Ask HN: How do you like your smartwatch?
Out of curiosity since I recently bought my first wearable. To all owners of Apple Watch, Pebble, Android Wear etc. how do you like your smartwatch, what do you use it for, what feature is most usefull to you, how long do you have it, what annoys you and which festure do you miss the most?
18 comments
[ 2.7 ms ] story [ 40.7 ms ] threadI do absolutely love that my phone's ringer is never ever on. It just doesn't ever make a noise.
Annoyances: I wear the sports band, and it's gotten difficult to put on. The rubber(?) hole that the metal peg grasps onto has become loose and is now agape, and slightly torn resulting in a couple of extra tries when I put on the watch. The external speaker is also a let down, I can not hear who is on the other end unless I put the watch up to my face (about 4" from my ear).
Features that I could use: Improving Siri's abilities with Wolfram Alpha when dictating to the watch, Improve watch face modularity. Decrease the thickness of the watch.
Miss it when I forget to put it on.
Phone stays in my pocket most of the day.
Looking at it during meetings is rude and literally a deal breaker.
Only use it for:
- notifications
- remote controlled camera for group selfies
- asking Siri how far away somewhere is, or simple questions
- quickly responding to messages
A few months after launch I snagged one on sale for $175 and I quite enjoy it (although not necessarily for the reasons I originally expected to).
My experience: it's nothing groundbreaking like your first (or latest) smartphone because it's largely just an extension of that smartphone. I don't really run too many watch-specific applications and mostly use it for quick notifications/replies and the occasional case where having a control on my wrist is nicer than messing with my phone.
One example of that would be navigation while riding my motorcycle. I don't have a phone charger/mount but I can fire up nav before leaving and glance down at my watch to see upcoming turns. It can also be nice as a remote for my phone's camera or to pause something I'm casting to the TV like a Netflix show.
Honestly my main, favorite thing about this watch is the ability to change the face to look like just about anything I want. I never would've guessed this at first but this is my stupidly obvious killer app (or at least the most enjoyable). There are several great watch faces for free or cheap on the Play Store and thousands of them available for download and application through apps like Watchmaker.
The fact that this is just a programmable screen means you can make it look like a subtle, classy "traditional" watch or you can do things not possible on traditional jewelry. If I felt like it I could swap between a long list of favorites to match whatever I'm doing or even what I'm wearing. Granted I'm not quite that obsessed with fashion or anything but it's a surprisingly cool thing to have.
And since I enjoy playing around in Photoshop and Illustrator, I can create my own interactive watch faces with no programming skill required. Watchmaker and other apps allow you to create each element from the background to the hands or dials or readouts or buttons and tie them to variables like time, date, battery, location, or even the orientation of the watch in space.
It's totally a geeky bit of tinkering that not everyone would enjoy but again, there are thousands of great ones out there made and shared by people who are into that sort of thing. Granted there are plenty of shitty "brand" watch knockoff faces and ugly amateurish stuff but that's the nature of user-generated designs.
So yeah, for $150-250, if you're a gadget fan and have the dough to spend on something that's mostly just pretty neat but not necessary, I think these sorts of watches are great. If the idea of putting it on a cradle on the nightstand every night turns you off or you would never spend that much on any watch, maybe it's not a great idea.
I doubt that I would spend the $400-500+ I've seen other smart watches going for because there's only so much I'd pay for a smartphone extender with custom display but in the $150-250 range it's pretty sweet.
I feel odd going outside without it though, I have bluetooth headphones, so on my walk to/from work, my phone can stay in my jacket pocket, and I still get notifications and can control my music.
I use the heart rate/step tracker a fair amount too as I'm trying to lose weight.
I don't use the other apps on there particularly regularly, although I found the 'remote camera view' app is great when working behind PCs/Monitors.
Mainly use it to get a glance at messages (Hangouts etc.), control music while on the go and to track my fitness goals.
I'm working on a Raspberry Pi powered doorbell/camera, so I'm looking forward to making the companion app and wear app.
What annoys me is the constant Bluetooth disconnection and sporadic battery life. Maybe I'm a heavy user or am remembering things incorrectly, but I feel like I used to get more battery life. I get a 20% battery warning every two days it seems.
I only wish the screen was retina like my co-worker's Watch. It's nice.