The evolution of wearable devices is fueled by rapid advances in technology
  including enhanced processor performance, extended battery life, continuous
  connectivity, smarter sensing, monitoring and tracking and user-friendly
  interfaces — all within ever-shrinking form factors and power budgets.
Evolution of Smartwatch Designs
  Smartwatches have become essential
  wearables
  for our smart, connected and active lifestyles. The smartwatch concept arose
  decades ago with sci-fi gadgets like Dick Tracy’s two-way wrist radio/TV, the
  Jetson’s clunky video wristwatches and “wrist communicators” debuting in Star
  Trek movies. Digital watches with LED screens—the precursor to
  smartwatches—came to market in the early 1970s, and the first true
  smartwatches with processing and telecom capabilities appeared in the late
  1990s.
  Smartwatches continued to evolve in the 2000s, competing with wrist-worn
  fitness trackers. Today’s designs are feature-rich, wirelessly connected
  “wrist computers", offering the biometric health monitoring capabilities of
  fitness trackers, along with touchscreen and voice control, graphics,
  multimedia and mobile telephony – all the functionality of a smartphone in a
  wrist-sized form factor.
  Trending Now: Feature-Laden Smartwatches for Health-Conscious Lifestyles
  Growing consumer demand for feature-rich smartwatches is one factor driving
  this market growth, especially among tech-savvy millennial and urban
  populations. Smartwatches are attracting new users, including older adults, as
  wearable makers add health-monitoring features, enabling users to track their
  health status and biometrics in real time.
  Today’s smartwatches are more capable than models from even a few years ago.
  Smartwatches typically communicate with the cloud and streaming services
  through Bluetooth-connected smartphones or directly through Wi-Fi, 4G-LTE or
  5G. Battery life has improved in recent years, extending from days to multiple
  weeks between charges for some smartwatch models. Organic LED (OLED) and
  active-matrix organic LED (AMOLED) displays, vivid graphical user interfaces
  with animation, voice control and audio playback provide more intuitive user
  experiences. Today’s smartwatches also have more robust, built-in security
  features to protect personal and commercial data.
  Smartwatch biometric sensing capabilities have become more sophisticated,
  extending beyond the features of basic fitness/activity trackers to support an
  array of health monitoring functions including SOS emergency services, safe
  zone alerts, contact tracing and vitals monitoring and reporting. Some
  smartwatches also offer “wearables as a service” capabilities including
  personal health and well-being monitoring (for instance, sleep patterns, heart
  rate monitoring, fall detection and oxygen levels), location monitoring for
  kids, older adults and pets and remote healthcare for cardiac care, diabetes
  management and physical therapy.
  
    
  
  
    Watch our demo video on smartwatches and wearables.
   
 
  Many feature-packed smartwatch designs offer sport modes with virtual
  trainers, music storage and playback, voice calling capability, local voice
  control and cloud-based voice assistants like Amazon Alexa and Google
  Assistant. For example,
  Amazfit GT3  watches offer advanced features such as up to 21-day battery life, an
  Ultra HD AMOLED display, 24-hour health management, more than 150 sport modes
  and Amazon Alexa for voice control. Another standout is
  Garmin’s Venu 2 Plus,  a fitness smartwatch built for active lifestyles supporting voice
  calling, animated watch workouts, sleep scores and general health monitoring.
  Wearables are also evolving beyond the wrist to include eyewear such as
  Ray-Ban’s Stories  smart glasses with photo capture, video recording and audio playback
  features in a stylish form factor.
  Designing Battery-Friendly, Secure Smartwatches with NXP’s i.MX RT MCU
  Families
  To compete in today’s dynamic smartwatch market, it helps to work with a
  leading platform provider. By using a market-proven processing platform, you
  can focus on what you do best: designing innovative, differentiated smartwatch
  products. As your wearables technology partner, NXP offers a broad low-power
  microcontroller (MCU) portfolio, advanced voice software, robust security
  technology and a comprehensive development ecosystem.
  Successful smartwatch designs begin with an optimized system-on-chip (SoC)
  platform. NXP’s
  i.MX RT500
  and
  i.MX RT600
  families of secure crossover MCUs offer an ideal balance of low-power
  processing and high-performance capabilities, along with rich integration and
  advanced security. The i.MX RT500/600 MCUs pair the real-time functionality of
  an Arm® Cortex®-M33 core with a high-performance
  DSP core to help unlock the potential of smart, connected wearable
  applications.
Extend Battery Life with NXP’s Low-Power Technology
  The i.MX RT 500/600 MCUs provide an optimal balance of high performance and
  power efficiency. The MCUs can run parallel tasks leveraging the Arm®
  Cortex®-M33 core running at up to 300 MHz, integrated
  Cadence® Tensilica®
  Fusion F1 or HiFi 4 DSP cores, a PowerQuad math engine, a 2D GPU for graphics
  processing and a host of on-chip peripheral interfaces. This clever
  multitasking approach enables wearable designs to use the right processing
  tool or interface for the task.
  The MCUs offer multiple power modes for energy-efficient heterogeneous
  computing. For example, the Cortex-M33 processor can remain in sleep mode
  while the DSP is hard at work. The i.MX RT MCU power architecture supports
  dynamic voltage and frequency scaling (DVFS) and multiple clock dividers,
  enabling easy throttling of processing cores. By adjusting core speeds up or
  down as needed, wearable designs can use integrated, low-power clock sources
  instead of higher power external sources. These low-power MCU innovations
  enable an extended battery life of up to three weeks in smartwatch mode.
Add Voice to Your Smartwatch Designs for Hands-Free Control
  NXP’s i.MX RT MCUs with integrated Tensilica Fusion 1 or HiFi 4 DSPs provide
  the right level of high-performance audio DSP capabilities to enable
  smartwatch voice assistance and voice calling features. Our
  voice intelligent technology
  (VIT) is a free, comprehensive voice control software package delivered as a
  ready-to-use library in the
  MCUXpresso SDK.
  VIT enables customer-defined wake word and voice commands using NXP’s
  online model creation tool.  In addition to VIT, NXP offers premium voice enablement and speech
  processing technologies including:
  - 
    VoiceSeeker – advanced audio front-end signal processing for voice control,
    incorporating beamforming, advanced noise reduction and acoustic echo
    cancellation
  
 
  - 
    VoiceSpot – low-power wake word engine, enabling reliable voice triggering
  
 
  - 
    Conversa – multi-microphone, full-duplex telephony suite for voice calls
  
 
  Give Your Smartwatch Design Vivid Graphics and Flexible Display Interfaces
  The i.MX RT500 MCUs modernize HMI design for power-sensitive applications by
  enabling vivid graphics with an integrated 2D GPU. Further simplifying
  graphics development, NXP’s comprehensive software ecosystem includes an
  extensive list of third-party solutions from partners.
  Zepp OS UI,
   powered by
  AMETEK Crank software,  enables compelling, smartphone-like experiences in small form factors
  like the Amazfit GT3 smartwatches. Based on FreeRTOS open-source code, Zepp OS
  is one of the lightest smartwatch operating systems available, helping
  smartwatches operate up to three weeks on a single charge on low-power,
  high-performance MCUs like the i.MX RT500 family.
  The AMETEK Crank Storyboard GUI framework is directly accessible within NXP’s
  
    MCUXpresso IDE toolkit, which greatly streamlines the process of evaluating NXP MCUs and creating
  rich embedded GUIs.
Secure 24-Hour Health Management
  Today’s always-connected smartwatches continuously monitor health and fitness
  biometrics such as heart rate and activity during the day. Sleep monitoring
  also has become a popular use case for many smartwatch designs. To make it
  easy to collect biometric data without CPU intervention, i.MX RT MCUs include
  a low-power DMA engine and an array of low-power sensor interfaces such as the
  I2C and I3C buses.
  Today’s smartwatches are capable of sharing biometric data with remote health
  care providers for monitoring and diagnostics. These wireless connections must
  be secure and private to protect user data. Securing smartwatch designs
  requires a powerful yet easy-to-implement security framework based on strong
  isolation and proven hardware security technologies. To help protect
  smartwatches and other wearables against intrusion, NXP’s i.MX RT MCUs offer
  advanced, built-in security features including secure boot, unique key storage
  and hardware acceleration of symmetric and cryptographic algorithms.
Connect with NXP and Drive the Next Generation of Smartwatches
  As new smartwatch use cases emerge, NXP’s advances in crossover MCUs, wireless
  connectivity, sensor interfaces, voice software and security technology will
  continue to meet the evolving needs of wearable designs. NXP’s comprehensive
  software solutions and third-party ecosystems help developers optimize their
  smartwatch designs, reduce cost and complexity within miniature form factors
  and accelerate time to market. Explore NXP’s solutions for
  smartwatches and other wearables
  or download our
  brochure.