Slashdot Mirror


Citizen/IBM To Make A Linux Watch

backtick writes: " Yup, they're making the Watchpad. 'Besides telling time, the WatchPad comes with a calendar-scheduling application, a pager-like application for sending and receiving short messages, and a Bluetooth chip for wireless communication with notebooks, handheld computers and cell phones'" If they'll make a watch that runs Linux and takes pictures like Casio's camera watch, I might just switch back to a digital. Gerdts points out that the watch's battery life is either up to six hours, or only six hours, depending on how you look at it.

5 of 279 comments (clear)

  1. Cool Iinux devices.. by ldopa1 · · Score: 2, Informative

    Linux Devices has the prototype of this watch on their cool embedded linux devices list.

    You can check out the link here..

    **Karma Killing Whine Alert**

    BTW: I reported on this three days ago, and the article was rejected.

    **End of Karma Killing Whine Alert**

    --
    The Dopester
    "Yes, I'm a Karma Whore, but I'm doing it to pay my way through school."
  2. Battery Life by Alien54 · · Score: 5, Informative
    By tinkering with Linux, IBM has reduced the amount of memory required to run the OS. In turn, this has helped increase the battery life to six hours. IBM has predicted all-day battery life will appear in a year or so.

    I would hope so.

    That kind of battery life I would expect from another OS.

    Sadly, the IBM page link is ead:

    dead link -> http://www.research.ibm.com/MobileComputing/WatchP ad.html

    But there is some info in this earlier Infoworld article:

    The prototype wristwatch, thinner than most current calculator watches, features a 720 dpi VGA display that makes 6-point type (about half the size of typical newspaper type) legible to the user. This allows the screen to show about as much type as the larger screen of a Palm handheld. Because of the high resolution of the display, the text can be read easily by the wearer, Karidis said. The device would offer organizing and messaging functions and could be navigated by touch, with just four or five touch areas.

    "Your watch knows what time it is. It certainly should be able to tell you where your next appointment is," Karidis said.

    Using Bluetooth, the WatchPad can communicate with a PC. As a demonstration, Karidis used the touchscreen controls to move through his presentation, which ran on an IBM ThinkPad notebook computer.

    Researchers at IBM Japan have developed a prototype motherboard for the watch, about 1.25 inches across, with 8MB of DRAM. It runs a version of embedded Linux. The device could be commercialized within two years, Karidis said in an interview Wednesday.

    Nice technology!
    --
    "It is a greater offense to steal men's labor, than their clothes"
    1. Re:Battery Life by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Laptops have significantly larger batteries than watches.

  3. this "fact sheet" has *some* details by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    hey, there's a fact sheet about the Citizen/IBM WatchPad prototype over at linuxdevices.com -- the device has a 32-bit CPU (not specified), 8MB DRAM and 16MB flash, and uses Linux kernel version 2.4 and Microwindows for the GUI.

  4. Re:You're kidding, right? by Galvatron · · Score: 2, Informative

    Renewable sure, but non-pollutant? Your floor says otherwise...

    --
    "The question of whether a computer can think is no more interesting than that of whether a submarine can swim" -EWD