

- #Android wear sleep monitor update
- #Android wear sleep monitor upgrade
- #Android wear sleep monitor full
- #Android wear sleep monitor android
The Galaxy Watch 5 has a couple of new watch faces, and all of them look great. I was able to play back Spotify from the speaker too with a Premium subscription when I downloaded songs to the watch. I only tested the Bluetooth and GPS edition, rather than the LTE version, so your phone needs to be within range to make and receive calls on the watch.Īlthough it's a niche feature, you can play music from the speaker without Bluetooth headphones connected, as long as the music files are stored on the watch. Phone calls I've taken on the watch sound clean and crisp, with the microphone picking up my voice well for callers on the other end. The dictation-to-text feature is also a little better at accurately translating my Australian accent.
#Android wear sleep monitor full
The full keyboard is easy to swipe on when typing messages, and that even pertains to the smaller 40mm model. I've noticed some improvements to typing on the watch. That said, with the exception of the ECG, my experience using the watch on both a Galaxy phone and a Google Pixel phone felt very similar.

#Android wear sleep monitor android
So the Galaxy Watch 5 is an Android watch, but it still feels most closely aligned with Samsung devices. It's not yet compatible with the Fitbit app - Google bought Fitbit last year and some of its features are expected to eventually arrive in Wear OS. You're also tied to Samsung Health for the most part, though you can sync to Google Fit with a little effort. They both run Samsung's One UI on top of Wear OS 3, with Google apps like YouTube Music, Google Maps, Google Wallet and the Google Assistant available.īut even though there are a suite of Google and third-party apps through the Play Store, the Galaxy Watch 5 series needs a Galaxy phone to use health sensors like the ECG. Wear OS feels great, but similar to last yearĭesign-wise, there's really very little that separates the new watches from the Watch 4 series. The Galaxy Watch 5 (left) and Pro (right). The Watch 5 series is responsive and loads apps quickly. But like CNET's Scott Stein wrote last year in his review of the Galaxy Watch 4, performance was never really an issue anyway. The Galaxy Watch 5 uses the same processor as last year's watches, rather than the new Qualcomm Snapdragon W5 chip. Hopefully Samsung is saving that for the Galaxy Watch 6. But I'd rather see the space occupied by the new touch bezel be used to extend the size of the screen instead. It has haptic feedback so it "clicks" when you move your finger around the edge. Funnily enough, the older Galaxy Watch 4 Classic is still available to buy, but it actually costs more than this year's model on Samsung's website at the time of writing. Last year's Galaxy Watch 4 model worked the same way, but it also came in a Classic edition with that physical bezel. Move your finger on the edge of the display to use the touch bezel. It sits on top of the touchscreen itself, and the watch also has two physical buttons on the side. Instead, the Galaxy Watch 5 uses a software-based touch bezel that requires moving your finger around the edge of the display to navigate. The biggest physical change is the absence of a physical rotating bezel, a stalwart of the Galaxy Watch line ever since the original model came out in 2018. The software is largely unchanged from last year and, perhaps more importantly, you lose the fan-favorite rotating bezel present on the Galaxy Watch 4 Classic.
#Android wear sleep monitor upgrade
If you own a Galaxy Watch 4, there's no compelling reason to upgrade unless you want a bigger watch in the Galaxy Watch 5 Pro, or slightly better battery life from both new variants. Apart from the construction, sports modes and battery capacity, they share most of the same features. This year's watch comes in two variants: the $279 Galaxy Watch 5 and a slightly larger, more rugged $450 Galaxy Watch 5 Pro, which I have also reviewed.
#Android wear sleep monitor update
It looks and feels much the same as last year's Galaxy Watch 4, so it's definitely an iterative update rather than a major overhaul. It has a bigger battery compared to last year's models, a more durable design and a new temperature sensor - but you can't use it yet. Samsung's Galaxy Watch 5 doesn't break new ground in the world of smartwatches, but it is the best Android watch you can buy right now.
