#Business #Featured

Christmas is Coming – 5 Best GPS Watches You Can Buy

The Christmas is coming… almost every week we hear about a launch of a new smart watch or fitness watch. At Geoawesomeness we are interested only in watches equipped with embedded GPS sensors. Everything else we consider a toy. Below you will find our choice of the best 5 GPS watches you can find on the market.

1. SUUNTO AMBIT 3 – $399

Suunto is a Finish company well known for its wearables for extreme athletes. Suunto’s top watch model is called The Ambit 3… and I love it. I has a great aggressive and sporty design, it has a top specs, simple API which allows to create your own apps, it connects via bluetooth to your smartphone for extra features and a variety of alerts such as missed calls, text messages and other push notifications. But my favorite feature is that you can display your track trace directly on the watch. And everything works flawlessly. If you like more or less extreme outdoor activities this is the GPS watch to buy. And it’s my first choice.

suunto

2.FITBIT SURGE – $249

Fitbit Surge is a new fitness watch made by a start-up known for its famous Fitbit fitness tracker. The watch features GPS antenna and build-in heart rate monitor. Moreover it has a cool, urban design which looks good enough to use it as your main timekeeping device. But Fitbit offer much more than that. The company had built its business on fitness bands where the most important thing is not the device itself but how the company analyzes and visualized the data gathered by a tracker. And this is the area where Fitbit is the best on the market. So for $249 you get a stylish running watch with heart rate monitor and 24/7 health and fitness tracking band in a single device + really cool extra features on the app. Not too shabby.

Zrzut ekranu 2014-11-19 o 20.06.29

 

3. TOMTOM MULTISPORT CARDIO – $299

TomTom is a well know brand in the navigation segment where it offers top quality PND devices. Last year TomTom launched its first running watch which was quite successful. This year TomTom launched its first on-the-market watch with a build-in heart rate monitor. Multisport Cardio is designed for 3 triathlon activities: running, swimming and cycling. It’s not a watch that you’d like to wear on a daily basis but if you’re searching for an extremely lightweight and versatile watch for an Ironman triathlon, this is the model to choose.

tomtom_runner_cardio-1200-80

4. GARMIN FENIX 2 – $399

Fenix 2 is Garmin’s answer to Suunto’s Ambit 3. And it’s a really good watch. Garmin advertises it as an ultimate outdoor watch for  running, climbing, riding, hiking, paddling, skiing or swimming. What I love about this watch is that it’s the only one with a pre-installed map of the world.  Moreover it offers simple pedestrian navigation. Similarly to Ambit 3, Fenix 2 connects to your smartphone via Bluetooth to alert you about missed calls, text messages and other push notifications. Very solid watch. Ambit 3 is my first choice over Fenix 2 only because I like the look of the Finish watch better.

Garmin-Fenix-2

5. SAMSUNG GALAXY GEAR S – $299 + carrier contract

The Galaxy Gear S is the only ‘smart watch’ in our collection. Why is that? It’s the only one with a build-in GPS. The watch looks really good with a 2-inch super AMOLED customizable display that curves with your wrist. Besides telling time, the watch has a sim card slot for 3G access, wi-fi, and Bluetooth connectivity. With your smartphone nearby, you can make and take calls from your wrist, text, use Facebook or play music. But is has also smartphone alike mapping and fitness capabilities. It has a built-in heart rate tracker, and with variety of apps you can use it fitness, running and even use step-by-step pedestrian GPS navigation. It has a 1.0GHz Dual Core Processor, 512MB RAM and 4GB of internal memory. The only serious con is Samsung’s operating system – Tizen instead of Android wear.

Samsung-Gear-S---Geoawesomeness

 

Say thanks for this article (0)
The community is supported by:
Become a sponsor
#Business
#Business
Geo Addressing Decoded Part 1: Why Does Geo Addressing Matter?
Aleks Buczkowski 04.16.2024
AWESOME 6
#Business #GeoDev
3 Pathways For Integrating Planet Data Into Your GIS Workflow
Avatar for Sponsored Article
Sponsored Article 08.12.2024
AWESOME 1
#Business #People
Meet the founder: An interview with Chris Brown as Mapstack is awarded prestigious UK Innovation Smart Grant
Nikita Marwaha Kraetzig 11.2.2023
AWESOME 1
Next article
#Business

Google Maps now lets you embed Street View and Photo Sphere panoramas to your website

Several months back Google released a new Google Maps Embed API which enables developers to generate HTML snippets that embed Google Maps within their own websites. But there was something important missing.  The tool didn’t allow to embed Street View and Photo Sphere. Viewing them involved navigating away to a dedicated page. Yesterday Google announced it will make things a bit easier. With Google Maps’ updated Embed API you will be able to integrate Street View and Photo Sphere panoramas right into your webpage. From my tests it seems that is works in all browsers besides Internet Explorer. Here is an example of how it works:

Embedding process is very easy. You simply search for a location on Google Maps in your browser, enter Street View mode or select from one of the Photo Spheres at the bottom and then click on the settings button in the bottom-right corner. You’ll see an option to embed your image along with the necessary iframe code. You simply copy the code to your website and it should work like a charm.

source: Google Geo Developers Blog

Read on
Search