Samsung Gear IconX: Beating Apple to the Cordless Punch

Exploding phone woes aside, Samsung has been creating some really innovative and high tech mobile devices lately. While Apple made a big splash with their decision to kill the headphone jack, they were far from the first company to create completely wireless earbuds. In this case, Samsung’s IconX earbuds complement the rest of their Gear line with surprisingly good sound and functionality.
As usual, Samsung insists on using their own eco-system for connecting to your Android phone. Before going any further it’s important to note that Apple users are left out in the cold here. While Samsung certainly recommends their Galaxy phones as the ideal platform for the IconX, other Android users can just download the Gear app and be on their way.
That said, getting the IconX set up was one of the most maddening device experiences I’ve had in a long time. The documentation is absurdly light and according to the Gear app, the IconX immediately needed an update. Okay, I expect that. What I didn’t expect is that it can’t actually update itself through the app. A message kindly tells me to download the Gear software for my Windows machine. That’s strike one. Why, in this day and age, would I need a PC to update my mobile anything?
It got worse. See, Samsung provides no links to where this software might be. I spent about an hour searching for it and the closest I got was a potential file from their Hong Kong website. Further research revealed the awful and ironic truth. The program’s installer was sitting there the whole time in the earbud’s internal storage.
So, after I regained consciousness, I installed it, updated my buds, and went on with my life, which is probably several hours shorter thanks to sheer frustration and amazement over how absurd this whole experience was.
From here on out, it was (mostly) rainbows and sunshine. The IconX acts as several devices at once. It’s heavily focused on fitness tracking and has a heart rate monitor and motion sensors to keep up with your activities. Unfortunately, it doesn’t integrate with any other fitness app besides Samsung’s own S Health.
There’s some oddities in how the IconX works as a fitness device as well. I had to puzzle through it, because I’m used to heart rate monitors that just, you know, monitor my heart whenever I wear them. Not so here. The only time the IconX monitors anything is when you intentionally start a workout in S Health. So, if you’re a sedate cube monkey like me, you can’t have it checking your pulse while you’re merely sitting around.
Once a workout is started (in my case, walking slowly out in the awful sunshine, because this is the kind of sacrifice I make for you people), the IconX is actually quite the wonder. It gave me regular, quick verbal reports on my progress, used the app’s GPS to track my route, and the heart rate meter seemed to detect that I had one. Is it accurate? No idea, but it had close parity with Samsung Gear Fit 2’s reading, so that’s something.