This article felt very weak and empty. The biggest complaint seemed to be that other people noticed she had it, and started small talk about it. Oh the horror. It's an article in search of minor reasons to not like the watch. I don't care if it wasn't life changing to you. Not newsworthy.
I think there's some substance here. My impression from reading it was that the watch was purchased as a fashion device, but it's still too much of a gadget to really be one.
If I brought my quadcopter to work and started flying it around, people would take notice and comment on it. Some might also want to try it out. No one would mistake it for a fashion accessory, however. That's because it is a toy; which is what people who aren't tech geeks think of gadgets: they're expensive toys. The author doesn't want to be perceived as the kind of person who has en expensive toy strapped to her wrist.
That's partially true. But it's also about how it makes you feel. Will most people be able to tell $250 Thomas Pink shirt from $25 shirt? Probably not, especially if the $25 one has good fit. But plenty of people plunk down $150-$250 for a shirt because they appreciate its feel, workmanship, fit, etc.
I thought about it quite a bit before the launch and decided against it. The reason is the same reason I haven't gone for any of these: AW is putting all its effort into being something that it's not (a fashionable watch) instead of being the best of what it is (wearable arm tech).
The watch started out as a utility on the arm and evolved into the time masterpiece or fashion piece that it is today. These 'watches' are attempting to skip all of that evolution instead of defiantly re-evaluating what a modern utility on the arm could be.
I'm personally in agreement with the author but not for the same reasons. I think the AW, Android Gear and what-have-you are definitely going to fizzle out in face of some future revolutionary device, possibly before then: people are going to grudgingly realize that they have a phone in their pocket and that they don't need another one on their arm.
Yeah, I feel the same way, too. The watches for iOS and Android really aren't anything more than an extra notification device for me ... my phone already does that, and arguably too much. My $24 Mickey Mouse watch still tells the time when I'm not staring at my phone, and it didn't cost me $400 like the Apple Watch would.
The problem of "more capability" is that everyone has a smartphone in their pocket. Any interaction that lasts more than 2-3 taps, or 2 seconds, is a failure because the user would have been better served by retrieving their phone. (niche "phone not accessible" situations notwithstanding)
The right answer to wearable tech is less interaction. The value has to be in the device presenting you the right 1-second functionality at the right time. (ala notification triage, Apple Pay, and the laundry list of Home Kit integration that's still TBD)
The best features on the Watch don't exist yet. They're the passive sensors, like the heart rate monitor. I think the best Watch is yet to come, if they can make these breakthroughs in body sensors like blood glucose.
Sure...but the other, implicit side of "I'm quitting it because of all the social awkwardness" is: "This device is not good enough to warrant tolerating all the social awkwardness". The iPad was the only Apple device that I've waited on opening day for and when I used it at subways or at the coffee shop for what seemed like the first two months, I always got questions. And it was fun at first, then kind of annoying. But I never felt the urge to "quit" the iPad because its form factor was just so damn useful. If I couldn't stand the public attention, I could always use it at home and feel like I got my money's worth. Apparently that's not the case with the OP and the Watch.
I've never used Glass, but what it has going against it besides social awkwardness, is physical design limitations and massive cost...substantially improve 1 or 2 of those categories, then it seems like an easy sell. And if it's the case that augmented-vision glasses don't ever make it to the public mainstream (imagine legislators passing sweeping regulations/restrictions)...I think it'd still be useful to wear for a wide variety of technical tasks...for example...instead of doing a DIY project and having to hold an iPad in one hand, with Glass and a specially designed app, have your field of vision augmented by the instructions.
It's possible to imagine an ideal Glass device (basically indistinguishable from normal glasses) and how that could be integrated into daily life. But it's hard to imagine how the ideal Watch, when it's finally implemented, would be drastically different than what it offers now; given its inherently small screen and its physical attachment to your wrist, what could a 5mm thin, 8-week-on-a-single-charge, heavily developer-supported Watch change how we use a watch-like device...and how would those changes compare in magnitude versus the changes brought by similar advancements in phone and eyewear technology?
Exactly right about Glass there. It blew my mind that Google dropped the ball so bad there. Why market it to drunk trustafarian boho douche bags that go hang gliding every day? Uh, there's a whole population of people that work with their hands for a living that could use an extra para-brain to do some light secretarial jobs like calling, taking a picture, texting, etc... I would say the working class is far more populous than the target audience in those original Glass-hole adds.
I think the problem is that it was expensive, so they were kind of locked into marketing it toward people who go through money like socks — similar to why Tesla started insanely far upmarket and has slowly been working its way down to the ordinary consumer market, which is probably where the most benefit will happen.
Expensive for an individual, but not for a group like a military (I understand if Google wants to stay away from that can of worms) or a big manufacturing company like aerospace or food or car repair, etc ...
Glass was pretty terrible IMO. Lots of major issues, not the least of which was battery life. People complain about the battery on the watch (which i think is great fwiw, never get below 60%). Glass couldn't even dream of 1 day battery life. it was lucky to make it to 1-2 hours, less if you wanted to do the video (basically the only thing it was good at).
That only means that products with more social awkwardness would need to deliver even more value. It doesn't change the cost/benefit calculation for the Apple Watch
I kind of know what you mean. But I've noticed a strange thing with the Apple Watch. Going back even 5 years ago it wasn't "will I wear a watch?" but rather what watch will I wear? A digital one with big buttons said I was a triathlete, an elegant one with a simple face said I valued simplicity etc. But then many of us just stopped wearing watches. So now when I see an Apple Watch on someone I'm having two reactions i) Oh, they're wearing an Apple Watch and ii) It's actually so important to them to have an Apple Watch that they've gone and put a new thing on their body that wasn't there before. So it _seems_ more pretentious to me than it would have a few years back. (sorry I don't mean to say you're pretentious because you have an Apple Watch just that I'm viewing it as much more of a deliberate two part thing)
BTW I know 5 years ago many people didn't wear watches then. I'm talking about the relative trend of significantly decreased watch wearing and buying coinciding with the rise of the smartphone.
People think I'm joking, but yes. I've had people walk up to me in the store and ask about it. It's a flip on the old joke:
How do you know you are wearing your Apple Watch?
Everyone will ask you about it.
And they are all looking for me to tell them that it's great, that it's wonderful, and that it changed my life. And when I don't, they inevitably have a glint of disappoint in their eyes.
Yes, Glass always garnered a bit too much attention for me. It's really awkward when people ask to try it on and you don't want to hand over your $1500 device to a stranger.
It suffered from the additional issue of negative social interaction - some people (luckily none that I've run into) are really opposed to face-phone (Glass) as opposed to in-your-pocket-or-hand-phone. I don't really understand why people think you're invading their privacy just because of an unusual device form factor.
How can you not understand that? If you talk to something wearing google glass you are in the camera's viewport. A smartphone however is mostly kept in you bag, or you have it placed on a table and you are probably NOT in the cameras viewport.
So it's not about the form factor, but the fact that in case of google glass, the camera is pointing on your head!
The device that screams "I'm a nerd (with $600)" causes people to notice that you have it? The same one that required preordering that is just being finished now, months later? And on a product that is, by definition, meant to be seen in public. Yeah, who could have seen that coming?
I don't agree with you. I think the complaint is completely legitimate, and it's the main reason I want to wait a year or two before taking the plunge with smartwatches.
I think the Apple Watch is really cool and I want one. But I'm very much like the author. I hate being ostentatious and I don't want to wear something that will be very noticeable.
The author was still willing to risk it in order to give it a try. There's nothing wrong with that.
(Also, for me the usually-off screen is sort of a dealbreaker, because it really harms the aesthetics of the watch when the screen is off.)
FWIW, I've got the Apple Watch Sport in black, and I haven't been getting significant attention. I think in black, it doesn't really stand out that much.
Agreed. I just used it to pay for my lunch at Panera today and it was the biggest response I've gotten so far, with an outrageous, over the top.... "heh, that's neat" as she grabbed my cup and continued with her day.
Android Wear has an option to have an always-on watch face. When I wore one of the nicer looking ones with that turned on, nobody even noticed it wasn't a real watch until I did something wacky like scroll on it or talk to it.
Especially when the product in question has been out for like 2 months. Not really a huge break up. Now if you were breaking up with indoor plumbing, that'd be a headline.
Exactly. If she really felt like not talking and that the watch was subverting her own being, she could have just said, oh it's a no name knockoff.
If I have something which catches attention I don't want and want to end that line of conversation, I introduce the conversation kill switch. I found it at a garage sale, I got it at jc pennys or tj max. I have no idea what brand it is.
No, she's actually doing the inverse of what she claims to want to do. She's calling attention to herself by announcing how she goes out of her way to not call attention to herself.
Reporters, as if their life wasn't about small talk and schmoozing.
Maybe she isn't comfortable having to lie just to get by, when she clearly didn't find enough benefit from the device to continue through what she perceived as the social issues attached to it.
Ok, so then stop wearing it. Return it. Why make it so melodramatic. It's really not a big deal. People deal with so many more annoying things in daily life -coworkers, digestive tract, bad food, selfish people, inconsiderate people, disease, weather, etc.
As soon as I realized it was posted in Fashion, I realized that it wasn't going to have any content that I care about. "It makes me feel this, people think that about me, etc etc" Hint: If you're going to buy products from the company with the strongest brand in the world, and you hate brands, you're going to have a bad time.
For what it's worth, I've been wearing an Apple Watch from the start and have never been "defined by a talking point on my wrist." Most people seem to either not notice it or not care.
Honestly, I've seen so few Apple Watches in the wild, despite owning one I'm more likely to ask people about their experiences if I see someone wearing one. Because it's led to some interesting conversations.
But, anyway. Many of the problems listed will be solved over time. Some won't. The Apple Watch as it stands is, in my mind, a beta-level product. It's very imperfect, but it's attractive if you're an early-adopter sort.
(Side note: For some reason the title of the article really bugs me. Like it's out to make a really dramatic moment out of the fairly mundane decision to stop using a gadget. When I replaced my old phone with a newer model, I didn't "divorce my old phone." When I rent a Zipcar I don't have a "torrid afternoon affair, after which we vow to never see each other again.")
The reviewer was full of shit, I've had mine for over a week and most people don't even notice and I'm more than happy to answer any questions they may have even though I'd just as well prefer that it was completely ignored. This headline is just one of many click-baity headlines by people that never gave the watch a chance or just want to get as many eyeballs as possible regardless of their actual experiences.
She mentions that a lot of cool stuff about the watch is moot as it is generally in screen off mode.
A lot of the value in a watch is being able to cast a sly glance towards it to see what time it is without anyone else noticing (e.g. in a boring meeting).
Having to do an ostentatious mime to awaken the screen rather defeats this purpose.
I can understand that it'd be frustrating to have a blank screen. It's surprising that Apple couldn't keep the screen on all the time like the LG G Watch series has been able to do. I get 24 hours of battery life with the feature enabled (it's on by default).
Does someone have insight into why Apple can't do what LG has been doing for a year? Is it patents, a larger battery, better software?
On a related note, I hope that someone will release an android wear watch with an epaper screen. I miss being able to see the screen easily in direct sunlight like I could with the pebble. Maybe some sort of hybrid (multi-layered) screen would be possible.
It would be interesting to see what Vanessa Friedman would make of the Pebble. It's still too large, as that's one of her complaints, but I imagine it won't jar like the Apple watch as. And it's pretty nondescript too.
TL;DR - The watch is too flashy for the user. It didn't wake up reliably when the user looked at the watch. The user prefers to unlock their phone to do mundane tasks. The user feels like the step tracking and health functions of the watch are a burden.
If there was ever a product that was not right for a consumer, I think this writer has found one...
Personally I love my A.W. I have had 1 single person ask me about mine, that is it. (Which is good, because I didn't purchase it to be flashy)
Also, I think it would be a bummer if it didn't show its watch face when you look at it. I have heard mixed reports on this functionality. For me, it works really good, I never feel like I'm waiting for it to wake up. Maybe not everyone looks at their wrist in the same motion that is enough to trigger it. Definitely happy it doesn't activate while typing here.
Lastly, if wearable activity technology is not exciting, it seems like a significant portion of the "reasons" to buy one diminish. I was an avid fitbit/jawbone user before the A.W.
A person who self-admittedly is uninterested in branding in her fashion buys the most readily identifiable product in years from the largest brand in the world and she's upset about it?
While a bit crude, I think you summarized the primary reason the Apple Watch was not a good fit. The author specifically shies away from displaying brands which doesn't fit well with the Apple approach of memorable design+branding.
Also, unless you're referring to a specific bug, it's always going to be "him" or "her" and not the watch.
I don't have an Apple Watch, but I'm using Android Wear for 6 months now - Yes, it takes a while to get adjusted to forming a relationship with your watch. But you get there. The bond you form with watch feels to be deeper and more trusting. That maybe intimidating at first.
The author gave up a great device because of peer pressure, and came online to rant about it. Yes, it does start conversations, people ask you what is it that you're wearing. That problem would be slimmer with Apple Watch than Android Wear.
So what? It's an amazing experience to own a smartwatch. And people are genuinely excited about your new gadget, not judging on you. From my experience, they really want to know, and find out how I got one.
It is not yet a fashion statement, but the upsides outweigh the downsides.
Sure, the smartwatch or fitness tracker is not for everyone - I would never consider someone a luddite for not wanting a smartwatch or even a smartphone. And true, for some people, the statistics/tracking does indeed descend into "a numbers-driven neurosis", but for others it's a great way to provide an incentive to remain active, even if it does feel like a cheap gamification trick.
I don't buy this part though:
“Why is that more embarrassing than endlessly looking at a phone?” my friends said when I complained.
It’s a valid question, but after some contemplation I think the answer is simple: A phone is hand-held, and we are used to seeing people read things held in their hands. Like, say, books. But seeing somebody staring at her wrist (or merely sneaking a surreptitious glance at it) telegraphs something else entirely: (1) rudeness or (2) geekiness.
The "rudeness" or "geekiness" aspect is entirely contextual. When you're meeting with someone face-to-face (for dinner, an interview, whatever), constantly glancing at your {watch, phone} is an indication you'd rather not be spending time with them or that there is something else more important on your mind. The exact device through which your inattention for someone else is conveyed is of less concern than the human behavior underlying the action.
My wife has been wearing the LG G Watch since October. She has a petite frame and so it's pretty big on her. Occasionally people will ask her if it's the Apple Watch (this started happening as soon as the Apple Watch was announced, long before it shipped), and when she tells them it's the "G Watch" they lose interest. So at least for her there's not a "conspicuous consumption" problem like the OP is worried about.
She wears it because it's indispensable [1] for her, as a busy mother of small children, to know when someone is calling or she gets a message. She doesn't carry her phone on her person around the house, it ends up on a counter or table somewhere. In addition, she uses the find-my-phone feature at least once a day.
[1]: The other mothers in the neighborhood use SMS to ask her to send their child sent home if they are over playing and it's time for dinner, or what-have-you, so there are communications that are time-sensitive.
> The watch threatened to drag me back into a numbers-driving neurosis, and that's a temptation I'd rather not have.
This is why I stopped using MyFitness, and I stick to rather unobtrusive pedometer apps for my phone. My personality has a very strong rebellious streak, and the phone becomes a parent-by-proxy, scolding me for not doing what it (or society) told me to do.
> Because no matter how attractive the Apple Watch is in the context of other smartwatches or smartbands, no matter how much of an aesthetic advance its rounded corners and rectangular display, it still looks like a gadget.
Which is why I wear a Moto 360 with a metal band. Because it looks like a watch. And it's not a conversation starter unless someone sees me using voice control (it's pretty good at picking up commands sotto voice, but I still look like a fed talking to a microphone in my sleeve).
To her point on fitness, even if I know exactly how much I'm doing and whether or not I'm in shape I actually do want something unobtrusive recording my vitals so that I can have a baseline in the future to compare against in case something truly is wrong, especially knowing what factors have changed over time and maybe being able to correlate them.
The article touches upon something I've thought about - and the reason I don't really believe in the Apple Watch: A phone is something you pick up, work with and then put back - in the pocket, on the table or similar.
A watch is something you choose to wear. That'e the reason that watches have almost always also been seen as a fashion accessory. And you choose to wear a fashion accessory because of the statement it implicitly make about you (for wearing it). And that statement needs to be highly individualized exactly because you choose to wear it.
When everyone wears the same, we call it a uniform. That goes counter to the inherent desire to express our individualism through what we choose to wear. While a specific accessory may signal that we're part of a certain group or belong to a certain segment, few modern people want to be viewed as primarily uniforms. A uniform is something that some of us accept to wear in certain situations, under certain circumstances. But it is generally taken as something that erases individualism. Indeed that is the purpose of a uniform.
There is a risk that the Apple Watch will be viewed as a uniform - something that signals lack of individuality rather than ideals about independence and confidence. If Apple Watch become something that is perceived to be worn by people who are seeking acceptance from belonging to some imaginary club, it becomes a uniform. And a uniform will be shunned by the fashion-aware who want to express ideals such as individualism, confidence and freedom.
> There is a risk that the Apple Watch will be viewed as a uniform - something that signals lack of individuality rather than ideals about independence and confidence.
This is why Apple's being pretty aggressive with the selection of watchbands and metals on the device itself. Right now the fashion side of the Watch is being hindered by technical constraints: It's got to be kind of thick and bulbous just to contain all the guts and battery. Apple will slim it down to just a thin screen given a few years. It'll probably still be rectangular, but the watchbands will be what people see more than anything. And there will be a million options for individuality.
People individualize their iPhones pretty well with cases and lock screen backgrounds. They'll do similar things with watchbands and watch faces.
Probably because it's a pretty unique device that she really wanted to try. She was willing to take the risk.
There are other smartwatches on the market, of course, but it sounds like she doesn't like the appearance of any of them, so the AW was the only viable option for her ("no matter how attractive the Apple Watch is in the context of other smartwatches or smartbands, no matter how much of an aesthetic advance its rounded corners and rectangular display, [...]").
"I do not want to be defined by a talking point on my wrist"
Meh, this won't be an issue in a few months, depending where you're located. In San Francisco, for example, Apple Watches are not a rare sight, so it's unlikely to prompt conversation. It happens to me maybe once or twice a week.
> Like, for example, that I do not want to be defined by a talking point on my wrist.
Ok stupid reason
> But when I started wearing the Apple Watch (the 38-millimeter case with a Milanese Loop band, which is the smaller size with a flexible stainless steel bracelet), it became a subject of conversation no matter where I was: in meetings at work, at the bagel store, at my son’s track meet. It has been so everywhere, marketed to so many people, there was just no mistaking it.
So buy the sport, I've had mine for over a week and only people who knew I was getting it even noticed. I wore a pebble for over a year before so that might have some impact but even then very few people asked about that. That said owning a pebble was made me fall so hard for the Apple watch. Everything the pebble did (other than battery which I don't care about, if it lasts a day I'm fine and mine is consistently at 50% when I go to bed) the Apple watch does better. It's equal parts just better UI/UX and Apple being able to "cheat" by having direct access to the OS that pebble never got.
> Not only does its face effectively span the width of my forearm, but the cool little screen saver that so many reviewers have lauded — the Mickey or the butterfly or the galaxy (which is the one I have) or the pseudo-watch hands (the one that, notably, is always on in every picture of the watch, and actually makes it look like a watch) — is also functionally sleeping most of the time.
So you just bitched about calling out the fact that "look at me I have an Apple watch" and now you are mad that the display isn't on constantly so that.... you can show it off?
> Not that it would do much good. Typing doesn’t awaken the picture. Even when I rock my arm back and forth energetically, it often takes a few tries before up the earth pops. The default position is blank.
I was used to the wrist shake to get the pebble backlight to turn on which doesn't work on the Apple watch but it took less than a day or two to get the gesture down to turn the screen on. This is not an issue as far as I'm concerned. I can rotate my wrist ever so slightly while typing to see the screen just fine and 99% of the time when I look at my watch it turns on. On rare occasions I have to "re-gesture" but I'll trade e-ink and always on (I've seen the new pebble screens in person) for this gorgeous display with much sharper colors and text.
> Just as my default position when trying to read an email or the text of a headline on the small screen involves raising my wrist to near eye level
Are you joking? Get some glasses, you have a problem. I can read my screen perfectly and often better than I could my pebble.
> or, if a phone call is involved and my actual phone is not reachable, talking into thin air. If your children or acquaintances come upon you, it’s pretty much an invitation to ridicule.
Get over it, either don't answer calls on your wrist when with company (sounds like you deserve the ridicule). I rarely answer calls on my watch and only do it when I'm alone and my phone isn't right beside me which is rare.
> It’s a valid question, but after some contemplation I think the answer is simple: A phone is hand-held, and we are used to seeing people read things held in their hands. Like, say, books. But seeing somebody staring at her wrist (or merely sneaking a surreptitious glance at it) telegraphs something else entirely: (1) rudeness or (2) geekiness.
Wow... is this supposed to be a big joke? Glancing at my watch is WAY less rude than pulling out out my phone while talking. As for geekiness again, get over it, it will be commonplace soon enough this is what you have to deal with as an early adaptor. Poor you, you bought a $600+ device and you have to deal with people poking fun at you, get over yourself.
> This doesn’t seem to have bothered the tech writers, most of whom wrote persuasively positive reviews of the gadget, primarily base...
This seems a fair critique to me, in that the clash between fashion and tech / geek / gadgets is real. For some people, blending all of that will make sense. I don't think it makes sense for enough people for the watch to mainstream like the phones have.
Take some of the commentary below as just my own idle thoughts, fantasy as to what might actually make sense. We aren't there yet, but we are close to taking some steps...
For me personally, it's compelling as an advance in what a watch can do. Of course, I was the geek back when I wore watches too. Had multi-function ones, and the best features were solar, with sensor to display light level (rare Seiko), and the variety of increment timers, alarms, and such. Had a calculator one for a while too. Used it a lot.
Some of those have aged well. I've an old Seiko that just screams "80's era peak digital tech", and it's beautiful. Machined case, reasonable display, nice band, etc... Once in a while, I'll wear it for fashion today. I no longer care about the functionality.
When I got past the simple pager and decided to carry a phone, I realized I don't like a lot of personal tech dependency. Having a phone and a watch, along with other potential things to carry around was too much. Something had to go, and that thing was the watch.
I've also realized the real appeal of wearables to me would be some sort of other interface, sci-fi at present (I think), where I can interact without looking at the thing somehow. It having a display is nice, but as a primary use case, not attractive to me anymore. I've a phone for that, and my Note 4 is a powerful phone! There are days when it's my only computing device, and I'm very happy about that development.
Someday, when the wearable can interact on a more personal level, say by stimulating nerves, or doing some other kind of thing, I see the potential for that private comms channel being really useful. Maybe meet somebody, query the phone for some info, get it, and all the while being able to engage them personally without having to pull out some tech, or interact with a thing they can see. Or maybe, it can notify me when somebody I really need / want to interact with enters the room, or is present via some other means. Maybe I could just quietly ask for help too, a 911 call without announcing it's been made.
To me, that's where wearable needs to go; otherwise, why not just have it on the phone where every other thing is?
Long ago, I learned morse code for a HAM radio license. Honestly, if I could get a wearable that would pulse to me at some reasonable rate, and I could pulse back at some reasonable rate, it would be enough to be super useful with the right software. Think text / command line type interface, with some data ending up on the display for various reasons too. Yes, this idea is primitive, and not something most ordinary people would find appealing, but I can't shake it due to my own experiences.
For people who have mastered morse, they can take it in nearly any form. Blinking lights, sound, vibration, taps on the shoulder, whatever. It just works, and they get 30-60 words per minute doing that. I've been around these people, say at a camp fire or some other event, and they literally are following a conversation via a blinking light nobody else there is aware of. I got a sense of what it would be like to be deaf, and found that potential compelling. The idea of having a comms channel with a device like that, personal, private, non intrusive to other interactions is where things become part of us, not just some thing mounted for handy interaction.
Using a watch still takes my sight, and sometimes my sound, and my hands. Using a watch with voice interaction is cool in some contexts, like when I'm using my hands, but not so cool in a social context, where using hands can work because one is speaking, etc... It's all a distraction, or rude, or public. Besides, a p...
84 comments
[ 2.6 ms ] story [ 142 ms ] threadGenerally with jewellery you would expect someone to say something like "that's a nice ring," not "hey is that the new Apple Watch? Can I try it on?"
Of course the latter will fade with time. So if that's her biggest complaint then I imagine it won't exist in a few months.
I thought about it quite a bit before the launch and decided against it. The reason is the same reason I haven't gone for any of these: AW is putting all its effort into being something that it's not (a fashionable watch) instead of being the best of what it is (wearable arm tech).
The watch started out as a utility on the arm and evolved into the time masterpiece or fashion piece that it is today. These 'watches' are attempting to skip all of that evolution instead of defiantly re-evaluating what a modern utility on the arm could be.
I'm personally in agreement with the author but not for the same reasons. I think the AW, Android Gear and what-have-you are definitely going to fizzle out in face of some future revolutionary device, possibly before then: people are going to grudgingly realize that they have a phone in their pocket and that they don't need another one on their arm.
I'd have camped out overnight for something like this: http://toddham.com/blog/iwatch-concept/
1) http://fallout.wikia.com/wiki/Pip-Boy_3000
That's technology! Exactly the type of revolution I was implying.
The right answer to wearable tech is less interaction. The value has to be in the device presenting you the right 1-second functionality at the right time. (ala notification triage, Apple Pay, and the laundry list of Home Kit integration that's still TBD)
It's possible to imagine an ideal Glass device (basically indistinguishable from normal glasses) and how that could be integrated into daily life. But it's hard to imagine how the ideal Watch, when it's finally implemented, would be drastically different than what it offers now; given its inherently small screen and its physical attachment to your wrist, what could a 5mm thin, 8-week-on-a-single-charge, heavily developer-supported Watch change how we use a watch-like device...and how would those changes compare in magnitude versus the changes brought by similar advancements in phone and eyewear technology?
BTW I know 5 years ago many people didn't wear watches then. I'm talking about the relative trend of significantly decreased watch wearing and buying coinciding with the rise of the smartphone.
How do you know you are wearing your Apple Watch?
Everyone will ask you about it.
And they are all looking for me to tell them that it's great, that it's wonderful, and that it changed my life. And when I don't, they inevitably have a glint of disappoint in their eyes.
It suffered from the additional issue of negative social interaction - some people (luckily none that I've run into) are really opposed to face-phone (Glass) as opposed to in-your-pocket-or-hand-phone. I don't really understand why people think you're invading their privacy just because of an unusual device form factor.
So it's not about the form factor, but the fact that in case of google glass, the camera is pointing on your head!
I think the Apple Watch is really cool and I want one. But I'm very much like the author. I hate being ostentatious and I don't want to wear something that will be very noticeable.
The author was still willing to risk it in order to give it a try. There's nothing wrong with that.
(Also, for me the usually-off screen is sort of a dealbreaker, because it really harms the aesthetics of the watch when the screen is off.)
I live in NYC
At best, they come off as immature ramblings.
If I have something which catches attention I don't want and want to end that line of conversation, I introduce the conversation kill switch. I found it at a garage sale, I got it at jc pennys or tj max. I have no idea what brand it is.
No, she's actually doing the inverse of what she claims to want to do. She's calling attention to herself by announcing how she goes out of her way to not call attention to herself.
Reporters, as if their life wasn't about small talk and schmoozing.
--"Granted, all of this would likely pale in importance if the watch were truly transforming my life, as my iPhone has"
--"And the small screen is simply too small to really read on ... when I saw a headline, all I wanted to do was find the rest of the story"
Those sounds like valid points to me.
Honestly, I've seen so few Apple Watches in the wild, despite owning one I'm more likely to ask people about their experiences if I see someone wearing one. Because it's led to some interesting conversations.
But, anyway. Many of the problems listed will be solved over time. Some won't. The Apple Watch as it stands is, in my mind, a beta-level product. It's very imperfect, but it's attractive if you're an early-adopter sort.
(Side note: For some reason the title of the article really bugs me. Like it's out to make a really dramatic moment out of the fairly mundane decision to stop using a gadget. When I replaced my old phone with a newer model, I didn't "divorce my old phone." When I rent a Zipcar I don't have a "torrid afternoon affair, after which we vow to never see each other again.")
Do you realize yours is not the only perspective in the world?
The potential of the tech is clear with WatchOS2. There will be interesting times ahead.
Having to do an ostentatious mime to awaken the screen rather defeats this purpose.
Does someone have insight into why Apple can't do what LG has been doing for a year? Is it patents, a larger battery, better software?
On a related note, I hope that someone will release an android wear watch with an epaper screen. I miss being able to see the screen easily in direct sunlight like I could with the pebble. Maybe some sort of hybrid (multi-layered) screen would be possible.
Higher resolution screen, and more modern (and power hungry) processor.
If there was ever a product that was not right for a consumer, I think this writer has found one...
Personally I love my A.W. I have had 1 single person ask me about mine, that is it. (Which is good, because I didn't purchase it to be flashy)
Also, I think it would be a bummer if it didn't show its watch face when you look at it. I have heard mixed reports on this functionality. For me, it works really good, I never feel like I'm waiting for it to wake up. Maybe not everyone looks at their wrist in the same motion that is enough to trigger it. Definitely happy it doesn't activate while typing here.
Lastly, if wearable activity technology is not exciting, it seems like a significant portion of the "reasons" to buy one diminish. I was an avid fitbit/jawbone user before the A.W.
It's not the Apple Watch, it's her.
Also, unless you're referring to a specific bug, it's always going to be "him" or "her" and not the watch.
The author gave up a great device because of peer pressure, and came online to rant about it. Yes, it does start conversations, people ask you what is it that you're wearing. That problem would be slimmer with Apple Watch than Android Wear.
So what? It's an amazing experience to own a smartwatch. And people are genuinely excited about your new gadget, not judging on you. From my experience, they really want to know, and find out how I got one.
It is not yet a fashion statement, but the upsides outweigh the downsides.
I don't buy this part though:
“Why is that more embarrassing than endlessly looking at a phone?” my friends said when I complained.
It’s a valid question, but after some contemplation I think the answer is simple: A phone is hand-held, and we are used to seeing people read things held in their hands. Like, say, books. But seeing somebody staring at her wrist (or merely sneaking a surreptitious glance at it) telegraphs something else entirely: (1) rudeness or (2) geekiness.
The "rudeness" or "geekiness" aspect is entirely contextual. When you're meeting with someone face-to-face (for dinner, an interview, whatever), constantly glancing at your {watch, phone} is an indication you'd rather not be spending time with them or that there is something else more important on your mind. The exact device through which your inattention for someone else is conveyed is of less concern than the human behavior underlying the action.
She wears it because it's indispensable [1] for her, as a busy mother of small children, to know when someone is calling or she gets a message. She doesn't carry her phone on her person around the house, it ends up on a counter or table somewhere. In addition, she uses the find-my-phone feature at least once a day.
[1]: The other mothers in the neighborhood use SMS to ask her to send their child sent home if they are over playing and it's time for dinner, or what-have-you, so there are communications that are time-sensitive.
This is why I stopped using MyFitness, and I stick to rather unobtrusive pedometer apps for my phone. My personality has a very strong rebellious streak, and the phone becomes a parent-by-proxy, scolding me for not doing what it (or society) told me to do.
Replace remotely authored committee nudge policies with asynchronous versions of your past or future self.
Which is why I wear a Moto 360 with a metal band. Because it looks like a watch. And it's not a conversation starter unless someone sees me using voice control (it's pretty good at picking up commands sotto voice, but I still look like a fed talking to a microphone in my sleeve).
A watch is something you choose to wear. That'e the reason that watches have almost always also been seen as a fashion accessory. And you choose to wear a fashion accessory because of the statement it implicitly make about you (for wearing it). And that statement needs to be highly individualized exactly because you choose to wear it.
When everyone wears the same, we call it a uniform. That goes counter to the inherent desire to express our individualism through what we choose to wear. While a specific accessory may signal that we're part of a certain group or belong to a certain segment, few modern people want to be viewed as primarily uniforms. A uniform is something that some of us accept to wear in certain situations, under certain circumstances. But it is generally taken as something that erases individualism. Indeed that is the purpose of a uniform.
There is a risk that the Apple Watch will be viewed as a uniform - something that signals lack of individuality rather than ideals about independence and confidence. If Apple Watch become something that is perceived to be worn by people who are seeking acceptance from belonging to some imaginary club, it becomes a uniform. And a uniform will be shunned by the fashion-aware who want to express ideals such as individualism, confidence and freedom.
This is why Apple's being pretty aggressive with the selection of watchbands and metals on the device itself. Right now the fashion side of the Watch is being hindered by technical constraints: It's got to be kind of thick and bulbous just to contain all the guts and battery. Apple will slim it down to just a thin screen given a few years. It'll probably still be rectangular, but the watchbands will be what people see more than anything. And there will be a million options for individuality.
People individualize their iPhones pretty well with cases and lock screen backgrounds. They'll do similar things with watchbands and watch faces.
I don't understand why someone who goes out of their way to find unidentifiable things would even consider buying an Apple Watch.
There are other smartwatches on the market, of course, but it sounds like she doesn't like the appearance of any of them, so the AW was the only viable option for her ("no matter how attractive the Apple Watch is in the context of other smartwatches or smartbands, no matter how much of an aesthetic advance its rounded corners and rectangular display, [...]").
Meh, this won't be an issue in a few months, depending where you're located. In San Francisco, for example, Apple Watches are not a rare sight, so it's unlikely to prompt conversation. It happens to me maybe once or twice a week.
Ok stupid reason
> But when I started wearing the Apple Watch (the 38-millimeter case with a Milanese Loop band, which is the smaller size with a flexible stainless steel bracelet), it became a subject of conversation no matter where I was: in meetings at work, at the bagel store, at my son’s track meet. It has been so everywhere, marketed to so many people, there was just no mistaking it.
So buy the sport, I've had mine for over a week and only people who knew I was getting it even noticed. I wore a pebble for over a year before so that might have some impact but even then very few people asked about that. That said owning a pebble was made me fall so hard for the Apple watch. Everything the pebble did (other than battery which I don't care about, if it lasts a day I'm fine and mine is consistently at 50% when I go to bed) the Apple watch does better. It's equal parts just better UI/UX and Apple being able to "cheat" by having direct access to the OS that pebble never got.
> Not only does its face effectively span the width of my forearm, but the cool little screen saver that so many reviewers have lauded — the Mickey or the butterfly or the galaxy (which is the one I have) or the pseudo-watch hands (the one that, notably, is always on in every picture of the watch, and actually makes it look like a watch) — is also functionally sleeping most of the time.
So you just bitched about calling out the fact that "look at me I have an Apple watch" and now you are mad that the display isn't on constantly so that.... you can show it off?
> Not that it would do much good. Typing doesn’t awaken the picture. Even when I rock my arm back and forth energetically, it often takes a few tries before up the earth pops. The default position is blank.
I was used to the wrist shake to get the pebble backlight to turn on which doesn't work on the Apple watch but it took less than a day or two to get the gesture down to turn the screen on. This is not an issue as far as I'm concerned. I can rotate my wrist ever so slightly while typing to see the screen just fine and 99% of the time when I look at my watch it turns on. On rare occasions I have to "re-gesture" but I'll trade e-ink and always on (I've seen the new pebble screens in person) for this gorgeous display with much sharper colors and text.
> Just as my default position when trying to read an email or the text of a headline on the small screen involves raising my wrist to near eye level
Are you joking? Get some glasses, you have a problem. I can read my screen perfectly and often better than I could my pebble.
> or, if a phone call is involved and my actual phone is not reachable, talking into thin air. If your children or acquaintances come upon you, it’s pretty much an invitation to ridicule.
Get over it, either don't answer calls on your wrist when with company (sounds like you deserve the ridicule). I rarely answer calls on my watch and only do it when I'm alone and my phone isn't right beside me which is rare.
> It’s a valid question, but after some contemplation I think the answer is simple: A phone is hand-held, and we are used to seeing people read things held in their hands. Like, say, books. But seeing somebody staring at her wrist (or merely sneaking a surreptitious glance at it) telegraphs something else entirely: (1) rudeness or (2) geekiness.
Wow... is this supposed to be a big joke? Glancing at my watch is WAY less rude than pulling out out my phone while talking. As for geekiness again, get over it, it will be commonplace soon enough this is what you have to deal with as an early adaptor. Poor you, you bought a $600+ device and you have to deal with people poking fun at you, get over yourself.
> This doesn’t seem to have bothered the tech writers, most of whom wrote persuasively positive reviews of the gadget, primarily base...
Take some of the commentary below as just my own idle thoughts, fantasy as to what might actually make sense. We aren't there yet, but we are close to taking some steps...
For me personally, it's compelling as an advance in what a watch can do. Of course, I was the geek back when I wore watches too. Had multi-function ones, and the best features were solar, with sensor to display light level (rare Seiko), and the variety of increment timers, alarms, and such. Had a calculator one for a while too. Used it a lot.
Some of those have aged well. I've an old Seiko that just screams "80's era peak digital tech", and it's beautiful. Machined case, reasonable display, nice band, etc... Once in a while, I'll wear it for fashion today. I no longer care about the functionality.
When I got past the simple pager and decided to carry a phone, I realized I don't like a lot of personal tech dependency. Having a phone and a watch, along with other potential things to carry around was too much. Something had to go, and that thing was the watch.
I've also realized the real appeal of wearables to me would be some sort of other interface, sci-fi at present (I think), where I can interact without looking at the thing somehow. It having a display is nice, but as a primary use case, not attractive to me anymore. I've a phone for that, and my Note 4 is a powerful phone! There are days when it's my only computing device, and I'm very happy about that development.
Someday, when the wearable can interact on a more personal level, say by stimulating nerves, or doing some other kind of thing, I see the potential for that private comms channel being really useful. Maybe meet somebody, query the phone for some info, get it, and all the while being able to engage them personally without having to pull out some tech, or interact with a thing they can see. Or maybe, it can notify me when somebody I really need / want to interact with enters the room, or is present via some other means. Maybe I could just quietly ask for help too, a 911 call without announcing it's been made.
To me, that's where wearable needs to go; otherwise, why not just have it on the phone where every other thing is?
Long ago, I learned morse code for a HAM radio license. Honestly, if I could get a wearable that would pulse to me at some reasonable rate, and I could pulse back at some reasonable rate, it would be enough to be super useful with the right software. Think text / command line type interface, with some data ending up on the display for various reasons too. Yes, this idea is primitive, and not something most ordinary people would find appealing, but I can't shake it due to my own experiences.
For people who have mastered morse, they can take it in nearly any form. Blinking lights, sound, vibration, taps on the shoulder, whatever. It just works, and they get 30-60 words per minute doing that. I've been around these people, say at a camp fire or some other event, and they literally are following a conversation via a blinking light nobody else there is aware of. I got a sense of what it would be like to be deaf, and found that potential compelling. The idea of having a comms channel with a device like that, personal, private, non intrusive to other interactions is where things become part of us, not just some thing mounted for handy interaction.
Using a watch still takes my sight, and sometimes my sound, and my hands. Using a watch with voice interaction is cool in some contexts, like when I'm using my hands, but not so cool in a social context, where using hands can work because one is speaking, etc... It's all a distraction, or rude, or public. Besides, a p...