Original topic:

Samsung’s likely return to Wear OS on the Galaxy Watch 4 is a great move

(Topic created on: 05-14-2021 07:23 AM)
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khtannnnnnnnnn
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Wearables

When Wear OS made its debut under the name of Android Wear, Samsung was one of the first partners to give it a shot. The short-lived Gear Live was quickly replaced by Samsung’s Gear and Galaxy Watch lines that went on to become some of the most successful options out there. Now, Samsung might be making a return to Wear OS, and I think it’s a move that’s good for everyone. Here’s why.


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Wear OS is better for apps

There are four main reasons I’m glad that Samsung is moving from Tizen to Wear OS, and the first is apparently Samsung’s own reason. Wear OS has a better ecosystem.

Google’s Wear OS is built directly on top of Android. That means that a lot of the experience and tricks developers use to create apps for your Android smartphone can directly translate to building apps for your smartwatch. That’s good news in general, but when you think about it, it especially makes sense for Samsung. Asking partners to build an app for their Android-powered phones and then a completely separate app for Tizen-powered wearables is absolutely a roadblock.

This is something we’ve heard directly, too. A recent report claimed that ease of app development was a direct reason for Samsung’s switch to Wear OS. A specific example cited was KakaoTalk, a popular messaging app in Korea that isn’t available on Tizen because the market is “not large” and also because “development is somewhat difficult.”

Beyond that, Wear OS also has a significantly larger library of watchfaces already available for users to download, which is another area Tizen has always felt behind. The Play Store also distributes all of this with a much more polished design and experience compared to what Samsung brings to the table.

Tizen is, reportedly, a security mess

Another reason Samsung may be wanting to distance itself from Tizen is security. Reports in recent years have essentially called the security of Tizen a joke with many flaws compared to other operating systems. One security researcher said:

It may be the worst code I’ve ever seen. Everything you can do wrong there, they do it. You can see that nobody with any understanding of security looked at this code or wrote it. It’s like taking an undergraduate and letting him program your software.

Yikes.

Tizen has never been successful on smartphones, only really taking off on Samsung’s TVs and smartwatches. Arguably, the security flaws aren’t as much of a risk on TVs (though they’re still inexcusable for a company as big and capable as Samsung), but they do present a risk on smartwatches. All of Samsung’s smartwatches support the Samsung Pay app, which directly talks to your bank/creditor. Even if that’s not the core reason for Samsung making the switch, if Tizen really is as bad as been reported, it seems like a ticking timebomb. Patching things up for Samsung’s super successful TVs is probably worth the effort, but it might not be for smartwatches, especially with the clear app gap.

Samsung’s pairing process is infuriating

Anecdotally speaking, the thing I’ve always hated most about Samsung smartwatches is pairing them. The process is fine with a Samsung Galaxy smartphone, but if you use a Pixel or any other brand, it’s nightmarish.

First, you download the Galaxy Wearable app from the Play Store. Then, you’ll have to install another plugin or two for the product you’re using, and then the Samsung Pay app too. Just looking at Samsung’s Play Store library is anxiety-inducing.

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MangoTango
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Wearables
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