The most useful things I’ve learned from my month of Apple Watch ownership:1
- I keep the watch in Theater Mode all the time. The screen only turns on when I specifically press a button. A battery charge lasts longer.
- Slapping the face of the watch with my palm turns off the screen and silences alerts. Which is terribly satisfying.
- The watch face named “Infograph” offers the most complications. (sheesh, can’t we just call them widgets, or doodads?)
- An elegant hack for cramming more complications onto the watch face:
- make a copy of the Infograph face by following these steps, then
- swipe between faces with this trick.
- This guy’s tips are pretty good.
- Yah, I caved and finally bought me a smartwatch. For a guy who works in tech, I have some Luddite tendencies–I generally only pick up a new technology when I see a clear use case for it.
I’d been ruminating buying one for awhile (I was particularly jazzed about the concept of an e-ink smartwatch).
But at the end of the day, my concrete use case was a device that (a) worked like a phone when I took it running (out of Bluetooth range of my iPhone), and (b) wasn’t gigantic on my ladylike wrist. Add those up and it meant I was going for a cellular model of the latest, smallest Apple Watch, the 41mm Series 9.
The watch’s purpose is to protect me from the phone, which is kind of breathtaking when I think about it: I purchased device #2 to protect me from device #1. But don’t take my word for it–it’s related in this entertaining Wired article from 2015:
Along the way, the Apple team landed upon the Watch’s raison d’être. It came down to this: Your phone is ruining your life. ↩︎
I’ve added some more thoughts, on sending the Watch’s music directly to my headphones. . . and saving battery power