This is a relatively old review when the TicWatch was new. This watch easily outperforms the Galaxy Ultra and even Oneplus 2R and musters in 4/5 days of battery life (looks sadly at my GW 6).

Some did report its app being not as good as S Health or Google’s implementation. However it’s main Achilles heel is the update problem. Pixel Watches, IIRC, get 3 years and Galaxy Watches get 4 years ; but TicWatches are lucky to get one major Wear OS upgrade and that too, delayed. Which is a Shame because the hardware here easily equals last gen Galaxy/Pixel Watches and in terms of battery life, will stand for many years to come.

In my country, Wear OS forms a tiny share of the market and Samsung has the biggest pie of it (it doesn’t help that watches aren’t considered for trade in here, so if and when I do upgrade to a new watch, my current watch becomes e waste and I pay full price). I did consider the TicWatch but seeing it’s relatively poor software support went with Samsung. However, damn if I said that I love Samsung’s battery life or charging implementation. The WPC mechanism wastes so much heat and throttles itself to heck in hot temperatures.

  • Disevani@lemm.ee
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    16 hours ago

    This is probably not a popular opinion, but I really don’t understand why people want Oled on their watches to begin with… are the pro’s really worth more than the con’s here (just a few days battery life, getting burn-in very quick due to static images)? I know there’s pixelshifting and that sort of stuff happening, but still…

    E-ink is such a beautiful thing! Better visibility with more light, very long battery life…i think that’s way more important on smartwatches.

    I guess it is appearance vs. endurance, or something like that. I’m just happy that nowadays there seems to be a watch for everybody (unlike smartphones, where 99% are huge, have camera cutouts and Oled…).