REVIEW: Samsung's New Fitness Gadget Makes A Sleek Smartwatch
samsung gear fit with samsung galaxy s5
samsung gear fit with samsung galaxy s5

Steve Kovach/Business Insider

After releasing a critical dud last fall with its first major smartwatch release, the Galaxy Gear, Samsung surprised a lot of folks in the industry when it announced an attractive new entrant into the wearable computing category, the Gear Fit, just a few months later.

The Gear Fit, as the name implies, is a fitness-tracking device. But unlike its biggest competitors such as the Fitbit, Nike FuelBand and Jawbone Up, the Gear Fit comes with a twist. It has a brilliant curved touchscreen so the device can double as a smartwatch, delivering notifications from your smartphone to your wrist. It's a strikingly pretty device, and one of the most intriguing wearables I've seen so far.

I've been testing the Gear Fit along with Samsung's new flagship phone, the Galaxy S5, for a little over a week. It's far from a perfect device, but I think it does point us in the right direction of what smartwatches could be like if they ever become as mainstream as smartphones.

The Gear Fit launches April 11 along with the Galaxy S5. It'll cost $199.

How It Works

The Gear Fit connects to your phone using Bluetooth and a special app called the Gear Fit Manager, which you have to download separately from the Google Play store for Android apps. It'll only sync with Samsung's Galaxy line of smartphones and tablets, so other Android phone users are out of luck.

The device itself is a pill-shaped mini computer with a bright, eye-catching 1.84-inch color touchscreen. It pops into a rubbery band that comes in a variety of colors so you can customize it whenever you want. It's incredibly light — just 27 grams — and largely mimics the feel of other popular fitness-tracking bands.

After pairing the Gear Fit to your phone, you can use it to track your steps with a built-in pedometer, measure your heart rate, and display notifications like incoming calls, texts, emails and tweets from the apps installed on your smartphone. The health data syncs with Samsung's fitness app called S Health, which comes preinstalled on Galaxy phones and tablets. S Health helps you get a broad overview of your calories burned, average pulse, and other activities. You manage the other functions like incoming notifications and software updates using the Gear Fit Manager app on your phone.

Whenever you get a new notification, the Gear Fit displays the text on the screen. You can tap a button to launch the corresponding app on your phone, or delete the notification and view it later. For incoming calls and texts, you can use the Gear Fit Manager to preprogram a few common responses like "I can't talk now…I'm in a meeting" so you don't have to pull out your phone. But for everything else, you'll need your phone to respond to incoming notifications.