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It might look like a mechanical spring-and-gear watch, but underneath, a microchip allows the Aquaracer to do more timekeeping with less clutter on the face. With traditional watches, adding functions requires adding gears and springs, as well as squeezing in tiny, hard-to-read dials. But the microprocessor in the Calibre S can keep track of multiple functions at once, so the main dial can alternate among showing, say, the time of day, ticking off time in stopwatch mode, and running backward for a countdown. $2,500; tagheuer.com
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