glance watch

Toronto startup can turn your watch into a smartwatch

It seems the smartwatch's time is still coming. After the Pebble smartwatch crashed onto the scene with a record-setting Kickstarter in 2012, tech giants (most notably Samsung) and startups alike began falling over themselves to produce their own entries in the wearable-tech marketplace. The backlash was swift, with detractors arguing the gadgets were too buggy, too expensive, and not accessible enough to attract your everyday, non-gearhead shopper.

A lot of that argument may be handily foiled by Glance, a project by Toronto-based startup Kiwi Wearables, that simply and inexpensively converts any existing wristwatch into a smartwatch. Glance is a slim, curved machine-aluminum unit that slips under your watchband, leaving a sliver of display screen visible. It connects to your device via Bluetooth, and uses a motion sensing and a top button to take commands.

As it turns out, there's a lot you can do with that tiny amount of screen space, including reading texts (and auto-replying to them with a flick of the wrist), receiving phone call alerts, calling your phone (in case you can't find it), and using it as a mouse button or controller for a smart TV. There's also a built-in activity tracker.

glance smartwatch

The device is currently being funded via Kickstarter; early birds can preorder their own Glance for a $70 donation. An accompanying Glance app has been created for Android and iOS phones - Blackberry and Windows Phone support are available as stretch goals.

Would you buy a Glance? Let us know in the comments below.


Latest Videos



Latest Videos


Join the conversation Load comments

Latest in Tech

Here are the best Black Friday deals for cheap phone plans in Canada

Canadians could cash in on class-action lawsuit against gaming and tech firms

Shoppers Drug Mart will no longer sell an entire category of products

Ontario strikes $100 million deal with Elon Musk

Canada TikTok ban will result in tons of job losses in Toronto

Rogers and Yahoo account holders can claim hundreds of dollars in settlement

New decision could soon give Canadians faster and cheaper internet

Subscription and membership services that hiked prices in Canada this year