Yes, you heard us right. A smartwatch that's running Windows 10 is happening, but you might be disappointed to hear that it's not going to be an Apple Watch or Samsung Gear rival.

OEM TrekStor is set to pack Microsoft's operating system into a wearable that's being built for business and commercial uses. Set to run on Windows 10 IoT Core, the smartwatch will be able to run Universal Windows Applications and will be able to connect to the cloud.

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Specs are slim on the ground at the moment, but it will feature a 1.54-inch display with Gorilla Glass 3 to add a layer of protection, which will be held in a soft casing. It'll support both notifications and voice messages.

On the connectivity front there'll be Bluetooth and Wi-Fi onboard and apparently plenty of storage space, processing power and battery life to perform in a variety of business-related scenarios.

Revealed in a Microsoft blog post, those business uses could include inventory management in retail, automation for guest services in hospitality, industrial automation in manufacturing and patient care in healthcare.



While Microsoft continues to make a push with its mixed reality and VR efforts, the Redmond company has backed away from making other wearables having canned the Microsoft Band in late 2016. The fitness tracker and smartwatch hybrid didn't run on Windows 10 relying on Microsoft's own wearables architecture.

So it's a still a pretty big deal that the operating system that's appeared on a whole heap of other devices including smartphones and laptops, is finally making an appearance on a wearable. It's just a shame we probably won't have much reason to use it.



More details of the TrekStor smartwatch is expected to be revealed over the coming months, so stay tuned to find out if it's worth getting excited about.

Source: Windows Blog



