the eye. It's not like the gorgeous AMOLED display like you'll find on the Samsung Gear Fit, but it's enough to get the job done without murdering your pupils.
Design, interface and performance
The Hot Watch Edge's design is a marriage between sheer sleek and dumbfounded doofus. Its minimalistic, rectangular metal watch face is complemented by a black rubber wristband and steel buckle. The style speaks professional without obnoxiously screaming tech.
The Hot Watch has only one physical button used for powering the device on and off and enabling the LED light. It's outfitted with rubber and deeply embedded on the right hand side of the hardware component. Firm pressing is in order.
Wrapped on the wrist, the Hot Watch's band titillates the skin with a smooth rubbery velvet - it's comfortable. Adjusting for the "right fit" may take a few attempts, since the strap's end takes a little force when passing through the two resisting latex loops. Rubber on rubber lacks ease.
Don't pull the band too much; the moderately durable rubber material isn't elastic enough to be equipped via tug-of-war. You'll run the risk of white stretch marks bruising its ebony hue.
The actual metal hardware component of the Hot Watch Edge is thin, measuring only 8mm thick. It weighs less than a standard 6 oz. titanium dress watch but a little more than a 0.7 oz. plastic Casio. It's a nice size without an obvious presence when actively worn.
As for that dash of doofus? Below the band's buckle is the Hot Watch's little stubby protruding directional microphone/speaker. Adjacent to the noisy stub is the indented and exposed metallic face of the power input you connect the USB charger to.
Once worn, the fitted strap does a good job visually hiding the Hot Watch's blemishes. Unless you're bending your wrist forward, the microphone speaker won't poke you.
It wouldn't be tech if it weren't somewhat awkward.
Interface
To ensure the least amount of soul-crushing frustration and piping blood lust, you'll want to get as familiarized with the Hot Watch interface as possible. You begin by opening up a user manual made for ants:
Too small? Here's the incomplete online PDF version.
After downloading the dedicated Hot Watch app on the App Store (which has yet to receive a proper iOS 8 update), and syncing via Bluetooth, I assumed takeoff.
The Hot Watch divides its sser screens into two categories: "Time and Information" screens and "Advanced Function" screens. The former is divided into 5 x 5 sections that can be accessed through horizontal swipes. Navigation isn't too slow, but big fingers and small touch screens train you for gentler touches after constant misses.
The default screen displays an analog style watch face with the day, month and year. You can change the clock face style by swiping upwards, accessing a catalog ranging from avant garde to more classical looks.
Swiping right navigates you to digital clock faces that feel way more visually appropriate for the Hot Watch's nature. These too also had varying designs accessible through upward swipes.
Swiping right again will land you in "Information Screens." This is the Hot Watch's push navigation menu for weather updates, meetings, walking distance, SMS texts and social media notifications, stocks, etc. Sadly, my Hot Watch never managed to bring me any good news even after setting it up.
The last two menu screens hold Native Apps (games like tic-tac-toe and a Breakout clone) and something called "Custom Phone Apps;" mysterious blank menu screens presumably for custom app developments.
To add on another layer of complexity, the Hot Watch's navigation further expands in the last pages of its instruction manual, detailing a whole other set of menus titled "Advanced Screen Functions." (But wait, didn't the manual call them "Advanced Function Screens?") These are only accessible through corresponding letter traces on the Hot Watch's buggy touchscreen.
"Advanced Screen Functions" include:
- A phone menu that holds your recent calls, favorites, contacts and has a dial screen.
- A message menu for sending emails, Facebook messages, texts and tweets.
- An applications menu with a calculator, calendar, voice response, pedometer, music control and note taker.
- A clock menu with two alarms, time and date settings, calendar, stopwatch and timer.
- A Bluetooth Menu for beeping your misplaced phone and connecting to Bluetooth.
- A settings menu for adjusting vibration strengths, power level, font style, etc.
Hot Watch goes on to call these abominations "Hot Gestures", but more on that later.
Performance
The Hot Watch operates with an energy efficient Cortex M3 processor and a 6-axis accelerometer and gyroscope, two crucial computing systems that brought to life the Hot Watch's biggest selling point and promise: gesture controls.
The Hot Watch classifies its gestures into two groups: call gestures and non-call gestures. Call gestures are activated and usable while receiving an incoming call, or when you're in one. Non-call gestures are used for simple operations outside of phone calls, like turning on the backlight, invoking voice response, and pulling up your favorite contacts.
After switching your phone's primary speaker to the Hot Watch, you'll be ready to take phone calls at the flick of your wrist. You can always stick with your phone's audio speaker while using the Hot Watch, but doing so will make it harder for anyone to hear you if you're not speaking into your phone.
When you receive a call, the Hot Watch's microphone/speaker emits a low pitched ringtone with the interface switching over to the call screen. The ring is a calmer and less frenzied tone than blaring smartphones, and can be adjusted for volume via the touch screen.
Then comes the best part about the Hot Watch.
After a few hurried cusping hand gestures to my ear, it picked up. The Hot Watch's speaker doesn't have the clearest audio, but I didn't care - I just used my hand as a phone. The cherry on top is hanging up through a wave. In due time, my sporadic waving became more elegant.
I can't imagine how well the Hot Watch would do if it became a simple and cheaper alternative to phone calls without all the bloat, because from here on out, we're going downhill.
Non-call gestures are just as alluring and fun to pull off, even after countless tiring efforts that wind up making you look like Frankenstein's monster who can't handle his liquor.
To initiate them, you have to do two quick twists of the wrist. Imagine aggressively jingling an invisible door knob similar to when your parents suspected you of adolescent monkey business.
Assuming the Hot Watch interpreted you correctly, it'll start quickly listening for non-call gesture follow ups. The easiest one is switching on the backlight through a horizontal watch reading position - essentially, a third twist.
I managed to invoke the voice response once by accident. It's the same gesture for the backlight, but slower, and followed by, as the manual so beautifully puts it: "a slow tap of the hand top to bottom 2 times." Where now?
Bringing up contact favorites through gestures will remain a mystery to me. "Shake hand and move hand to ear when there is no incoming call" doesn't seem to work as well as the manual states. Sometimes its better to manually navigate to the actual screen.
Remember "Hot Gestures"? It's an unnecessary third term possibly formulated by the knee jerk reaction of the Hot Watch's marketing team that has nothing to do with cool hand movements.
Hot Gestures are a set of 11 defiled alphabet characters used as "touch shortcuts" you need to memorize in order to access the Hot Watch's "Advanced Screen Functions." Without them, there is no way to lock (or unlock) the sensitive touch screen, call people, change your settings, adjust the date and time, or access the Bluetooth menu.
The Hot Watch truly shines in defectiveness when it struggles to understand what you mean by tracing 'U' 700 times on its touch screen; a Hot Gesture that unlocks your smartwatch so you can actually use it. Memorizing Hot Gestures aren't so much an issue as they are a highlighting indicator of the Hot Watch's unresponsive touch screen.
For gentlemen of the fatter, rugged, and more oily finger such as myself, the touchscreen is your antithesis. Patience gets tested when the touch screen doesn't do what you want it to. The dial pad becomes a game of intense concentration, and one minor slip on the contact list and you're dialing an ex. To rub absolute salt in your wounds, it doesn't help that the date and time always reset when the watch shuts down, forcing you to manually fix it in the narrow and unforgiving Clock Menu settings.
Both the gesture controls and using your hand as a phone seem to be the only apparent reason the Hot Watch manages to survive today. It's certainly running its course as other smartwatches wake up and smelling the bacon.
Battery life, apps and fitness
The Hot Watch will last about three days on standby. It isn't as strong as the week-long Pebble (the best smartwatch battery life to date), but instead fixates on juggling a cornucopia of features and input methods that zaps it of its power.
I put the Hot Watch under the same regimen as my Casio digital wristwatch, wearing it 24-hours a day and only taking it off when I slept. I kept my iPhone 6 on me with Bluetooth always on, and used the Hot Watch for gesture controlled calls and time viewing.
You can expect a full day of battery life under moderate use.
The Hot Watch includes a magnetic USB charger. Successfully bumping uglies with it and the exposed power input will vibrate the watch, and a little charging icon will appear on screen.
PHTL claims it takes only 30 minutes for a full charge, meaning they're 50% right. Sometimes it took about an hour, with the occasional check up to see whether it was charging properly. The charger can unplug even from smallest gusts of a butterfly's wings.
App
If you're running iOS 8 (currently on 72% of all Apple devices), you're out of luck: The Hot Watch's smartphone app is practically incompatible.
Once launched, you'll be stuck on the grey Hot Watch logo screen. A prompt will occasionally pop up telling you to pair your iPhone and Hot Watch via a Bluetooth connection even if you already have.
To assure myself I wasn't losing my mind, I relaunched the app about 20 times, restarted my iPhone 6 twice, and even waited a full hour on the default screen until finally losing my mind - for real this time.
The Hot Watch allows for open source programming, so you can make your own apps, but why bother?
Fitness
Opposed to other wearables which amass workout data, tailoring it into informative illustrations, the Hot Watch features a very basic pedometer. The fitness menu displays the total number of steps you took as well as your distance traveled, and then resets after 90 seconds.
Seriously.
Verdict
Ask yourself: If iOS 8 released six months ago, and the Hot Watch has yet to receive a compatible firmware update in order to fully work, is it worth buying? Is the $208 (about £134, AU$266) price for the Hot Watch Edge worth the style and limited gesture control? A reviewer never wants to write that the reader should find a better product.
We liked
If "the suit makes the man," then wearables transform him.
Answering phone calls through a hand gesture and speaking into my palm was pretty cool. In public, it evokes a feeling of momentary badass espionage, using cutting edge tech that will turn heads. Don't mind me waving to hang up, I know what I am doing. (It never gets old.)
It wasn't just about feeling cool, but being lazy. I know every ring and jingle my iPhone emits isn't worthy enough to wrestle out and unsheath from my skinny jeans' constricting pockets. Glancing at push notifications was laborless, saving valuable seconds.
Water resistant technology is appreciated. It's nice to shower with hardware knowing that it'll still work after you dry off. The harmony of the elements and tech is comforting.
We disliked
I can only speak on behalf of using the Hot Watch with iOS 8, so I can't imagine how different the experience might be using Android 4.2 or iOS 7 and below. The latest major Hot Watch over-the-air-firmware update on February 16 did nothing to fix ongoing issues.
Maybe I am ungrateful, but an unresponsive touch screen (one where you keep repeating the same gestures over and over again) quickly goes from annoying to disheartening. Endless trial and error is the only way to get the watch to function, but should never be expected of anyone.
I still stare at the Hot Watch's frozen app screen, knowing behind those incompatible doors lies a hidden treasure full of adornments meant to enhance the Hot Watch experience.
I won't talk about the $249 (£150, AU$268) price tag.
Final verdict
The Hot Watch could have been everything I've ever asked for had it actually worked. Instead, it resurrected my childlike whimsy only to sucker punch it 10 feet deep in its grave.
This isn't the smartwatch to buy.
My reasoning comes from the practical approach of placing myself in the position of the average tech savvy consumer while thoroughly reviewing the ins and outs of a product that collapsed on itself. The Hot Watch tested me, and it will test you, and you'll stop believing. Why?
Previous hands on reviews showcased a fully functioning Hot Watch that reacted like a pro before, but since then, OSes upgraded while the Hot Watch lagged behind.
I can't help but ask myself if PHTL is aware of its own blunders or simply allows them. The latter answer gains weight when taking into account an apparent negligence.
Countless complaints from users on both the Hot Watch Facebook page and YouTube videos; an incomplete online instruction manual; the dire need for an updated app and firmware compatible with iOS 8; and even the possibility of the Hot Watch site being hacked, according to Google searches. There are way too many factors to measure.
If you have to get your hands on a smartwatch, look into the $249 (£189, AU$299) Sony Smartwatch 3 (which is like a computer on the wrist). Wait two months, and you'll not only be able to get an Apple Watch, but witness how it influences the course of the entire market
from TechRadar: Technology reviews http://ift.tt/1JIninj
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