In
computer news this week, 06/26/02
The
truest sign of a computer geek - the wristwatch ....
In
recent years I 've bought 3 of the exact same Timex Datalink Watches, which lets you send data to the watch from your
computer screen. Each time the watch has been cheaper - this time $ 37 at
Walmart - and has better software. The reason I buy a new watch is that most
places won't replace the batteries in these watches, and it's cheaper to buy a
new watch then have the battery replaced at a jewelry store.
When
I was a kid I loved Detective Dick Tracy comics, and his 2-way wrist radio
watch. In the 1970's I was watching a
James Bond movie and he had a wristwatch that had an alarm in it, to tell him
when it was time to blow something up. I've always been into electronic
gadgets, and since then I've had just about every new electronic watch that
comes on the market. I had one with
alarms, I had one with a calculator, I had one that you could play space
invaders on. Then when the running craze hit, I had runners watches that had
alarms and stopwatches that could measure laps and total time, and even sound
an alarm near the end of the run to tell you to speed up if you wanted to break
your personal record.
I
played around with watches in the 1980's that you could hook up to your
computer, but they were slow, used cables, and didn't have much memory. I also
played with the credit card size electronic directory devices, but they didn't
meet my needs either.
As
a watch, the Timex Datalink is great. It keeps standard or military time in 2
time zones, has a night light, and a stopwatch that counts up to 50 laps. Then
it has 5 countdown times, which is really nice. You can also label each
countdown timer, so I have toast -2 minutes,
Raw Bytes - 3:00 , running - 5:05 - for pulse checks, and 2 others I
set for parking meters and other things.
I
also buy them with a velcro watchband as the plastic ones tend to disintegrate
after a few years and break, and then I end up dropping or breaking the watch
before I get a new band. Timex also provides software to maintain an address
book on your computer and download it to your watch.
It
has ten alarms you can set and label. I'm in alarm heaven. You can set them for
a specific day and time also, so I have them set for daily wakeup, weekly
record Raw Bytes Show, weekly teach
guitar class, and I was wondering what I was going to do with the other 6,
before I found a special Timex program designed for Microsoft Outlook, which
actually lets you download appointments and contact phone numbers to your watch
from Outlook. Appointments are stored as different alarm times with the
person's names, and contact's names and
phone numbers are stored in a phone book.
The
Timex Datalink watch comes with very good software, that lets you set
everything on your watch from your computer, as opposed to having to push tiny
buttons. They also provide an excellent interactive computer tutorial on how to
use it.
The
only limitation is watch memory, but I have been able to get some very
important information I need into it. No cables either - you just hold your watch up to your
computer monitor and it sends the data right to it from the screen. The monitor
flashes in kind of a Star Trek scenario;
your watch beeps when the data transfer is completed, and you can shout "Beam me up, Scotty
!" as your fascinated office mates watching you wonder if you're going to
disappear into the computer.
I
also notice that in the many Are You a Geek ? tests on the internet, the
reoccurring qualifying question is "Does your wristwatch talk to your
computer?".
Ok,
this is geeky, but Timex has even geekier watches,
including ones that receive email, use GPS satellites to measure running
distance, heart rate monitors, and one with a digital compass for when you're searching
for the South pole.
For
geekmania go to Timex.com.
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