Analog watches with just one hand aren't unheard of, but they are still far from the norm. The problem with this novel approach is that accuracy tends to take a back seat. The Visus Watch from Mykonos Design aims to change this.
The Visus Watch manages to retain a fair degree of accuracy by keeping the single hand stationary and moving the time past it, instead of the other way around. The single red hand remains in the traditional 3 o'clock position at all times, while the hours, minutes, and seconds sweep past in three concentric circles.
The outermost disc contains the hours along with their half-hour interstitials, the middle disc contains the minutes, separated into five-minute intervals, and the inner disc contains the seconds, with every fifth one once again displayed. You are therefore simply reading along the line formed by the immovable hand.
The face of the Visus watch is available in black or white, with a woven steel strap and buckle completing the ensemble. The Visus Watch is priced at US$50. The video below briefly shows the Visus Watch in action.
Source: Mykonos Design via The Awesomer
As mentioned above the digits display in the wrong order. It should be HH:MM:SS not SS:MM:HH as it is now.
The ring with the most details is the smallest one leaving very little room for the data The order of the numbers is wrong. People expect higher number to be below the lower numbers.
I have to look at least 2 times to figure out the time displayed. I expected better from an Italian designer
I personally have four different versions of this watch and one that looks suspiciously like the one pictured here. I didn't pay more than $10.00 for each of them on Ebay. I hate to say it but they just aren't Gizmag material.
It would indeed have been much better if the disks moved counterclockwise. Unfortunately, this would entail using a nonstandard movement running in reverse. I've seen such movements in novelty wall clocks, but not in wristwatches.
But I still wouldn't want the hours on the tiny inner disks---most of the time, when you look at your watch, the hour is important, and the second is hardly relevant. I prefer the hour written in bigger numerals.
I assumed that having the writing the right way up was obvious. Think about it