Đồng Hồ Hot Nhất Năm Ngồi Ngóng: Cuối Cùng Cũng Có! [ad_1]

## Đồng Hồ Hot Nhất Năm Ngồi Ngóng: Cuối Cùng Cũng Có!

Năm ngoái, chiếc đồng hồ nào khiến bạn thòm thèm? Đó chính là chủ đề chúng ta sẽ cùng khám phá trong bài viết này! Đã đến lúc gạt bỏ mọi sự chờ đợi, bởi vì “chiếc đồng hồ chúng ta hằng mong ước năm ngoái” giờ đây đã có mặt tại Việt Nam!

(Phần này sẽ là nội dung chi tiết đánh giá sản phẩm. Vì bạn chưa cung cấp thông tin cụ thể về chiếc đồng hồ, nên tôi sẽ viết một ví dụ. Hãy thay thế thông tin này bằng thông tin thực tế về sản phẩm.)

Đánh giá chi tiết:

Thiết kế: Ấn tượng đầu tiên chính là vẻ ngoài sang trọng và tinh tế của chiếc đồng hồ. Vỏ máy được chế tác từ [chất liệu ví dụ: thép không gỉ cao cấp], tạo cảm giác chắc chắn và bền bỉ. Mặt đồng hồ [mô tả kiểu dáng, ví dụ: tròn, vuông, hiện đại, cổ điển] với [mô tả chi tiết ví dụ: màn hình AMOLED sắc nét, hiển thị thông tin rõ ràng]. Dây đeo [mô tả chất liệu và kiểu dáng dây đeo, ví dụ: da cao cấp, mềm mại, dễ chịu khi đeo].

Tính năng: Không chỉ đẹp mắt, chiếc đồng hồ này còn sở hữu hàng loạt tính năng hiện đại. [Liệt kê các tính năng, ví dụ: Theo dõi nhịp tim, đo lượng oxy trong máu, giám sát giấc ngủ, đếm bước chân, thông báo cuộc gọi, tin nhắn, hỗ trợ thanh toán không tiếp xúc,…]. Ứng dụng đi kèm [tên ứng dụng] trên điện thoại thông minh giúp bạn dễ dàng quản lý và tùy chỉnh các cài đặt.

Trải nghiệm người dùng: Sau thời gian sử dụng, chúng tôi đánh giá cao sự tiện dụng và chính xác của chiếc đồng hồ này. [Mô tả trải nghiệm cụ thể, ví dụ: Việc theo dõi sức khỏe chính xác, giao diện thân thiện, dễ sử dụng, thời lượng pin ấn tượng…].

Kết luận: “Chiếc đồng hồ chúng ta hằng mong ước năm ngoái” thực sự đã đáp ứng được kỳ vọng. Với thiết kế đẹp mắt, tính năng hiện đại và trải nghiệm người dùng tuyệt vời, đây chắc chắn là một lựa chọn hoàn hảo cho những ai đang tìm kiếm một chiếc smartwatch chất lượng cao.

Mua ngay tại QUEEN MOBILE!

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(Lưu ý: Hãy thay thế các thông tin trong ngoặc vuông bằng thông tin chính xác về sản phẩm đồng hồ.)

Giới thiệu The watch we wanted last year

: The watch we wanted last year

Hãy viết lại bài viết dài kèm hashtag về việc đánh giá sản phẩm và mua ngay tại Queen Mobile bằng tiếng VIệt: The watch we wanted last year

Mua ngay sản phẩm tại Việt Nam:
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KẾT LUẬN

Hãy viết đoạn tóm tắt về nội dung bằng tiếng việt kích thích người mua: The watch we wanted last year

The original Google Pixel Watch was my favorite smartwatch of last year, but I’ve always felt like that opinion was somehow against my better judgment. Google’s first smartwatch looked fantastic and performed very well, but at a premium price of $350, its weak battery life just took too much babysitting to make it a solid recommendation for most people.


But it’s Pixel Season yet again, and the Pixel Watch 2 has finally landed. It offers precious few upgrades from the original — those thick first-gen bezels are still here. But in managing to eke out honest-to-goodness all-day battery life with its always-on display active, the Pixel Watch 2 fixes most of what I didn’t like about the first generation. I’ve still got complaints, but the Pixel Watch 2 is what the original always should have been, and I’m happy to see it.

google pixel watch 2 white background angled

Source: Google

Google Pixel Watch 2

The Google Pixel Watch 2 is the sequel to Google’s very first self-branded smartwatch. The second generation doesn’t reinvent the wheel, instead offering a handful of low-key improvements like a redesigned digital crown, Wear OS 4 out of the box, and a newer chipset that should offer better performance and battery life. 

Case Material
Aluminum

Case size
41mm

Colors
Matte Black; Polished Silver; Champagne Gold

Display
1.2″ 450 x 450 AMOLED

CPU
Qualcomm Snapdragon W5 with Cortex M33 co-processor

RAM
2GB

Storage
32GB

Battery
306mAh

Software
Wear OS 4

Health sensors
Optical heart rate, SpO2, ECG, continuous EDA, skin temperature

Price
Starting at $350

Dimensions
41 x 41 x 12.3 mm

Weight
31g (without strap)

IP Rating
IP68

Cellular connectivity
LTE

Pros

  • 24-hour-plus battery life with always-on display
  • Same striking aesthetic as the first generation
  • Wear OS 4 out of the box

Cons

  • Display is slow (30Hz) and dim (1,000 nits peak) compared to the competition
  • Limited upgrades from last generation
  • Pricey at $350

Price and availability

The Google Pixel Watch 2 is available for $350 for the Bluetooth/Wi-Fi model or $400 for a version with LTE, direct from the Google Store and from Google’s usual retail partners like Amazon, Best Buy, and B&H. The watch comes in matte black with an Obsidian (black) band, champagne gold with a Hazel (gray) band, or Polished Silver with either a Porcelain (white) or a Bay (blue) band.

Design and hardware

google-pixel-watch-2-face-1

I’m going to do my best not to repeat a thousand times in this review that the Pixel Watch 2 looks nearly identical to the first-generation Pixel Watch, but the Pixel Watch 2 does look nearly identical to the first-generation Pixel Watch. It’s got domed glass over its 1.2-inch AMOLED display that spills over the corners, making for a look that’s not quite like any other smartwatch out there, even two generations in.

Having exposed glass at the edges, the Pixel Watch 2 is definitely more fragile than watches with metal bezels. But over the past year, I’ve worn the very similar first-gen Pixel Watch more than any other smartwatch, and it’s held up very well, its only damage being a small scuff on the flat part of the glass. The Pixel Watch 2 is hardly ruggedized, but I don’t think its screen is that much more likely to break than the regular Samsung Galaxy Watch 6’s is.

The near-identical design extends to the Pixel Watch 2’s rotating band mechanism, so bands are still proprietary. Google’s first-gen Pixel Watch bands are compatible with the Pixel Watch 2, at least — though, oddly, Google says not all Pixel Watch 2 bands are backwards-compatible with the original Pixel Watch.

google-pixel-watch-2-band-mechanism

The most immediately obvious hardware upgrade is the Pixel Watch 2’s digital crown. Compared to the first generation’s, the new crown rotates more freely and smoothly. Wear OS 4 also introduces inertial scroll (which sees scrolling content continue to move just a bit after you stop manipulating it) when scrolling using the crown. Combined with the new crown hardware, it makes scrolling on the Pixel Watch 2 a nicer experience overall.

Display

The Pixel Watch 2’s display is a 1.2″, 450 x 450, circular AMOLED with thick bezels and a 30Hz refresh rate. It doesn’t match what other Wear OS watches offer on paper, but in real life, the Pixel Watch 2’s screen is quite nice: colors are vibrant, and the screen’s high enough resolution that you won’t see individual pixels from a normal watch-viewing distance. Practically every screen you’ll see in Wear OS has a black background, too, and the Pixel Watch 2’s display blends in nicely with the curved glass around it.

google-pixel-watch-2-face-2

I wish it got brighter, though. The Pixel Watch 2’s screen tops out at 1,000 nits — bright enough to make out in most lighting, but harder to see in harsh sunlight than the Galaxy Watch 6, which peaks at 2,000 nits. The Pixel Watch 2’s display lags behind the Watch 6’s in a few ways, actually: Samsung’s watch comes with a bigger 1.3″ panel, with a smoother 60Hz refresh rate, surrounded by considerably thinner bezels. The Pixel Watch’s hardware and software do a good job hiding the thicker bezels, and I think 30Hz looks fine on a watch-size display. I hope to see the Pixel Watch 3 make some real improvements here, but the Pixel Watch 2’s display isn’t bad.

Software and performance

The Google Pixel Watch 2 comes with Wear OS 4. It’s actually not the first watch to ship with the newest wearable version of Android, though — the Samsung Galaxy Watch 6 and 6 Classic have offered Wear OS 4 since August.

google-pixel-watch-2-pixel-watch-app

Wear OS 4 isn’t the same kind of big overhaul we saw with Wear OS 3 in 2021. Coming from the first Pixel Watch still running Wear OS 3.5, I don’t think I would have noticed anything was different on the Pixel Watch 2 with Wear OS 4, at least not right away. The biggest user-facing change from previous versions is that you can transfer Wear OS 4 watches from one phone to another without having to reset the watch, saving some hassle when you upgrade your phone. You also get access to a few additional apps with Wear OS 4, including native Google Calendar and Gmail apps (they’re fine, by the way).

The Google Pixel Watch 2 showing app icons on the watch face

Modern Wear OS is easy and even fun to use, though, with lots of rounded elements that look right at home on the Pixel Watch’s curvy screen. Interactive, widget-like slices of app functionality called Tiles live to the left and right of the home screen; quick settings are above and notifications are below. Your app drawer is accessed by pressing the Pixel Watch’s crown; double-tapping the crown opens Google Wallet. The discrete hardware button above the crown opens your recent apps with a tap, or the Google Assistant if you press and hold. It’s all easy to wrap your head around, even coming from different watch software.

Google built the first-generation Pixel Watch around a Samsung chipset from 2018, the Exynos 9110, paired with a Cortex M33 co-processor. Despite that unconventional choice, the first Pixel Watch offered perfectly decent performance, keeping up with other wearable options running on years-newer hardware.

google-pixel-watch-2-with-pixel-8-4

In the Pixel Watch 2, Google’s upgraded to the Qualcomm Snapdragon W5 from last year, keeping the Cortex M33 co-processor and the same two gigs of RAM from the first-gen Pixel Watch. Performance out of the new loadout is really quick, and in the time I’ve been using it, I haven’t ever felt like the Pixel Watch 2 has kept me waiting on anything. Opening apps, flipping through Tiles, switching watch faces, and anything else I’ve wanted to on the Pixel Watch 2 has been about as fast as I could hope for. I felt the same way about the first-gen Pixel Watch, too, so I’m not sure how necessary the horsepower bump was, but more performance headroom today means the Pixel Watch 2 should age better than the first-gen will — and the newer silicon really helps with battery life (more on that later).

You’ll use a couple of apps to interact with the Pixel Watch 2. To set the watch up and manage its general settings, there’s the Pixel Watch app. But for all the Pixel Watch 2’s fitness features, you’ll need to use Fitbit.

Health and fitness

Google’s leaning on Fitbit integration to sell the Pixel Watch 2’s health tracking features; the watch comes with Fitbit preinstalled and includes a six-month trial of Fitbit Premium for new subscribers. The Pixel Watch 2 tracks basic activity and sleep data, plus a handful of more advanced health metrics including breathing rate, heart rate variability, skin temperature (strangely, not used in menstrual cycle tracking here), and blood oxygen saturation.

google-pixel-watch-2-fitbit-app-heart-rate

The Fitbit app breaks down your activity into a number of different factors: steps, distance, estimated calorie burn, and Zone Minutes. Compared to data from the Oura Ring I’ve been wearing while testing the Pixel Watch 2, Fitbit’s step and distance counts look normal. Fitbit estimates I use significantly more calories than Oura does, though — up to 500 more per day. All these platforms are doing their best to guess how much energy we’re using day to day, but the Pixel Watch 2 estimating my calorie use almost 20 percent higher than Oura does makes me wonder how useful Fitbit’s data would be for anyone who really wants to keep an eye on their energy expenditure.

The watch will automatically detect if you’ve been walking or running for 10 minutes and nudge you to open exercise tracking; for other types of workouts, you’ll have to remember to start tracking manually from the Pixel Watch’s Fitbit app. During exercise, the watch’s display changes to an updated workout UI that puts helpful information like duration, distance traveled, and heart rate front and center, with clever use of color to make it more obvious what zone you’re in at a glance.

google-pixel-watch-2-hands-on-4

The Pixel Watch 2 tracks your sleep like most fitness wearables do, and the Fitbit app breaks down when you slept and what stage you were in throughout the night, grading your sleep performance each night out of 100. Your score is based on factors like your resting heart rate overnight and time spent in deep and REM sleep stages. If you have Fitbit Premium, after wearing the Pixel Watch 2 for 14 nights in a single month, you’ll get a Sleep Profile that provides some deeper insights into your sleep, including, crucially, which animal’s sleep patterns are most similar to yours.

So far, my sleep data from the Pixel Watch 2 lines up pretty well with what I’m seeing from my Oura Ring, with each tallying my time asleep about the same, and even detecting similar patterns in my sleep stages. I haven’t had the watch long enough to get a complete Sleep Profile yet, though. Excited as I am to see what my Sleep Animal is, I’m more eager to see what the Sleep Profile feature does with my sleep data.

google-pixel-watch-2-ecg

I’ve never been convinced by sleep tracking for sleep tracking’s sake; I tend to know when I slept poorly. But Sleep Profiles aim to give personalized guidance on how to get better sleep, ostensibly informed by the data the Pixel Watch 2 collects when you wear it to bed. I’m skeptical that this guidance will actually be helpful, but I’m interested to find out. I’ll update this review with longer-term impressions soon.

Fitbit also offers stress management features. Like the Fitbit Sense 2, the Pixel Watch 2 has a new cEDA sensor that monitors the electrical activity in your skin. Together with data about your activity, sleep, and heart rate, data from that cEDA sensor helps inform your daily Stress Management score. The Fitbit app tells you very roughly how this score is calculated, but as far as I can tell, it doesn’t offer much advice on what to do if your score is out of whack.

For example, I can see Fitbit rates my “exertion balance” this week at 34/40, which should mean the amount of activity I’m getting relative to my level of fitness has been pretty good for keeping my stress levels down. That checks out. But Fitbit’s guidance in case you have a low exertion balance score is that you might be “exercising too much or too little.” You could use this simple guidance to draw your own conclusions about what you need to do in that case, but I feel like a fitness tracking platform as storied as Fitbit should be doing more to offer proactive advice. If Fitbit’s algorithms suggest taking a jog tomorrow — or taking a day off from exercise — could help me manage stress, why not just say so?

Battery and charging

google-pixel-watch-2-watch-face-b

Battery life was far and away my biggest problem with the first-generation Pixel Watch — with the always-on display active, the original often struggled to make it through a full 24 hours of wear, and I woke up to a dead watch after a night of sleep tracking more than once. Thanks to some combination of the newer Snapdragon W5 chipset, an ever-so-slightly bigger 306 mAh battery, and Wear OS 4’s power optimizations, the Pixel Watch 2 can much more comfortably make it through a full day and night of use.

True to Google’s word, I’ve reliably been getting over 24 hours of use per charge. On my most recent charge, with AOD active, I got 25 hours and 12 minutes of use before the watch died, including about 45 minutes of GPS-tracked walking and running and a night of sleep tracking. That’s not revolutionary for Wear OS, but it’s a big step up from the kind of battery life the first-generation Pixel Watch delivers. It feels firmly good enough.

google-pixel-watch-2-sensors-and-charger

Google switched from the inductive charger it used with the first Pixel Watch to a pin charger for the Pixel Watch 2 — the first-generation Pixel Watch charger isn’t compatible. Because you have to line the pins up correctly to charge, the new charger is moderately less convenient. It’s faster, though. Google quotes charging time to get the Pixel Watch 2 from empty to full at 75 minutes. My results have been a little weirder: my watch reaches 96 or 97% within an hour, then takes another 20 minutes or so to charge that last three or four percent. That seems like a quirk that could be ironed out with software updates, but even if it’s not, it beats the first-gen Pixel Watch, which took almost two hours to charge fully.

Competition

At a starting price of $350, the Pixel Watch 2 is competing at the high end of the Wear OS space. Samsung’s Galaxy Watch 6 is the easiest alternative to recommend. For a lower MSRP of $300, the 40mm Galaxy Watch 6 offers a slightly larger display with thinner bezels, plus battery life that should last a bit longer than what the Pixel Watch 2 can manage. The Galaxy Watch 6 comes in two sizes, too, and even the larger, longer-lasting 44mm model is less expensive than the Pixel Watch 2 at $330. Like the Pixel Watch 2, the Galaxy Watch 6 is running Wear OS 4 — although it’s got Samsung’s One UI 5 Watch software on top, which changes the look and feel a bit.

A Samsung Galaxy Watch 6 worn on a wrist

If you don’t care whether your watch can make it through a full 24 hours on a charge, Google’s still selling the first-generation Pixel Watch for a discounted price of $280. You’ll miss out on the newer model’s stress and temperature sensing hardware, better battery life, quicker performance, and refined crown, and you’ll have to wait a little while to get Wear OS 4. But the two watches look the same, so if you’re mostly after the look, you can get it a little cheaper by going first-gen.

Should you buy it?

I liked the first Pixel Watch a lot, but even I can see that it wasn’t necessarily an easy sell: it was more expensive than a lot of its Wear OS competition and didn’t offer much to earn its price tag outside a unique look.

The Pixel Watch 2, meanwhile… well, it’s still more expensive than its closest competition, the Samsung Galaxy Watch 6. But it’s got newer internals that drive slightly faster performance and considerably longer battery life than the first Pixel Watch could manage, and for that reason alone, the Pixel Watch 2 is easier to recommend to more people than the first generation was. It still doesn’t match its Wear OS competition on value, but the Pixel Watch 2 is useable enough that it feels more reasonable to spend the premium on it — less style over substance, more style in addition to substance.

The handful of new features in the Pixel Watch 2 aren’t compelling enough that I’d recommend upgrading from the first generation. Anybody who was interested in the Pixel Watch but turned off by the crappy battery life, though? The second generation fixes it. I think we should expect bigger changes in the Pixel Watch 3 — smaller bezels, for one — but for now, the Pixel Watch 2 is the do-over the original needed.

google pixel watch 2 white background angled

Source: Google

Google Pixel Watch 2

The Google Pixel Watch 2 is the sequel to Google’s very first self-branded smartwatch. The second generation doesn’t reinvent the wheel, instead offering a handful of low-key improvements like a redesigned digital crown, Wear OS 4 out of the box, and a newer chipset that should offer better performance and battery life. 


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