On the other hand, it means the OnePlus Watch is stuck with its suite of preinstalled apps. There are pros and cons to this, and on the plus side we don’t see WearOS watches coming anywhere near the OnePlus Watch’s battery efficiency, which we chalk up to OnePlus owning both the software and hardware of the wearable. The OnePlus Watch doesn’t run Google’s WearOS, and instead uses the company's bespoke operating system (called OnePlus Watch OS). The watch ran smoothly in our testing, and didn’t hiccup or slow down when put through a selection of tasks – though given the limited number of preinstalled apps there's not much scope for pushing this watch particularly hard. The OnePlus Watch packs an undisclosed OnePlus-built chipset – we asked, and the company hasn’t gotten back to us about the specifics of the silicon in the watch – and 4GB of onboard storage, of which 2GB is available for media.
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