Google's £180 smartwatch to launch in June: LG device has a square display and will run on Android Wear

Reports have already predicted 2014 will be the year the smartwatch goes mainstream - and that trend is now expected to be kicked off by Google in July.
Korean firm LG has been teasing its Google-powered G Watch for months, and last night gave a sneak preview of how the device will fit in with its current range of phones and accessories.
The watch is expected to launch at Google’s I/O conference in June before going on sale in July for £180.

G WATCH: WHAT WE KNOW SO FAR
The G Watch has a square, 2-inch display and runs Android Wear - a streamlined version of Google’s current operating system seen on phones and tablet.
LG has also revealed the watch will be waterproof, feature voice controls that take advantage of Google Now, and is likely to sync with LG’s range of smartphones.
The watch is expected to launch at Google’s I/O conference in June, and go on sale in July, with reports quoting a £180 price.
It will be available in black, white, and champagne gold.
It is one of a handful of devices, including the Moto 360, to take advantage of this modified software.
LG has also revealed the watch will be waterproof, feature voice controls taking advantage of Google Now and is likely to sync with LG’s range of smartphones.
The glimpse was seen during an LG event in London last night, in which the firm unveiled its much-rumoured and much-leaked G3 smartphone.


The G3 has a 5.5-inch QHD display, which the firm claims is four times as detailed as HD.
It builds on a number of features from the previous generation G2 handset, including the Knock On feature.
Now called Knock Code, users of the G3 can tap in a pattern on the phone’s screen to unlock it, even when the screen is off.
Inside the handset is a Snapdragon 801 2.5GHz quad-core processor and a memory card slot that can take cards up to 128GB. It will be available on O2 from July.

But all the watches expected to launch this year rely on the owner connecting it to a smartphone.
Earlier this week, patent files revealed a Samsung smartwatch that won’t need a phone to work.
According to the application filed by the Korean firm, the standalone smartwatch could be controlled using gestures, detected by sensors built into the wrist-worn device.
These sensors could recognise flicks, waves and other movements, and the files claim a depth sensor, when combined with a camera, for example, could be used to detect what a user is pointing at.

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