answered
2014-04-12 15:08:21 +0200
I'd certainly not want a watch type of thing. The thought of having anything touch my skin makes me feel the sweet building up beneath it on a hot summer day here in the city. :( I'd leave it at home more often than not.
Wearable could also mean that you clip something onto your clothes (your sleeves, key ring, the inner pocket of a jacket,...) or alternatively onto something you already wear around your wrist right now (which could be anything from your leather wrist cuff to your Hello Kitty watch).
What should it do? The poor display and the lack of proper text input are my main concern. I'd expect it to be a source of information, some type of window that I can move around a scene of multitasking applications. Nothing fancy, just time, RSS-headlines, weather, traffic info, calendar events, mail notifications...
I'd also expect there'd be a mode that circles through the most interesting sources of information which I have previously selected. In this mode, personalisation would be key: Certain items (like time) I would want to be shown for a few moments, then be replaced be the next ones. Others (like mail notifications) I'd prefer to stay on the screen until I tap to confirm I've seen them. For some RSS-feeds, all unread items should be part of the circle. For others, I want to see only items updated during the last 2 hours or so. Etc.
The wearable gadget must act as an audio player, of course. The size of the display may not be ideal for video playback, but still... watching the live stream with news from my local TV station in low quality is better than nothing.
It should also interact with a main phone, but must not depend on it for proper operation. So you'd mute and reject calls (or redirect to the wearable device for awkward social situations), read text messages etc on the wearable device. Applications that run on the phone may also "drop" information to the wearable device that allows me to consume them when the phone's not in reach. Like: An application on the phone informs me in real time about various data from my city's public transport system. No matter where I am, all I really need is departure information from two underground stations. So I select these snippets of information on the phone, "drop" them to the wearable device... and will be informed about those two stations whenever I swipe to the corresponding frame, even if my phone's at home and turned off.
The device should be a versatile remote control and use various channels for that: bluetooth, wifi and yes, infrared.
Why not fix the phone's problems first... :P
roboro ( 2014-04-10 21:28:55 +0200 )editBecause you have to keep research going to be on the edge :) Else you'll end up with suddenly not having any ideas or directions to pursue.
Stskeeps ( 2014-04-11 11:13:48 +0200 )editOr you end up starting new projects and never finishing them
ZogG ( 2014-04-11 14:03:31 +0200 )editCan you explain what exactly sailfish os can provide as unique feature? And what is the difference between it and any other wearables or mobile system except few UI concepts?
ZogG ( 2014-04-11 14:05:22 +0200 )editSo : Marketing people explain us that smartphone must have > 5" screens and stop providing sub 4" (like N9 or 808) high range smartphone because they are too small.... and then want to have us leave it in a pocket (or a bag if it doesn't fit) and interact with it on a 1" display on our arm ? Add to this that we we need two hands (or at least one arm and one hand) to interact with a smartwatch, whereas the sub 4" inch smartphone was designed for one hand... No need to say I can't help you there !
zeta ( 2014-04-12 17:23:30 +0200 )edit