Honor B Z1 review: A simple, basic, affordable smartwatch

BY GreenBot Staff

Published 11 Feb 2016

I’m a little bored with Android ar. It feels like every new version is about style rather than functionality. rt of that is ’s doing, as it’s still figuring out what works, part of that can be attributed to the manufacturers who want to be a part of this apparent wearables uprising but aren’t doing much innovating.

It’s why I was interested in Huawei’s Honor B Z1. It’s a ridiculously barebones smartwatch that’s small, comfortable, easy to use. It also performs the most basic tasks that every other Android ar watch does for a fraction of the price. I know that apps on your wrist are all the rage these days, but that’s just too much commitment for me. So I was curious to see if the Honor B Z1 could fulfill my desire to wear a smartwatch without dealing with the annoyances of being an Android ar user.

A barebones smartwatch

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It may be barebones, but at least it’s sleek.

I admit that I’ve been particularly choosy about smartwatches this past year, but the Honor B Z1 is one of the few I’ve actually enjoyed wearing. Its 1.06-inch OD panel is surrounded by brushed stainless steel, its hypoallergenic polyurethane wristb is comfortable to wear all day. It’s light, too, unlike the Z1’s larger cousin, the Huawei tch, its smaller size means it doesn’t overpower your wrist.

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A smaller, comfortable smartwatch.

In keeping with its minimalist design, there are no buttons on the Z1. To wake it up, you have to quickly double tap, while getting from screen to screen requires simply swiping up down. The only other interface mechanism is a press–hold, which you’ll use to either choose from one of four watch faces, or to start a workout. It’s worth noting that I discovered all of this through trial error, even afterwards I had some trouble getting the watch to underst my taps. There’s also a limited Settings menu, though most of what you customize on the Z1 B is done with the accompanying Huawei ar app.

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A look through the Z1’s different watch screens.

The Z1 tells the time, tracks your steps, counts you how many hours you’ve slept. It can track a workout, too, though you can’t specify the type of exercise. It also pushes through simple notifications, wakes you up if you’ve set an alarm.

The battery life on the Honor B Z1 is particularly remarkable, especially compared to what you’d get with an Android ar device. The watch lasts a little more than four days, or 14 days on stby time. It uses a magnetic charging dock you can easily stow, it supports fast charging, so the watch is ready to go after an hour half on the charger.

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One of the four watch faces on the Honor B Z1.

Overall, the Z1 B is relatively vanilla in its functionality, you’ll hardly interact with it throughout the day except to glance at notifications, or the time. I would have liked a few more features tossed in there, like volume playback controls when you’re listening to music, but I’m hoping that’s something that’ll come through in a future software update.

Its companion app could use a little work

If there’s anything I learned in the last few years of this burgeoning wearables scene, it’s that it’s the companion application that can make or break a smartwatch or fitness b.

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The Huawei ar app is nice to look at, but it’s functionality is pretty limited.

The Honor B Z1’s companion app is Huawei ar, which you can also use with the Huawei tch. The interface for it is pretty simple to use: there are two main screens, including one for how much sleep you’re getting another for your fitness. The fitness tab bundles in how much you’ve worked out during the day, how far you’ve walked, how many calories you’ve burned.

There’s also a pullout menu you can access by swiping from either direction that offers customization options for the b. For instance, you can set a reminder to buzz you when you’ve been sitting for too long, or select which apps can push through notifications. You can also set a Do Not Disturb mode so that the watch doesn’t bug you during important times of the day, though once it detects that you’re asleep it won’t buzz at all until it’s sure that you’re awake.

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It feels a little buggy, too, which you’ll definitely experience with the hamburger menus.

If your main goal is fitness or weight loss, the Huawei ar app is seriously disappointing. First off, it’s slow, I’ve never seen a hamburger menu this jittery since the Froyo days. Second, the data that you accumulate can only be shared with wbone Uor MyFitnessl, even then the app blanked on me during testing, so I don’t know how it actually works. I expected more from an app that’s developed by a company as massive as Huawei.

A simple digital accessory for your wrist

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A simple, digital accessory.

The Honor B Z1 is not a revolutionary new gadget from Huawei, nor is it meant to go up against the dozens of fitness trackers already on the market (at least, I certainly hope not). It’s simply a digital watch that tells the time, figures out if you’ve slept well enough through the night, allows you track how much you’re walking each day. It’s also a stylish little accessory for receiving notifications, though you’ll still have to grab your phone out of your purse or pocket to get a better gauge of what’s going on.

This is an $80 smartwatch, so I wasn’t exactly expecting it to power the International Space Station. But I think its companion application needs a bit of refinement before anyone can justify spending that kind of money on a watch that does so little. If you’re particularly concerned with fitness weight loss, there are plenty of other health trackers out there that can get the job done, including the slightly pricier FitBit Flex. It’s about $20 more it doesn’t tell the time or push through notifications, but it can actually help you achieve your personal goals.