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Huawei Watch 3- A brilliant display watch with a lot of potential!

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The Huawei Watch 3 is a stylish smartwatch that runs Huawei’s own HarmonyOS for the first time. It’s silky smooth, but it’s not quite smooth yet, as you’d anticipate. There are only a few additional apps to download, and third-party service support is low.

Nonetheless, if you have an Android phone, the Watch 3 is a wristwatch worth considering – and it’s only going to get better as the ecosystem grows.

The Watch 3 is available with health tracking in mind, and it includes a powerful set of capabilities for tracking both your daily health such as sleep, step counts, and SpO2 and your exercises. During intensive training sessions, You will find its heart rate monitoring to be a little variable, occasionally reporting surprising jumps during interval training. But location tracking, as well as pace and cadence, were all going to be correct during your run.

The Watch 3 has a lot of potentials; the technology is amazing, and the watch’s brilliant display would be ideal for on-screen navigation and driving exercises with graphical instructions.

Availability and Price

Price and Availability of Huawei Watch 3

The Huawei Watch 3 got available in certain regions in June 2021, with a starting price of £279.99. That works out to around $390 / AU$530. But now has grown to $428.00/£229.00.

You can have a try with this normal Huawei Watch 3, but there’s also the Huawei Watch 3 Pro. This has a few extra features including dual-band GPS for better accuracy and longer battery life. It also comes at a much higher price. With more features comes a higher price.

Design

Huawei Watch 3- A brilliant display watch with a lot of potential!

With a huge, glossy face, low bezels, and glass that bends towards the corners to meet the casing, the Huawei Watch 3 is a significant change from the hefty Watch 2. Instead, it bears more than a passing similarity to the Watch GT.

The Huawei Watch 3 active version features a 46mm casing and a black silicone band that isn’t as soft as the Apple Watch 6 but is still comfortable. The band is held with a traditional buckle instead of the loop-and-tang kind of fastening that is becoming increasingly common with smartwatches as well as fitness trackers. Also, it features quick-release pins so that you can simply convert them to something a bit more attractive.

The Huawei Watch 3 includes only two physical controls. A tiny button that navigates backward through menus or returns you to the home page. Also, a crown that you can use to choose settings and applications, or turn to browse through text and menus. It is the capability that the Huawei Watch 2 lacks.

It’s a very well and accurate design system, and swiping with the crown is fluid and responsive. But also it is big enough to type on the Watch 3’s on-screen keyboard, though it’s still a little tricky. You’ll be grateful for the autocorrect option.

The 1.43in AMOLED display of the Watch 3 is a notable feature since it is sharp and colorful. Allows you to read a lot of data or text at once. In the Huawei Health app, there’s a vast selection of watch faces to pick from. Several of which are interactive to truly show off the display. But it’s worth noting that the majority of them are paid-for and vary greatly in price.

Battery life

Battery life of Huawei Watch 3

Like the Apple Watch 6, you can charge the Huawei Watch 3 using a magnetic puck. Huawei’s charger, unlike Apple’s, uses a USB-A port rather than USB-C.

Huawei claims the watch would last 14 days in power-saving mode and three days in smartwatch mode with all capabilities active. But it will only last about two and a half days when recording a daily exercise on the top of everyday steps and heart rate.

Audio of Huawei Watch 3

Audio

The Huawei Watch 3 also has an internal speaker, which is especially handy for delivering important health information during exercises, such as pace and heart rate, every ten minutes or so, depending on the activity.

Although you may discourage anyone from utilizing the Watch 3 as a true way of truly enjoying Doja Cat on the move. Also, it does offer surprisingly decent clarity that can handle the music.

The loudness is adequate for a wristwatch, but if you want to listen to music directly from the watch, you’ll need to attach a set of Bluetooth headphones, whether they’re local or you’ve chosen for Huawei Music’s streaming platform, which also enables offline listening.

The microphone experience, which you’ll probably use to communicate with Huawei’s virtual assistant, Celia, is a bit less dependable, trying to understand simple inquiries like inspecting the weather or even consistently identifying the “Hey, Celia” wakeup command.

App

Companion

The Huawei Health app, which is accessible for iOS and Android and comes with HarmonyOS, connects to the watch. It’s as simple as creating an account (if you don’t have one already), inputting a PIN from the watch face for confirmation, and providing it the appropriate rights to connect the watch.

Both a Huawei P40 Pro and a Fairphone 3 Plus running Android 10 is almost better than the Watch 3. The Huawei phone connect without the need for a hitch, but the Android app didn’t recognize the new wristwatch and couldn’t locate it. If this occurs, Huawei recommends that you update the Huawei health app from your phone’s AppGallery to resolve the issue.

The software itself is a breath of new air in terms of use, bringing together all of your daily and historical health data in one place. Unlike Fitbit’s app, Huawei Health doesn’t hide specific information behind a subscription; instead, all of your data is at your fingertips.

Via the Huawei Health app, you may also access a variety of workout programs, which you would have to subscribe to in the Fitbit app. To help change up your training, there are introduction sessions as well as tempo, HIIT, and interval workouts. The app and watch won’t recommend a training plan depending on your previous activity (though this may change in a future version). But the selection is amazing and comparable to many subscription services.

Is it worthwhile to invest in a Huawei smartwatch?

The Huawei Watch 3 is a stylish smartwatch that runs Huawei’s own HarmonyOS for the first time. It’s silky smooth, but it’s not quite slick yet, as you’d anticipate. There are only a few additional apps to download, and third-party service support is minimal.

Is the Huawei Watch 3 capable of making phone calls?

A fantastic exhibition of clever features. HUAWEI WATCH 3 is a stand-alone communications device that uses eSIM technology. Make calls, listen to music, download apps without having to connect to your phone, and keep your current phone number.

Is the Huawei Watch 3 compatible with an ECG?

An ECG sensor is available within the watch, which delivers far more heart information than a standard heart rate sensor. The watch also includes a blood-oxygen sensor and a thermometer, as well as stress and sleep tracking.

Conclusion:

The Huawei Watch 3 is the first wristwatch to run HarmonyOS, and it’s a fantastic demonstration of the new OS. The incredibly crisp AMOLED display truly shows off all the system has to offer, and the performance is extremely fluid. The Watch 3 comes with an excellent collection of fitness tools, but it still can’t compete with Google and Apple when it comes to extra applications. It’s a shame there aren’t more third-party tools, but that should change in the coming months. This is really a smartwatch with a huge future, even if it can’t yet deliver on all of it.

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