News
Exactly how do you talk on a wrist-phone?
by Guy Kewney | posted on 14 August 2003
The excitement about the new Chinese wrist-phone seems to be based on the idea that it's a "first" which, of course, it isn't. The IXI-Mobile design which Seiko announced earlier this year was not only first, but rather smarter.

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For the rest of us, it's rather tricker!
There are three solutions. There's the Seiko, which uses the wrist module as an alert and as a display, and provides simple control for accepting and terminating calls. A Bluetooth headset deals with the audio, and a belt-mounted personal mobile gateway does the GSM wireless work.
The other famous wrist-watch phone is the Japanese model, the Wristomo, was announced by NTT DoCoMo in March this year. To talk on that one, you take it off, opening up the wrist-clip to make it look like a reasonably neat phone. The buttons on the inside of the band are, presumably, a minor discomfort for the tough-guy nerds who wear it.
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The Chinese announcement won't be seen in Europe; it's designed to work on the CDMA standard, found mostly in North America.
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"A wired earpiece is worn on the finger like a ring. To listen to the call, the ring is held up to the ear. However, a more conventional wireless infrared earphone or wired earpiece is also available." More pictures (on a Chinese language Web site) make it clear that it looks even worse than it sounds.
As if there weren't enough to fiddle with on this thing, it apparently includes a camera too.
Back to Inspector Gadget. These things will never work. And at over $1,000 in price, will anybody except gadget-mad Japanese nerds ever want to try?
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