
A Display Built for Quick Glances
The Yoho Smartwatch uses a simple, compact display style designed for short checks rather than long reading sessions. On basic Yoho band-style models, the screen is meant to show the essentials first: time, date, activity data, battery information, and a few key health pages. The manuals consistently describe a screen flow that favors quick access and automatic shutdown instead of a complex visual interface.
Default Screen Behavior
In normal use, a short press or touch wakes the screen and opens the default page with date and time. From there, additional touches cycle through the available pages on the band. The display does not stay on for long by default; the manuals state that it turns off automatically after about five seconds, while the quick setup guide describes it as turning off after a couple of seconds. In practice, this means the display is intentionally brief to reduce distraction and conserve power.
What You Can Adjust

The most clearly documented display setting is page visibility. In the Yoho app, the “Band display settings” option allows users to choose which function pages appear on the band. Enabled pages are shown one by one as you tap through the interface, while disabled pages are removed from the cycle. This is one of the most practical display controls because it directly changes how fast and clean the watch feels in daily use.
Why Page Selection Matters

A small display feels better when it is not overloaded. If every available screen is left active, reaching the page you actually want can take longer than it should. By keeping only the most useful screens visible, the watch becomes easier to read and quicker to navigate. For many users, the best setup is a short rotation built around time, steps, distance, calories, battery, and one or two extra pages they check often. The quick setup guide also shows a common screen sequence of Time, Steps, Distance, Calories, and Battery, which supports this simpler display-first approach.
Time and Date Display
The time display is one of the most important visual elements on the watch, and it is designed to be corrected through synchronization rather than manual on-band adjustment. The manual states that after the watch is synchronized with the phone, the date and clock on the band are automatically calibrated. It also notes that first-time pairing is important because time, pedometer, and sleep-related functions depend on successful app connection. This makes Android syncing part of the display experience, not just part of setup.
Display and Sync Work Together
Because the display depends on synchronization for correct time and data presentation, the watch feels most accurate when it stays paired regularly with the Android app. The setup guide notes that if the battery runs flat, the watch may need to resync with the phone app to update time and information again. In other words, display accuracy is tied not only to the screen itself, but also to the watch’s connection routine.
Health Pages on the Display
Some pages behave differently from ordinary information screens. When switching to the heart-rate or blood-pressure interface, the manual says the band automatically starts the measurement. The result is then displayed after about 40 seconds, after which the screen turns off automatically. This tells us that certain display pages are designed as short task screens rather than permanent readout pages. They appear, perform a function, show a result, and then close themselves.
Notification Display Behavior
Display settings also connect to reminders and notifications. The manual explains that if vibrating reminders are turned on, the band vibrates for calls, messages, and other alerts. If vibration is turned off, the reminder can still appear on screen without vibration. That means part of the display experience is not purely visual customization, but deciding how visible and how disruptive alerts should feel on the wrist.
Android Permissions and On-Screen Alerts
For Android users, background permission settings can affect how well the watch shows reminders and connected features. The manual specifically recommends allowing the Yoho app to run in the background and granting the needed permissions so reminder functions can work fully. This matters because a watch display may appear simple on the surface, but some of its most useful on-screen behaviors depend on the Android app being allowed to stay active behind the scenes.
A Display Focused on Simplicity
One of the clearest things the manuals reveal is what the display is not trying to be. The documented settings focus on page selection, screen wake behavior, auto-off timing, synchronized time display, and alert presentation. They do not emphasize a deeply layered on-watch interface. This suggests that the Yoho display is designed around simplicity, speed, and battery-conscious use rather than heavy visual customization. That makes it better suited to quick daily checks than to long on-screen interaction.
How to Set Up the Display for Better Everyday Use
A practical display setup usually starts with reducing clutter. A shorter page cycle makes the watch easier to use, and a properly synced time display makes it more trustworthy at a glance. For most users, the best display experience comes from a few simple habits:
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Keep only the pages you actually use enabled
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Sync the watch with the Android app regularly
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Charge before the battery becomes completely empty
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Use reminder settings selectively so the screen stays helpful
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Let the display serve quick checks instead of constant monitoring
These habits align closely with how the device is documented to work: short screen sessions, app-supported settings, and simple touch-based page movement.
Suggested Display Layout
A clean and practical display layout may look like this:
Essential Pages
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Time and Date
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Steps
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Battery
Useful Daily Pages
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Distance
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Calories
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Heart Rate
Optional Pages
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Notifications
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Reminder-related screens
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Extra health pages you check occasionally
This kind of layout keeps the band fast to navigate and avoids turning a small screen into a crowded one. Since the app allows enabled pages to appear and disabled pages to disappear, the display can be shaped around comfort and routine rather than left in a one-size-fits-all setup.
Final View
Display settings on the Yoho Smartwatch are less about advanced visual design and more about practical control. The watch is built to wake quickly, show key information, cycle through selected pages, and turn off again without delay. The Android app plays an important role by letting users choose which pages appear and by keeping the date and time calibrated through synchronization. When used well, the result is a display that feels simple, readable, and efficient for everyday wear.