Android Advisor

Samsung Gear S3 Frontier

£349 • samsung.com/uk

- Henry Burrell

The Gear S3 Frontier is the new top of the range smartwatch from Samsung. Has the Korean tech giant done enough to convince people to get even more connected?

Are smartwatch­es cursed, forever to be luxury items? Smartphone­s are a vital tool of modern life. Unable to fully function without one, the Gear S3 could be just another forgettabl­e sidekick.

A year on from the success of the bezel-controlled and undoubtedl­y well designed Gear S2

comes this, the Gear S3 Frontier. It is one version of two new Samsung smartwatch­es unveiled at IFA 2016 in Berlin in September 2016, released with the Gear S3 Classic. Both have exactly the same features (and price) and differ only in design.

But smartwatch sales have taken a dip in the past year. While useful for notificati­ons, their limitation­s become apparent as soon as you take a smartphone out of the equation. Also, one of the main complaints we had about the older Gear S2 was the lack of apps available, meaning it was a glorified notificati­on device, rather than the more useful aspects of products like the Apple Watch. The lack of available apps was a clear disadvanta­ge too.

Design

The Gear S3 Frontier is a design upgrade from the original, sporty-feeling Gear S2. The Gear S2 Classic was closer to what we have now, styled as the Frontier is to look more like an actual watch than a piece of tech. It most succeeds; the build quality is the best we’ve seen on a smartwatch to date, up there with the premium Apple Watch.

The very clever rotating bezel has ridges to help you turn it easier, and watch points for every minute on it. The inner ring of the casing also has five minute integers printed; it’s a good looking face. You can then, of course, choose your own watch face on the circular touchscree­n. Gorilla Glass protects this touchscree­n and you use it to input and select apps and menus, while two buttons on the right of thee watch act as back and home commands. The rear has the

heart rate sensors housed behind glass. It may be problemati­c for some that the Frontier is so masculine in its design – it’s not the daintiest of smartwatch­es for either sex.

If you’re not into the rugged outdoors look with a bit of military styling metal casing thrown in for good measure, it might not be for you. The screen and overall build is larger than last year’s S2, meaning it’ll dwarf small wrists, though a small and large size band is included in the box.

The rotating bezel is very well made and gives a tiny metallic ping on every turn, which is purely down to the materials. It gives it even more of a sturdy, premium feel. However when we wore some jackets with stiffer cuffs, the ridged edges caught and turned the bezel, which was quite annoying, landing us on different screens and in apps. The watch is on the verge of being too big, so we’d recommend trying one on in store first.

That said, it does mean the 1.3in circular screen shows more informatio­n, and the less squinting the better. Overall the watch measures 49x46x12.9mm and ours came with a black rubber strap with raised detailing, but Samsung has many different colours and leather versions to choose from. The rubber band is quite hard to get on and off because it’s so grippy, but it’s a surprising­ly comfortabl­e watch to wear all day given its size.

The watch without strap weights just 62g which is ridiculous­ly light considerin­g its many technologi­cal capabiliti­es, including room for the mic on the right side and speaker on the left. We really liked the design of the Gear S3 Frontier, but fear that Samsung may have reduced its potential market slightly by making a device that is so black and metallic.

Features

The Gear S3 Frontier is the definition of fully loaded. Bar LTE, it has everything (the UK doesn’t get an LTE version, but if you’re in certain regions like the US, then you do!). It connects to any Android smartphone running Android 4.4 or higher and Samsung also recommends a device with at least 1.5GB RAM. It connects to your phone via Bluetooth but also has the ability to piggyback on the Wi-Fi network your phone is connected to if you stray out of Bluetooth range, which is a neat trick.

The 1.3in screen has a stylish, crisp feel to it due to Samsung’s decision to use black as the main background colour. Blacks display especially dark on the 360x360 resolution Super AMOLED display with a 278 pixel per inch density. In real life

that mean it’s very good, and colours of apps, text and icons create a feel the right size of colourful. The software, which we will explore in depth, is Samsung’s own Tizen platform, opting for it as it does over Android Wear.

It’s good also to see the Gear S3 Frontier is IP68 rated for dust and waterproof­ing. So you can wear it in the shower, but you can’t take it swimming. This is great and means you can wear it all around the clock – unless you need to charge the 380mAh battery. You’ll generally have to do this every three days and we think this is good for such a fully featured smartwatch thought battery life will of course decrease if you have Wi-Fi on all the time. It charges on the supplied magnetic cradle and is very quick and easy to use.

Although there’s no LTE in the UK version of the watch, you can make and receive calls directly from your wrist, Star Trek style with the Gear S3. In

real life you probably won’t do this unless you’re on your own, it’s something that’s nerdily really cool and you’ve probably always wanted it to be technologi­cally possible. But now it’s here, it’s a bit gimmicky. It was useful when out on a run with our phone in a pocket, meaning you can quickly answer, or indeed reject, the call. Otherwise, you’ll see the notificati­on and then pick up your phone.

Another feature is NFC, but Samsung is taking an absolute age to release Samsung Pay in the UK. Contactles­s payments with a smartwatch like this using the built-in NFC would be amazing and will work in the US, but us here in the UK are carrying around the tech without being able to use it.

When on said runs you can take advantage of the in built GPS that was missing from the UK version of the Gear S2, and is likely the reason this watch costs £100 more. This allows the watch to track and map your outdoor workout without having

to rely on your smartphone. With the 4GB of on board storage, you can move MP3 files to the watch directly and go out running with tunes, provided you pair with some Bluetooth headphones. Leaving your phone at home is a huge advantage, but you won’t be able to call anyone without it.

What this all boils down to is that the Gear S3 has pretty much everything a smartwatch can have built in, even an altimeter and a barometer. The question is does it all work well, and do you actually need it? All of that can be answered by how well its components work with the software – software that is limited by the simple fact it’s built into a tiny watch.

Software

The Frontier runs Tizen 2.3.2, and is a minor update to the software running on older S2s. The use of the rotating bezel to turn through menus is still borderline genius in its simplicity, and once you’ve customised the various screens to your liking, you’re only a few clicks away from your music player, calendar, email and heart rate. Receive a text and the watch vibrates, popping up with the whole message thread. You can even reply directly using the pleasingly unfiddly on-screen keyboard or using your voice. The software is just about good enough for the latter, but you have to enunciate or it’ll make mistakes.

The real joy of using the watch is how it fades into the background. Like all fully featured rivals its little buzzes and pings will keep you on track with your emails and texts, but you’ll nine times out of ten revert to your phone to deal with them.

By making their best smartwatch to date, Samsung has gone further to highlight it’s about as far as the form factor can go.

Slightly frustratin­g too is the lack of third party apps. Debatably you don’t need any as the S3 comes with text, email, phone, contacts, S Health, Weather, built-in music player, calendar and more that all sync with your phone’s correspond­ing apps. This means you can only compose texts or emails from the watch itself.

The interface is quite uniform, but customisat­ion is possible in the changing of watch faces, many of which are on the device already and hundreds more can be downloaded from the Gear store. They can be as plain or as complicate­d as you like, and being able to choose depending on the occasion is handy. You can set the screen to be always on too, but this is at the sacrifice of battery life.

The only other way to send messages is by interactin­g with notificati­ons from other apps; receive a WhatsApp and you can tap reply, but as there’s no WhatsApp app for the Gear, you can’t compose, only reply. It’s also shame that only Samsung phones support the text and email apps. With any other Android phone, these apps on the watch are unavailabl­e meaning any compositio­n of message is limited to a reply from a notificati­on. The only third party app we downloaded the whole time was Uber. And even then we still didn’t use it instead of on our phone.

S Health works well and the watch monitors your heart rate throughout the day. It is very good at tracking a run or workout, displaying informatio­n clearly and syncing the logs with the app on your

phone. If you want a fitness tracker’s capabiliti­es in a full-on smartwatch, the Gear S3 is the best choice.

But really the best parts of using this watch are as a remote control and notificati­on device. Change track without getting your phone out or turn down the volume. Check how close you are to your step goal by glancing down. Check the weather. Quick nuggets of informatio­n are smartwatch­es’ sweet spot and the Gear S3 Frontier presents all these things as painlessly as possible in a refined hardware shell. It’s one of the best smartwatch­es available, but it doesn’t do anything new or different to products that were out two years ago.

Verdict

The Gear S2 arrived on a deserved wave of hype, but for some reason we aren’t overly excited about

this new Gear S3 Frontier. The only thing it actually adds is GPS, and at a £100 cost it’ll definitely put some people off. The reduced functional­ity when not using a Samsung phone is also a turnoff, despite the software being easier and more intuitive than Android Wear.

The problem isn’t entirely the S3’s fault, it’s in the inherent limitation­s of smartwatch­es. You’ll always need a smartphone to finish the majority of tasks, and added to the fact that this is practicall­y a repackaged Gear S2 means not much new ground has been broken. If you want a smartwatch and can afford to spend £349, this is the one to get. It just isn’t essential.

Specificat­ions

1.3in Circular Super AMOLED (360x360, 278ppi) Full Color Always On Display

Corning Gorilla Glass SR+

Tizen Based Wearable Platform 2.3.2

4GB Internal memory, 768MB RAM

Bluetooth 4.2

Wi-Fi b/g/n

NFC, MST,

A-GPS/Glonass

Accelerome­ter, Gyro, Barometer, HRM, Ambient light

380mAh battery

Wireless charging (WPC Inductive)

IP68 water and dust resistance

Dual core 1GHz

46x49x12.9mm

62g (without band)

Strap 22mm

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia