Re: Worth it?
Also it kind of ties you to a narrow choice of phones. Posted via Android Central App
This is the key statement! I think if people step back, remove the hate of some and the blind loyalty of others, and really look at what Samsung is attempting to do they would better understand their overall product and marketing strategy. Don't be fooled. Samsung is NOT just throwing out products to see if something sticks.
Samsung seems to desire to build the Galaxy Line of products and services into its own ecosystem. Why else would they create:
Samsung Hub - Their own movie, music, game portal
Samsung Apps - Their own app store
S-Health - Their own version of a fitness tracker for food and calorie burning
S-Voice - Their own version of voice commands
S-Translate - Their own version of speech translation
Scrapbook - Their own version of Pocket
Story Album - Their own version of a hardcopy picture book
S-Educate - Their own version of online math, science, economics and finance courses
WatchOn- Their own version of an IR Blaster to control your tv and home theater
Messaging- Their own SMS & MMS client
Email - Their own email client
Group Play - Their own cross device method for sharing documents, pictures, videos and listening to music
S-Cloud - Their own data and storage solution
ChatOn- Their own social networking app
I'm sure there are others that I'm not thinking of, but the Gear is just another product in what is likely a long line of products and services to keep customers engulfed in the Samsung ecosystem.
So to the question. Is it worth $300. Absolutely, if you are willing to stay within the Samsung ecosystem for any period of time. Samsung has no desire to make the Gear applicable across other OEM's. It does not appear to fit into their long term strategy. I'm not saying it's right or wrong, but before you shell out $300 for this smartwatch, I think you have to ask yourself are you willing to stick with Samsung products for phones and tablets? If the answer is yes, the decision is easy. If the answer is no, then I would buy something a bit more universal.
Personally, I have owned a Samsung product since the original Galaxy Note. Since that phone came out in 2011 I have owned every version since (I now own the GN3). For what I do for a living, no other phone offers the functionality of the s-pen, and it's become a part of the world I live in. I also owned each version of the Note tablet, and now have the 2014 edition. So for me, the Gear was a natural extension. But for others I can understand the hesitancy.