Prototype watch works with smartphones

Most smartphone users have done it at least once: scramble to silence a ringing phone hidden deep in a jacket pocket or bag. Casio has developed a prototype system that can mute a phone with a couple of taps to a wristwatch.

The prototype watch works with handsets armed with Bluetooth Low Power technology and a compatible app and is slated to be commercialized at the end of the year. It’s designed to alert a user to things like incoming e-mail or calls to their cell phone.

If a phone is in a bag or pocket, the alerts would allow the watch wearer to find out who the call or message is from, without scrambling for the phone. Or, in the case of an incoming call, quiet the phone by tapping the watch twice.

Information flows both ways. With the push of a button, the watch can request the current time from the cell phone and update itself. This could be especially useful when traveling, because cell phones generally take local time from the mobile network, and automatically adjust to time zone changes.

The Casio prototype, which was demonstrated in Tokyo, can also help find a lost cell phone. Providing it’s within the technology’s range of several meters, the watch can make the phone sound an alarm so it’s easier to find.

The system is based on Bluetooth Low Power, a new version of the wireless technology that uses much less power than current Bluetooth. Watches running the system that stay connected to a phone 12 hours a day and should be able to run 2 years before needing a battery replacement.

Casio plans to open the communications standard to application makers to encourage its adoption in smartphones and other devices.

It sees additional potential uses, such as using the watch display for information from a GPS device or sports heartbeat monitor.

A commercial watch featuring the technology should be available around the end of 2011 or in early 2012. That’s about the same time as other Bluetooth Low Power devices should be hitting the market.

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Jim Love, Chief Content Officer, IT World Canada

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