Testseek.es han recogido 369 las revisiones expertas de el Motorola Moto 360 y el grado medio es el 72%. Enrolle abajo y vea todas las revisiones para Motorola Moto 360.
(72%)
369 Críticas
Puntuación media de los expertos que han realizado una crítica del producto.
Usuarios
(87%)
111 Críticas
Puntuación media de los propietarios del producto.
720100369
A los editores les gusta
Diseño estético Correas intercambiables Monitor de ritmo cardiaco Buen reconocimiento de voz
Diseño
Acabados
Sensación una vez puesto
Ligereza
Lidera una nueva etapa del smartwacth
Algunos casos de uso prometedores
Diseño es
Con diferencia
Lo mejor. Mientras sus rivales parecen antiguos relojes digitales en esteroides
El Moto 360 es un smartwatch que realmente sí querrás llevar
Al menos desde el punto de vista estético. Solo el LG G Watch R se le acerca en este
Materiales nobles
Resistente al polvo y al agua
Compatible con muchos dispositivos Android
Correa ajustable a muchas longitudes
Pantalla brillante
Carga inalámbrica
El Moto 360 tiene un atractivo diseño
Sensor de luz
Monitor de ritmo cardíaco
Se carga inalámbricamente
Le pueden cambiar las bandas y sus comandos de voz funcionan bien.
Sensor de luz y pulsómetro
A los editores no les gusta
La vida de la batería no es buena El diseño de Android no cubre la pantalla redonda
Autonomía limitada (aunque no tanto como se pronosticaba)
Pantalla sufre en exteriores
Empeora casos de uso de un reloj normal
Android Wear inmaduro todavía
Cargador aparte
Un único tamaño Igual que ha hecho Apple
Motorola debería lanzar al menos dos tamaños diferentes. Si hay diferentes tamaños de móviles para adaptarse a todas las manos y gustos
¿por qué no hacer lo mismo con los relojes?
Rendimiento el uso no es todo
Carcasa voluminosa
Sensores imprecisos
A veces incómodo de usar
Detección de voz impreciso en ocasiones
El display circular corta contenidos
La pantalla no es totalmente redonda
El cargador no tiene conector de USB
Es caro
Su tamaño no es para todos y su batería es decepcionante
Publicación: 2020-01-30, Autor: Corbin , crítica de: androidpolice.com
A heart rate sensor, NFC for Google Pay, Wi-Fi, and everything else you would expect from a Wear OS watch is here, The 1GB of RAM makes this one of the smoothest Wear OS watches on the market right now
The $350 MSRP is almost laughable when you can buy a Fossil Gen 5 with the same internal hardware for at least $100 less, The recessed dial is harder to use than the dial on most other smartwatches, and there's only one customizable button
Moto 360 (2019)6/10Probably not. The new Moto 360 is a decent product on its own, but it doesn't make much sense to spend $350 on it when you can buy a Fossil Gen 5 for around $250 (it has even dropped as low as $170). Not only does the Fossil Gen 5 have...
Publicación: 2020-01-19, Autor: Rich , crítica de: neowin.net
One of the reasons that I dug through photos from 2014 to find images of my old Moto 360 is because I wanted to see just how similar these things are, and they're not. Like I said earlier, if you were hoping for the same device but with updated internals...
Reflective display performs great in the sun, Silicone body and strap built for fitness, Integrated GPS for phonefree run tracking
Battery struggles to get through a day, Fitness features underdeveloped, Silicone picks up every piece of lint and hair, Ambient display has no backlighting
Android Wear has always had some pretty basic fitness tracking built in. With a gyroscope in every smartwatch and most Android Wear watches sporting heart rate sensors, they're already capable, if basic, fitness trackers. The addition of GPS and a fitness...
Resumen: While my first inclination was to title this post "what no other smartwatch has", that just wouldn't be accurate. What we've got here is a bona-fide piece of technology in the Moto 360 Sport that's never been released in any device before. Here, according...
Publicación: 2015-11-04, Autor: Dieter , crítica de: theverge.com
Resumen: Smartwatches really only came onto the scene in a major way in the past two years — Google, Apple, and Samsung are all hoping it'll be the next big computing platform. Since then, we've seen lots of manufacturers try different strategies for strapping a c...
Resumen: You know what they say, gang: When it rains, it pours.Just yesterday, I strapped on the new Moto 360 smartwatch, which showed up in the midst of my Moto X Pure Edition review process. And now, what do we have here? Why, it's the other highly anticipated W...
Resumen: It's a tale of two smartwatches. Both round, both running Android Wear. One selling for $349, the other for $180. So which watch is the one for you?We're talking, of course, about the LG Watch Urbane and the Moto 360 -- two of the most buzzed about Androi...
Publicación: 2015-04-20, Autor: Juan , crítica de: androidguys.com
As I said before, this is by no means supposed to be a detailed review on the Moto 360. Just a short synopsis of my experience with the Moto 360 and some of the changes it has seen since it first came out.While the Moto 360 did not have all of the feature...
Fantastic build quality, Stylish, understated, sleek, Syncs easily with Android, Moto Maker = Customizable, Very useful mobile accessory
Won't work with any other OS other than Android
We're sure many of you are contemplating the need for a smartwatch. I, too, wondered this. I've found myself quite productive using only a smartphone, and I'm a proponent of minimalism. Those who are managing just fine by using just a phone, and aren't ke...
Some might find the "flat tire" a bit weird, but it's not that noticeable. Android Wear needs a bit of work
For a first generation Android Wear device, the Moto 360 performs well and looks decent while on your wrist. As far as the device itself, I couldn't find much wrong with it based on the version of Android Wear it was running. It also functions as intended...