The new Nothing smartwatch does something even the Apple Watch Ultra can't do – Mashable
Nothing is going all-in on AI with its new CMF 3 Pro smartwatch.
Available for purchase now for $79.99, the CMF Watch 3 Pro brings a lot of fitness tracker features to the table, including a dual-band five-system GPS setup for more precise tracking, a four-channel heart rate sensor for more accurate readings, blood oxygen monitoring, stress tracking, 130 activity modes, and more. But perhaps the biggest feature of the smartwatch is its AI integration, specifically when it comes to ChatGPT.
The device has fully integrated ChatGPT into its design, allowing you to ask the chatbot questions, set reminders, record voice notes, and perform other tasks with simple voice prompts. The voice recorder can also auto-transcribe conversations or notes. On its face, this may not seem like big news, but it’s actually worth noting that many big-name smartwatches only offer ChatGPT through awkward workarounds. The Apple Watch can only access ChatGPT via third-party apps, or by asking Siri to access ChatGPT.
The CMF Watch 3 Pro cuts out the middleman, giving users direct access to the AI chatbot. The wearable even lets you use AI-generated watch faces to customize its look.
This isn’t the first Nothing product to tout ChatGPT integration — the Nothing Ear (a) buds also have this feature, as do the newly released Nothing headphones.
Whether this is a positive and genuinely helpful feature remains to be seen, but what we can say is that every AI wearable we’ve seen up to this point — like the Rabbit R1 and Humane AI Pin — has been an utter failure. Will Nothing’s CMF Watch 3 Pro join that list? Maybe, but one thing is certain: AI wearables are becoming more mainstream, for better or worse.
Topics Smartwatches ChatGPT OpenAI
Dylan Haas is a Lead Shopping Reporter for Mashable, where he covers all things gaming, laptops, fitness, and shopping events like Black Friday and Prime Day. Before joining the team at Mashable, Dylan received a B.A. in Communications from Pace University and contributed to publications like Paste Magazine, Bandsintown, and others following a brief stint as a marketing and management assistant in the music industry.