Skip to main content
Tech Radar TechRadar the technology experts
Sign in
  • View Profile
  • Sign out
RSS
Asia
flag of Singapore
Singapore
Europe
flag of Danmark
Danmark
flag of Suomi
Suomi
flag of Norge
Norge
flag of Sverige
Sverige
flag of UK
UK
flag of Italia
Italia
flag of Nederland
Nederland
flag of België (Nederlands)
België (Nederlands)
flag of France
France
flag of Deutschland
Deutschland
flag of España
España
North America
flag of US (English)
US (English)
flag of Canada
Canada
flag of México
México
Australasia
flag of Australia
Australia
flag of New Zealand
New Zealand
  • Phones
  • Computing
  • TVs
  • AI
  • Streaming
  • Health
  • Audio
  • VPN
  • More
    • Cameras
    • Home
    • News
    • Reviews
    • Opinion
    • How to
    • Versus
    • Deals
    • Coupons
    • Best
Tech Radar Pro
Tech Radar Gaming
Trending
  • Nintendo Switch 2
  • ChatGPT
  • Best laptop
  • Best VPN
  • NYT Wordle today

Recommended reading

Apple Watch Series 10
Smartwatches I've been wearing an Apple Watch for 10 years, and it changed me in ways I never expected
Apple Watch Ultra 2 and Series 10
Smartwatches Ranked: the 10 biggest milestones in Apple Watch's 10-year history
Core Time 2 + iPhone 15 blue
Smartwatches 'They're stopping our watches from being awesome.' Pebble founder takes the fight to the Apple over its walled ecosystem
Pebble watch Core Time 2
Smartwatches New watches, old tech: how Pebble is about to make a splash in a shrinking smartwatch pool
Apple Watch Global Close Your Rings Day Pin
Smartwatches Act fast – if you're lucky, you can get a free limited-edition Apple Watch pin at the Apple Store today
Apple Watch foldable display patent
Smartwatches Forget the folding iPhone – Apple has patented a foldable Apple Watch with two screens
Apple Watch Series 10 42mm vs 46mm side by side
Smartwatches Apple Watch Series 11: Everything we know so far
  1. Health & Fitness
  2. Smartwatches

Before Apple Watch: the timely history of the smartwatch

News
By Carrie Marshall published April 17, 2015

The long and winding road to the Apple Watch

When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission. Here’s how it works.

History of the smartwatch: past times

History of the smartwatch: past times

Smartwatches have been the next big thing since 1982. But now the Apple Watch is in the world, it's going to start a whole new wave of wearable tech.

And if that doesn't? Well, we've got smartwatches to look forward to from pretty much everyone else.

So what's different this time, and why haven't smartwatches really taken off before now? Let's look at some of the major milestones - and mistakes.

Page 1 of 11
Page 1 of 11
1982: Pulsar NL C01

1982: Pulsar NL C01

Pulsar is a Seiko brand, and while the NL C01 was rather primitive by today's standards - it stored just 24 digits of information - it was quickly followed by more models such as 1984's UC-2000 and 1985's UC-3000. Both of these watches were ambitious: you could buy them with a dock that boasted a thermal printer and a memory cartridge slot.

Ambitious is a relative term, of course: mid-eighties smart watches were still rather gimmicky. What they didn't have was connectivity. Bluetooth was a decade away and cellular hardware was far too big and far too expensive: the enormous Motorola DynaTAC 8000X would set you back a whopping $3,995.

Page 2 of 11
Page 2 of 11
1984: Seiko RC-1000

1984: Seiko RC-1000

Seiko's RC-1000 synchronised via a cable, and it was compatible with the various PCs of the time including Apple and Commodore C64 hardware.

Another model, the RC-4000 (dubbed the PC Datagraph) was released in 1985 and that shrugged off the plastic look of the RC-1000, favouring a stainless steal chassis.

RC-4000

It was known for its unusual three-line dot-matrix type and the fact that it housed 2KB of RAM.

RC-1000

Page 3 of 11
Page 3 of 11
1990: Seiko Receptor

1990: Seiko Receptor

The next big shift in smart watches happened at the turn of the decade, and it went beep - literally in the case of Swatch, whose The Beep watch followed in the footsteps of Seiko's 1990 Receptor, a watch that doubled as a pager.

For the first time, smart watches were wirelessly connected to the wider world. All they needed now was all the other stuff. That stuff started to appear in late 90s, largely thanks to - you guessed it - Seiko.

Page 4 of 11
Page 4 of 11
1998: Seiko Ruputer

1998: Seiko Ruputer

The 1998 Ruputer (later launched as the OnHand PC in the US) was more of a computer than a watch, boasting a 16-bit processor and 128KB of RAM. The screen wasn't up to much - it was a 102x64 mono LCD - and it wasn't a touchscreen, but you could write apps for the Ruputer in C.

Samsung was thinking about smart watches too: its SPH-WP10 was the first watch phone, although while the device has spawned several imitators it was never an enormous success.

Linux Watchpad

IBM and Citizen tried a Linux smart watch, the WatchPad, but it was short lived. Fossil lasted longer, having found a way to cram the Palm OS into a much smaller screen (Palm OS was designed for PDAs, but Fossil's watches used smaller cellphone screens): it launched multiple models from 2002 to 2005.

Page 5 of 11
Page 5 of 11
2004: Microsoft SPOT

2004: Microsoft SPOT

You can usually count on Microsoft to enter a potentially massive market far too early, so you won't be surprised to discover that it was making smart watches nearly a decade ago. Microsoft's platform was called Smart Personal Object Technology, or SPOT for short, and it used FM broadcasts to update subscribers' data in major US cities.

A subscription was $59 per year. SPOT watches were released from 2004 until 2008, and Microsoft shut down the SPOT-updating MSN Direct service in 2012.

Page 6 of 11
Page 6 of 11
2009: Samsung S9110 Watch Phone

2009: Samsung S9110 Watch Phone

Microsoft had the right idea and the wrong answer. The future of the smart watch was wireless, but the wireless wasn't FM: it was Bluetooth. The relentless march of smartphone tech meant that all the pieces of the puzzle were starting to come together: better batteries, touch screens and low-power, short-range connections to internet-connected devices such as smartphones.

By the beginning of this decade, firm after firm had seen the potential. Samsung had its S9110 Watch Phone (2009). Sony Ericsson launched its LiveView (2010) to pull data from Android phones, and Allerta's InPulse (also 2010) did the same for BlackBerries.

Motorola Actv

WIMM Labs' WIMM One (2011) shoved a modified version of Android into a watch-sized device, Motorola's Motoactv (also 2011) combined fitness information and music playback and Apple found that many of its square iPod Nanos (2011 again) ended up on people's wrists.

Page 7 of 11
Page 7 of 11
2012: Pebbles and fitness kit

2012: Pebbles and fitness kit

By the end of 2012 we were up to our wrists in wearables: Nike+ Fuelbands and Jawbone Ups, the epaper-screened Pebble and the cute Cuckoo, the Sony Smartwatch and all kinds of GPS trackers and exercise monitors.

But while many of them are very good indeed, their relatively small sales suggest that nobody has quite nailed the smart watch yet. Could Samsung be about to change that?

Cuckoo

Page 8 of 11
Page 8 of 11
2013: Samsung Galaxy Gear

2013: Samsung Galaxy Gear

Samsung has been extremely busy in the smartwatch market, releasing no less than six devices since the original Samsung Galaxy Gear back in September 2013. This is definitely not a once-size-fits-all approach. For instance, there is the original Gear (since upgraded to Tizen OS from Android), the Gear 2 and Gear 2 Neo which offer up wearable tech for those who want to keep abreast of email and messages on their phone.

Then there is the Gear Fit, a fitness band of sorts that's tethered to a Samsung device, and the Samsung Gear S which is Tizen based and a smartwatch that runs is separate to a phone, as it comes complete with its own SIM card slot. Oh, and Samsung also dipped its toes into Android Wear with the Samsuing Gear Live. Which brings us on to...

Page 9 of 11
Page 9 of 11
2014: Android Wear

2014: Android Wear

Google went big with smartwatches this year, announcing Android Wear its watch-centric OS that makes use of things such as Google Now and allows developers to create smartwatches with either a round, square or rectangle face.

Google has rounded up a whole host of partners for Android Wear - including Motorola, Samsung, LG, HTC and Asus - and at IFA 2014 we saw the fruits of this partnership, with the introduction of the Moto 360, LG G Watch R and the Asus ZenWatch.

LG G Watch R

Android Wear has already produced some great-looking smartwatches but they have all been under the spectre of an impending Apple wearable which was finally announced in September...

Page 10 of 11
Page 10 of 11
2015: Apple Watch

2015: Apple Watch

Apple showed off the Apple Watch in September 2014, with the hope that anyone looking to buy a smartwatch this Christmas would have second thoughts. Stats on smartwatch sales showed that it worked.

Although thoughts on the design have been mixed - everything from 'ooh, it's a little chunky' to 'take my money, Apple. Take it all now' - the mere presence of an Apple Watch almost future proofs this still nascent product category.

Gareth Beavis, TechRadar's resident mobile devices wizard reckons: "The Apple Watch is neither a fitness band, watch or fashion accessory though, despite taking a bit from each of those camps. It's hard to define what it really is, which means that users may struggle to justify the purchase."

And that pretty much sums up the whole smartwatch market at the moment. It's an area that doesn't yet have a purpose but we expect this to change very soon...

  • Hands on Apple Watch review. Here's what we think of Apple's wearable.
Page 11 of 11
Page 11 of 11
TOPICS
Apple Watch
Carrie Marshall
Carrie Marshall
Social Links Navigation

Contributor

Writer, broadcaster, musician and kitchen gadget obsessive Carrie Marshall has been writing about tech since 1998, contributing sage advice and odd opinions to all kinds of magazines and websites as well as writing more than twenty books. Her latest, a love letter to music titled Small Town Joy, is on sale now. She is the singer in spectacularly obscure Glaswegian rock band Unquiet Mind.

See more News about Smartwatches
Read more
Apple Watch Series 10
I've been wearing an Apple Watch for 10 years, and it changed me in ways I never expected
Apple Watch Ultra 2 and Series 10
Ranked: the 10 biggest milestones in Apple Watch's 10-year history
Core Time 2 + iPhone 15 blue
'They're stopping our watches from being awesome.' Pebble founder takes the fight to the Apple over its walled ecosystem
Pebble watch Core Time 2
New watches, old tech: how Pebble is about to make a splash in a shrinking smartwatch pool
Apple Watch Global Close Your Rings Day Pin
Act fast – if you're lucky, you can get a free limited-edition Apple Watch pin at the Apple Store today
Apple Watch foldable display patent
Forget the folding iPhone – Apple has patented a foldable Apple Watch with two screens
Latest in Smartwatches
Garmin watches in foreground, female runner in background
Garmin surprise launches two new Forerunner watches – the Garmin Forerunner 570 and Garmin Forerunner 970 – plus the HRM 600
The Garmin D2 Mach 1
It looks as though Garmin is working on another high-end smartwatch as a Fenix 8 spin-off
Samsung Galaxy Watch Ultra on a green background with the text don't miss
Choose your Samsung Galaxy Watch Ultra deal: up to $325 off with a trade-in or $140 off without
Apple Watch Ultra 2
Forget Apple Watch Ultra 3 – a model with a camera could be much closer than we thought
Samsung Galaxy Watch 7 front
Samsung Galaxy Watch 8 leak teases massive design change, and it looks just like an Apple Watch
Apple Watch Ultra 2 and Series 10
Top 6 smartwatches still to launch in 2025
Latest in News
Headphones
Nothing is making over-the-ear headphones and they might be better (and cheaper) than AirPods Max
A boombox, drone, and Galaxy S25 Edge next to each other.
ICYMI: the week's 7 biggest tech stories from Samsung's ultra-slim Galaxy Edge to DJI's magnificent new drone
Fortnite Darth Vader
Forget the Force, AI brings the late James Earl Jones’ iconic Darth Vader voice to Fortnite
An image of Robert Downey Jr reading Jeremy Renner's autobiography while sitting in front of his Avengers: Doomsday trailer
New Avengers: Doomsday behind-the-scenes images from Robert Downey Jr are getting Marvel fans excited about his portrayal of Doctor Doom
Shape of Russia filled with Russian flag-colored internet codes on a black hacking background
"A clear escalation in Russia’s crackdown on digital privacy tools" – experts warn against recent VPN disappearances in Russia
Audio-Technica AT-LPA2 turntable. It is a transparent turntable with its key circuitry in a silver metal-looking box beside it. It's photographed on a metallic surface in a brightly sunlit room.
Audio-Technica's see-through turntable is so cool, it seems a shame to put your vinyl on it
LATEST ARTICLES
  1. 1
    Pride and Prejudice TV show: everything we know so far about the upcoming Netflix adaptation
  2. 2
    ICYMI: the week's 7 biggest tech stories from Samsung's ultra-slim Galaxy Edge to DJI's magnificent new drone
  3. 3
    Google's AI Overviews are often so confidently wrong that I’ve lost all trust in them
  4. 4
    I tried Manus AI's impressive new image generation and ChatGPT should watch out
  5. 5
    Nothing is making over-the-ear headphones and they might be better (and cheaper) than AirPods Max

TechRadar is part of Future US Inc, an international media group and leading digital publisher. Visit our corporate site.

  • About Us
  • Contact Future's experts
  • Contact Us
  • Terms and conditions
  • Privacy policy
  • Cookies policy
  • Advertise with us
  • Web notifications
  • Accessibility Statement
  • Careers
  • Do not sell or share my personal information

© Future US, Inc. Full 7th Floor, 130 West 42nd Street, New York, NY 10036.

Please login or signup to comment

Please wait...