Qualcomm jumps into 'wearables' fray with Toq smartwatch

Published September 5, 2013
Paul Jacobs, chairman and CEO of Qualcomm, displays the new "Toq" smartwatch at the Uplinq 2013 conference in San Diego, California, September 4, 2013. — Reuters Photo
Paul Jacobs, chairman and CEO of Qualcomm, displays the new "Toq" smartwatch at the Uplinq 2013 conference in San Diego, California, September 4, 2013. — Reuters Photo
Paul Jacobs, chairman and CEO of Qualcomm, uses the new Qualcomm "Toq" smartwatch to check the company's stock at the Uplinq 2013 conference in San Diego, California, September 4, 2013. — Reuters Photo
Paul Jacobs, chairman and CEO of Qualcomm, uses the new Qualcomm "Toq" smartwatch to check the company's stock at the Uplinq 2013 conference in San Diego, California, September 4, 2013. — Reuters Photo
Paul Jacobs, chairman and CEO of Qualcomm, displays the new "Toq" smartwatch at the Uplinq 2013 conference in San Diego, California, September 4, 2013. — Reuters Photo
Paul Jacobs, chairman and CEO of Qualcomm, displays the new "Toq" smartwatch at the Uplinq 2013 conference in San Diego, California, September 4, 2013. — Reuters Photo
Paul Jacobs, chairman and CEO of Qualcomm, displays the new "Toq" smartwatch at the Uplinq 2013 conference in San Diego, California, September 4, 2013. — Reuters Photo
Paul Jacobs, chairman and CEO of Qualcomm, displays the new "Toq" smartwatch at the Uplinq 2013 conference in San Diego, California, September 4, 2013. — Reuters Photo

Qualcomm Inc has unveiled the Toq, a smartwatch that can play music and handle phone calls and messages, and said it would start selling the device in the fourth quarter, marking the chipmaker's entry into the emerging arena of wearable computing.

The company, which dominates the global market for applications processors for smartphones and tablets, introduced the device on Wednesday in a bid to showcase its own technology to manufacturers as Samsung Electronics Co Ltd unveiled its own much-anticipated “Galaxy Gear” in Berlin.

The Korean company's gadget also performs basic functions like calls, photos and messaging in concert with a smartphone.

Apple Inc and Google Inc are also widely believed to be working on “wearables” such as wrist-worn devices, in what analysts expect to be the next phase of the mobile communications boom. The exploration of such wearable-computing devices has accelerated in recent years as smartphone growth tapers off.

Qualcomm is using the watch, which works as a second display for a smartphone, to promote proprietary features including a low-power always-on display, wireless charging and stereo Bluetooth audio.

Anand Chandrasekher, Qualcomm's chief marketing officer, told Reuters at the company's annual developer event in San Diego that they would divulge more details on how to buy a Toq later this month, and did not specify a price.

Tech blog Cnet reported it will sell for $300, similar to Samsung's $299 price tag for Gear.

The US company said its Google Android-compatible Toq will be the first smartwatch with a touch-enabled “Mirasol” color screen that can be easily be viewed in bright sunlight.

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