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Microsoft working on smartwatch: report
by Staff Writers
San Francisco May 30, 2014


Taiwan's Acer to launch 'smartband' wearable device
Taipei (AFP) May 30, 2014 - Taiwan's leading personal computer maker Acer announced Friday that it will debut its first wearable device at the upcoming Computex trade show before shipping the products later this year.

Liquid Leap, a one-inch touch-screen smartband with fitness tracking, phone and SMS notification and music control, will be sold together with the Liquid Jade smartphone in selected markets from the third quarter, Acer said.

Consumers will get a peek at the device at Computex, Asia's largest tech trade show, set for next week in Taipei, the company said.

"With the introduction of the Acer Liquid Leap, Acer now offers a comprehensive range of touch devices from 1 inch to 27 inches in display size for different customer needs," it said in a statement.

Founded by Stan Shih in 1976, Acer was the world's second largest PC maker in its heyday and remains one of Taiwan's best known brands.

But the company's fortunes have worsened in recent years with sales hit by competition from Apple and other rivals. Acer has been struggling to branch into mobile devices to offset shrinking demand for PCs.

Acer declined to disclose its sales target for the new wearable device.

Market tracker IDC said in a report last month that wearable tech is moving beyond a small group of early adopters and going mainstream, as sales are expected to triple this year to 19 million units worldwide.

Microsoft plans to weigh into the wearable computing market with a smartwatch, Forbes reported Thursday. The US technology tighten tapped into talent behind its gesture-sensing Kinect accessory for Xbox video game consoles to help make a sensor-loaded smartwatch, according to Forbes. Smartwatch capabilities were said to include fitness features such as measuring and tracking heart rates. Like the growing array of "wearable computing" devices, Microsoft's creation will be designed to synch wirelessly to applications in smartphones, Forbes said. last month, market tracker IDC predicted sales of wearable tech items would triple this year to 19 million units worldwide, growing to 111.9 million by 2018. IDC said the wearable sector is still led by fitness trackers such as Jawbone UP and Fitbit devices. "The increased buzz has prompted more vendors to announce their intentions to enter this market," IDC research manager Ramon Llamas said in a statement released with the forecast. "Most importantly, end users have warmed to their simplicity in terms of design and functionality, making their value easy to understand and use." Apple is also rumored to be working on an "iWatch," although the iPod, iPad, iPhone and Macintosh computer maker has not commented on that. Google, meanwhile, recently opened its Glass "explorer" program to anyone in the United States with $1,500 to spend on the Internet-connected eyewear. gc/vlk Microsoft

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