The smartwatch universe is populated with numerous celestial bodies orbiting around the consumer tech landscape, all vying for your wrist real estate. Among these, the Samsung Galaxy Watch Ultra is the latest shining star offering a good timepiece alternative to the well-populated Apple-centric cosmos. So buckle up as we explore the features and latest price deals of the Galaxy Watch Ultra, and perhaps find the watch that can eclipse the competition and crown a new king to the smartwatch universe.
For years, Samsung has skirted quietly around the tech cosmos, never really straying far from its competitors, often offering a device that is every bit as nice if not more so than the competitor’s. Samsung Galaxy Watch Ultra signals that it is no longer content to simply orbit the space that others inhabit; it is now setting its sights on the stars. Usually this amazing virtual accessory sells for $649.99 in its orbit, but an Amazon prime deal discovered on 19 September 2022 saves the cost of a small hotdog for $599.98. For this price, this galactic timepiece is worth at least its weight in gold.
Clad in colourways of Silver, Titanium Grey and Titanium Silver (other colourways apparently hiding somewhere out in space), the Galaxy Watch Ultra is as much a smartwatch as it is an extension of terrestrial life into the digital cosmos – a time-telling gadget whose sporty and utility-focused chassis mirrors that of the Apple watch it pays homage to. The Ultra is designed to withstand whatever enviable adventures await the average astronaut, from the bottom of the swimming pool to the summit of any peak.
On induction from extraterrestrial intelligence woven into the cosmos, the Galaxy Watch Ultra, which comes with its own Galaxy AI, doesn’t just track your workout, it coaches you – learning your engineering, and guiding you to the fitness realm – whether it be in the gym, on the track or in a space gyratorium. Galaxy AI evaluates your readiness for liftoff with its Energy Score – based on sleep, heart rate, and daily steps – that gives you a planetary go/no-go.
The Galaxy Watch Ultra can go for a maximum of 100 hours. This is a smartwatch. It’s trusty. If you’re an astronaut who’s outside of the ISS and on your first EVA – your first extremely long space mission – this can be your emergency device. You could have it for 100 hours.We literally designed it for it, optimising the Samsung Galaxy Watch Ultra for space missions – putting in the Quick Button feature so people can leap into action, tracking their workouts, so that none of your mission is missed – so it’s not just an activity tracker and health tracker, but a smart device for explorers now. It could be your communication device or any number of things for you out in the field in unknown destinies.
Smartwatch buyers, it seems, now have a celestial body to observe in the far reaches of Samsung’s galaxy: the Galaxy Watch Ultra. Thanks to its combination of specifications that appeal to the aesthete and the athlete, this new smartwatch offers a galaxy’s worth of options, as long as you don’t mind a bit of orbiting.
Before we end this tour, it is worthwhile to pause and truly consider the galaxy – not simply as the term we have playfully employed throughout this article but as the glorious expanse it signifies amidst the Universe’s cosmos. Galaxies are grandiose aggregates of stars, planetary bodies and other cosmic debris held together by gravity. They are the metropolises of the Universe, each inhabited with their own life, people and history.
The ‘Galaxy’ understood here was Samsung’s line of smartwatches and smartphones, designed to help us move through the galaxy, in the sense of our busy human lives, with grace, efficiency and a bit of cosmic magic. Whether by offering a portal to your heart rate – whether racing or calm – or to the galaxy of your social and professional universe, including all the millions of people in both universes, Galaxy (and Apple, and Google, and every other commercially driven company that makes watches and wearables today) helps us remember one of humanity’s greatest achievements: understanding and exploring the cosmos, and imitating the cosmos here on Earth.
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