![]() After which, I’ll go out and get my own for any future testing needs. You name it, I’ve been trying it.Īs usual, this watch is a media loaner, and it’ll go back to Garmin shortly. From snowy winter glove weather to bright sunny islands. There are lots of details to cover, and I’ve been using this watch for more than a month now – putting it through its paces in all assortment of conditions. Further, a slate of minor things like switching out materials for nicer ones – such as going with a stainless steel rear case, and going with 20mm industry standard quick release bands.īut let’s not get ahead of ourselves. Meaning, they’re things like adding in a third button (in the middle), and splitting the difference in sizes between the previous Venu 2 and 2S. Plus you can now listen to music using the speaker on the watch if that’s your thing, and it’s surprisingly not horrible.īeyond that, the changes are almost entirely industrial design related. However, most interesting in my opinion is the ability to take calls on your wrist, and even trigger emergency assistance and safety alerts using voice (which is new to Garmin as well). This is the first Garmin watch to offer any sort of voice assistant integration, and out of the gate it supports Apple’s Siri, Google Assistant, and Samsung’s Bixby. ![]() ![]() The Garmin Venu 2 Plus aims to be an incremental update over the 7-month-old Venu 2/2S, with the core new features being voice assistants and a speaker for making and receiving calls. ![]()
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