The OnePlus Watch 3 arrives on February 18
OnePlus has revealed that you'll be able to get your hands on (or wrist under) its latest smartwatch very soon. The OnePlus Watch 3 will be available in the US, Canada and Europe on February 18. The company hasn't announced pricing just yet, but you can get a $30 discount if you sign up for updates.
It claims that the Watch 3 can run for up to 16 days in power saver mode and five days in smart mode (which would be 20 hours longer than the Watch 2). Meanwhile, the wearable is said to run for up to 72 hours on a single charge if you're a heavy user. The company added that you can get a full day of use out of a 10-minute charge as well.
OnePlus is trying to balance performance and battery life by employing two chipsets: the Snapdragon W5 performance chipset and the new BES2800 MCU Efficiency chipset. The Watch 3 also uses the same battery tech that the company employed in the OnePlus 13, while battery capacity has increased from 500mAh in the previous model to 631mAh. The extra capacity plus the promise of lower power consumption make for a potent combination to boost battery life.
As was the case last time around, the OnePlus Watch 3 supports WearOS. The latest model doesn't look very different from the previous one on the surface, though there's a new bezel made from titanium and the sapphire crystal screen should bolster durability. The OnePlus Watch 3 will be available in two colorways, emerald titanium and obsidian titanium.

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If I could say 'remember this restaurant' or 'save this address for later' and have the AI find and store relevant content, it would make Mind Space feel more like a true assistant. There's no reason voice couldn't be part of the interface, especially when other OEMs are moving quickly to layer voice control across their AI features. Next, there's no cloud syncing. As niche as my gripe sounds, it is critical to the way I wrangle information. Mind Space is entirely local, which means everything I save lives only on my phone. Switch devices, lose the phone, or try to work across a tablet or laptop, and all that captured content is gone or inaccessible. If OnePlus is serious about building an AI-powered memory system, it needs to offer a way to securely back up and sync Mind Space across devices. Even better, a web or desktop client would let users organize and act on saved content outside the phone. Until then, it's not really a memory system. It's just a temporary locker. Dhruv Bhutani / Android Authority Then there's the walled garden problem. Mind Space doesn't connect meaningfully with other apps or services. I can't export content to Google Drive or send it to my Notes app. The only cross-app integration I've come across so far is the ability to create calendar events. As convenient as that is, it's not enough. For a feature positioned as a personal productivity tool, it's oddly disconnected from the rest of the phone. OnePlus should think seriously about app integrations, whether that's through deep linking, system-level shortcuts, or a proper API that lets developers hook into Mind Space. Exporting is a pain point, too. Once something is in Mind Space, getting it out isn't easy. There's no bulk export and no way to send content to third-party apps in a structured format. For users who want to write up notes in Docs or track saved items in a spreadsheet, Mind Space is a dead end. A proper export feature, even if limited to standard formats like PDF or markdown, would make the tool more useful in everyday workflows. Privacy is another concern of mine. While OnePlus says most of Mind Space's AI runs on device, there's no real transparency around what data is stored, how long it's retained or what happens when you delete something. For a feature designed to capture all kinds of personal information, that's a problem. A dedicated privacy panel with toggles for data retention, syncing if ever introduced, and analysis history would help build trust. Most of all, if OnePlus is really serious about this, Mind Space needs to be more than just a scrapbook. Give it some structure. Let users add checklists or reminders to saved content. Show clippings in the context of a timeline. What you saved, when and why. Maybe even surface recurring themes over time. If someone keeps saving screenshots about an upcoming trip, that's probably worth surfacing as a smart folder or project. These are the kinds of use cases that AI excels at. Mind Space is close, but not quite essential Dhruv Bhutani / Android Authority Look, I like what OnePlus is trying with Mind Space. It's a genuine problem for users like me who consume a copious amount of information every day. But for it to succeed, Mind Space should feel personal. Not just in what it saves, but how it evolves. If a user tends to clip content during work hours, prioritize showing those items first. If someone mostly saves social media posts and shopping links, maybe offer price tracking or AI summaries, or extract more information like the booktok example I mentioned earlier. This isn't out of the realm of possibility, as dedicated apps already let you do that. Right now, Mind Space feels like a concept in public beta. A good concept, but still a concept. It's not useless, but it's also not packing enough utility to build a workflow around. That could change. The foundation is solid, the hardware support is already there, and the broader trend toward AI-first experiences is only picking up speed. But for Mind Space to matter, OnePlus needs to treat it as more than a checkbox on the feature list. Right now, Mind Space feels like a concept in public beta. A good concept, but still a concept. Mind Space has to become a key part of how people use their phones every day. When paired with OnePlus's excellent tablets for content consumption, I could see this being a compelling reason to shift to the company's ecosystem. But it's not there yet. If OnePlus wants to build an ecosystem that's smarter, more contextual, and more personal, this is the right place to start, but it's got its work cut out for it.