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A first look at the LG G Watch

David Pierce
is editor-at-large and Vergecast co-host with over a decade of experience covering consumer tech. Previously, at Protocol, The Wall Street Journal, and Wired.

On the third floor of the Moscone Center in San Francisco, CA, Android Wear devices are starting to come out of the woodwork. The latest: the LG G Watch, perhaps the default Google-powered smartwatch for the moment. We’ve had a few minutes to test one out and do everything but put it on our wrists (which was strictly forbidden by a shockingly stern blonde man), and one thing seems already clear: the first batch of Android Wear smartwatches is as good as it is uniform.

The G Watch is an incredibly simple device. Drab, even. It’s just a black square, a screen and very little else. Its 1.65-inch screen dominates the device, and it looks good enough, though not anything special. There’s also a gray rubber strap that’s essentially like a cheaper version of your average watch strap, not the strange clasp-y mechanism on the Gear Live. Once again, the device’s software worked only in “retail mode,” meaning it could do a few things and recognize a few commands but hardly offered the full breadth of the Android Wear experience.

Like the Samsung Gear Live, the LG G Watch is available for pre-order today. It’ll be $229 when it ships July 2nd.


LG G Watch hands-on pictures
LG G Watch hands-on pictures
LG G Watch hands-on pictures
LG G Watch hands-on pictures
LG G Watch hands-on pictures
LG G Watch hands-on pictures
LG G Watch hands-on pictures
LG G Watch hands-on pictures
LG G Watch hands-on pictures
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