Skip to main content

The Verizon Wear24 Android Wear smartwatch has been discontinued

Verizon Wear24
Kyle Wiggers/Digital Trends
Verizon, not to be outdone by smartwatch competition like Apple, announced the Android Wear-powered Wear24 earlier in 2017. But on Monday, September 25, it discontinued sales of the watch, The Verge reports.

The Wear24 was made in partnership with original design manufacturer Quanta, a Taiwanese company better known for its branded laptops, desktops, and media players. It was a Verizon exclusive and one of the first smartwatches to ship running version 2.0 of Google’s Android Wear operating system.

The Wear24 started at $300 on a two-year contract or $350 at full price (if you try to navigate to the watch’s product listing, you’ll be redirected to a support page.).

The Wear24 had the makings of a compelling package. Its “slim and modern” 13.5mm body is IP67-rated, meaning it could withstand up to 3.3 feet of water for up to 30 minutes. And under the hood was 768MB of RAM, a beefy 450mAh battery compatible with off-the-shelf wireless chargers, and a 1.39-inch AMOLED display with 290 pixels per inch. It boasted full compatibility with Verizon’s LTE network too, meaning the Wear24 could make and receive phone calls and texts without the need for a smartphone.

Thanks to Android Wear 2.0, the Wear24 shipped with loads of useful features. New watch faces boasted “Complications,” miniature widgets for notifications and shortcuts for apps that put upcoming calendar appointments, fitness goal progress, and more at a glance. A new version of Google Fit, Google’s cross-platform fitness tracker, used the Wear24’s built-in GPS to track your pace, distance, and the calories you’ve burned during workouts. And new messaging features let you respond to texts and messages with a keyboard.

One of the bigger additions was the Google Assistant, cloud-powered AI software capable of performing actions like setting reminders, finding directions to a specified point of interest, telling you the weather, booking a restaurant, and more.

Unfortunately, the Wear24 didn’t support Android Pay, Google’s contactless touch-to-pay platform. The smartwatch had an NFC chip, but Verizon opted to disable it.

In our review of the Wear24, we were disappointed its lack of heart rate sensor, cheap wristband, and poor speaker quality. It couldn’t quite measure up to similarly priced alternatives like the Huawei Watch 2 Sport, which has a better screen, and the LG Watch Sport, which had a functioning NFC radio.

The Wear24 was compatible with its $10 Single Device Plan, which provisions 1GB, unlimited talk, and unlimited text for a connected device. Alternatively, existing subscribers could add the Wear24 to their plan for an extra $5 per month.

Update: We’ve updated the article to reflect the Wear24’s discontinuation. 

Editors' Recommendations

Kyle Wiggers
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Kyle Wiggers is a writer, Web designer, and podcaster with an acute interest in all things tech. When not reviewing gadgets…
Tag Heuer reimagines its beautiful, $1,800 WearOS smartwatch for 2020
tag heuer connected 2020 smartwatch news hands

Tag Heuer, the first Swiss watchmaker to embrace touchscreen smartwatches, has announced the third generation of its wearable, called simply the Tag Heuer Connected. The company has stayed with a similar design to the previous versions, but with some key alterations both inside and out to bring it up to date.

This is a luxury smartwatch, which means it’s made from high-end materials. The Connected watch comes in a choice of three polished or brushed stainless steel cases, plus one made from grade 2 Titanium, each with a fixed ceramic bezel. On the stainless steel models, this comes in either a metal or PVD black finish, while the Titanium version gets a matte black PVD bezel. (PVD, or Physical Vapor Deposition, is a process that vaporizes a number of metals, and then binds it on a surface, in layers, in a heated vaccuum.)

Read more
New leak shows off Samsung’s One UI 2.0 — and it’s built on Android 10
Samsung One UI

Android 10 is on the way, and is expected to be released to the public in the near future. Samsung traditionally hasn't been known for adopting new Android versions right away -- but it looks like that could change with Android 10. Why? A new leak shows off Samsung's One UI 2.0, and it's built on Android 10.

Notably, the leak shows off the use of Android 10's new gesture-based navigation system -- essentially meaning that Samsung has done away with the traditional navigation buttons, which it has held on to so far. This is good news for Google too -- as it ensures some consistency between how users control different Android devices.

Read more
5G vs. LTE: What’s the difference and why you should care
OnePlus Nord N300 5G speed test.

By now, you’ve almost certainly heard of 5G, the latest chapter in the evolution of wireless technology. Chances are you already have a smartphone and plan that supports 5G; if you don’t, you probably will after your next upgrade.

Although 5G has now effectively reached the mainstream, you may still wonder what the big deal is and how it will improve your life over the 4G/LTE technologies that have been the standard for the past decade. Is it worth upgrading to a 5G phone? Do you need a 5G plan, and if so, what level of 5G service should you choose from among the different flavors?

Read more