A Third of Consumers Who Bought Wearable Devices Have Ditched Them 180
An anonymous reader writes "The Guardian reports on research (PDF) into the (alleged) wearable device trend: fully one third of customers who bought one stopped using it within six months. Activity trackers fared even worse: half of them are collecting dust. 'For comparison, you wouldn't find people from the early days of the smartphone saying that they'd abandoned their BlackBerry, Treo or Windows Mobile or Symbian phone. They were the early adopters, and they found utility in having email and (sometimes) web pages on the move. The idea of giving them up just wouldn't occur to them. ... So far, there aren't clear signs of quite what it is that smartwatches and fitness trackers are replacing, in the way that [early] music players did. Useful new technology has to replace or simplify some function, ideally; otherwise it has the challenge of persuading us that we need this entirely new thing. Smartphones are simpler ways to collect your email – and also make phone calls and surf the web (and so on). Fitness trackers... let you track your fitness. But given that 41% of people run with their smartphones, you might get by with a movement tracking app instead. The trouble with devices that claim to track your steps is they're so easily hoaxed by waving your arms around.'"
Gimmicks gonna gimmick. (Score:5, Insightful)
Same as my experience with Wii owners, or other fads, like slap bracelets.
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So, I think successful gadgets will combine something practical that people will always need, with something new and "exciting" that may or may not have long-term utility. Millions of people already wear watches, so I think smartwatches have chance if they aren't too much additional hassle to char
Usefullness vs. charging hassle (Score:2)
The problem with wearables is that they are by definition battery dependent. And if they're not low-powered enough to run for years on a battery like a traditional watch is, then the issue is going to be how useful are they vs. how much of a pain is it to remember to plug it in every day.
I have two 7" Android tablets, and I never use either of them. Sure, for some of the stuff they can do, they do it better than my Android phone. But the phone is the thing that goes on the charger every night. And for a
Re:Gimmicks gonna gimmick. (Score:4, Interesting)
My kid still plays the Wii every weekend and it's actually one of the activities they do in his school for gym when it's raining out. My sister-in-law who's in a nursing home uses one as part of her physical therapy. Fad it is not.
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Re:Gimmicks gonna gimmick. (Score:4, Informative)
Sorry. I kind of wish it was just a trend too, but the fact is, the Wii is still very popular with a lot of people. It seems like a joke to a lot of more "hardcore" gamers, but it's still dominant in a market that was largely ignored before: casuals. I don't play Wii much anymore, especially since I picked up a PS4, but when I do it's because my girlfriend still enjoys it more than any other platform we've tried, and we try every game we can to see if she's interested.
Is it the future of console gaming? No. But for a lot of people it's all they'll ever need for a price they can easily afford.
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Is everyone else missing the point that 2/3 of buyers of wearable devices are still using them after six months?
That. And also the statement, "The idea of giving them up just wouldn't occur to them." (wrt early smartphone adopters) is rediculous. A large portion of early adopters of anything end up giving them up. That's part of the early adopter pattern... it's new and shiny, so they early adopt it, and then it's no longer new, so they move on. They may come back to those types of thing later, but it's normal for many people to give up up in the early days. For example, on my first phone with MMS, I set up an email
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Same as my experience with Wii owners, or other fads, like slap bracelets.
It is probably also the same as those who bought cars in the 1800s, mobile phones in the 80s, tablets in the 90s, and many other technologies in their infancy. Perhaps wearable technology is a fad, but the fact that a third of consumers who buy them end up not liking them is hardly an indicator of anything. At best it shows that the current products in the market are insufficient for most people.
Re:The second coming of tech-crash (Score:5, Insightful)
The iWatch will be the precedent to decide if Apple is Apple without Steve Jobs. There are many factors to what Steve did which made their products something to be a part of a person's environment. Wearables have to provide a service that people really want. While the submitter and the article mentions about how 50% of the wearable market is sitting on the shelf, people should take note of every other market before Apple entered it.
Anyone remember the Tablet PC in 2003? That thing was a giant pile of steaming crap that people bought into, but barely used.
Smartphones were alright, but passable. I didn't see much of the advantage and waited until the technology matured. Microsoft nearly killed it, Blackberry saved it, and Apple allowed it to flourish.
Anyone remember the first MP3 players? I had one. They were terrible. I didn't see the point of having a 64MB device that was a nightmare to use. Apple introduced the iPod and everyone else followed suit.
People can trash wearable tech all they want, but I am not going to write it off until Apple fails at it. This will prove that the magic of Apple is truly gone, or ... there really is no point to wearable technology.
From what I see of the leaks though, Apple is doing what they do best so far. They are making the technology simple, small, unobtrusive to one's lifestyle. My iPhone to me is the same way. I don't have the device latched to me in such a way that it feels like an anchor. It's either there or not, but if it's around, I want to use it. Some of the wearable tech that I have seen so far appears to be large, clunky, has a terrible battery life and while might have a lot of functionality, requires too much effort to get anything useful out of.
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While we have seen a lot of products that lead us astray, even the worst products had some sort of hint of what was coming.
Steve Jobs would deceive many people about a product through various ways, "People don't read anymore?"
Still, there as been enough momentum inside Apple to indicate that there is some sort of wearable technology coming from Apple. This might be a while yet because Apple will want to get the technology correct.
The original iPad wasn't that great, but the apps that followed made it great
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How many times have we been told that there is going to be an Apple TV? Not just the set-top box of that name, but a thing with an actual screen.
How many times have we been told that Apple were going to release a games console?
As to the point that Apple enter markets where others have failed. Well that's true sometimes, but it's not a rule. Sure, the iPod and iPad fit that description. But the iPhone and the Mac don't.
There's certainly been some solid information that they are working on health monitoring.
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If we are in a tech bubble, I don't see it as bad as it was in the 1990's.
Today's bubble is focused mostly on Consumer Technology, the 1990's bubble was on Business and Consumer Technology.
For one: Todays tech workers are no treated like Gods like the 1990's. The idea of paying 6 figure salaries for someone to use front page to make a static website. And bringing the Techies to the C table. We have been knocked down a few pegs. As best we are considered Professional Services, at worst we are considered a
Wearable device feasibility (Score:5, Interesting)
Wearable devices will not be massively popular unless they will be as simple to use as headphones. Plug and it works and you don't need to think anymore about them.
There are many people I know who dislike bluetooth headphones just because after a while they get tired from sychronising them with the device, finding the proper frequency, there is noise and interference and whatever have you. Or they need something for a special purpose, such as to cheat at an exam hearing through a tiny invisible earplug deep in your ear what someone else at the next room is reading. But for normal people and normal life, either wearable devices will be as simple as switching on the TV, either the producers should really think targeting not "all the people there is" but selected target groups and usage specific audiences.
Annoying cable wrangling (Score:4, Interesting)
Wearable devices will not be massively popular unless they will be as simple to use as headphones.
Maybe you are different but I don't carry headphones either and frankly I think headphones are a huge PITA. Headphones require all kinds of annoying cable wrangling or if wireless all kinds of unreliable setups that you are constantly dicking around with. Useful? Yes. Simple? Not so much.
I carry precisely 3 items 99% of the time - phone, wallet and keys - and I'd do away with any of them if I had a reasonable way to do so. I don't mind carrying a fitness tracker if I'm actually doing exercise but otherwise the phone should serve that purpose. I don't want to wear a special purpose device unless I'm doing something rather specific. I don't wear a watch except on rare occasions because they serve little purpose these days (clocks are everywhere) and are annoying to wear if you don't have to.
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If you usually travel by public transit, having headphones is almost a necessity.
Different strokes for different folks. I strongly disagree that it is anything resembling a necessity. Preference for many I'll concede but there is no requirement to be listening to something on headphones merely because you are traveling somewhere on public transit.
Sitting there, doing nothing, just seems like such a waste of time.
Personally I prefer to be aware of what's going on around me. I also use travel time to think about things I might not have time for otherwise. Sure, sometime its boring but I have plenty of ways of solving that that don't involve headphone
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If you usually travel by public transit, having headphones is almost a necessity. Then again, I'll see people just sit there and do nothing for the entire transit trip.
I find music pumped directly into my head stops me thinking. I'd far rather think.
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They send me to sleep. Literally, I play them when I'm in bed and fall asleep far faster than without them. Again, it's because they stop me thinking.
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Re:Annoying cable wrangling (Score:4, Informative)
Wearable devices will not be massively popular unless they will be as simple to use as headphones.
Maybe you are different but I don't carry headphones either and frankly I think headphones are a huge PITA. Headphones require all kinds of annoying cable wrangling or if wireless all kinds of unreliable setups that you are constantly dicking around with. Useful? Yes. Simple? Not so much.
I carry precisely 3 items 99% of the time - phone, wallet and keys - and I'd do away with any of them if I had a reasonable way to do so. I don't mind carrying a fitness tracker if I'm actually doing exercise but otherwise the phone should serve that purpose. I don't want to wear a special purpose device unless I'm doing something rather specific. I don't wear a watch except on rare occasions because they serve little purpose these days (clocks are everywhere) and are annoying to wear if you don't have to.
Generally I agree with you and I can see your point with corded headphones but cordless (Bluetooth) ones work fine for me. I used to go through a ton of corded headphones. Usually they'd wear out due to metal fatigue just above the plug to save money. For years I used to shorten the chord and solder it back to the plug like a true penny pinching geek. Then I finally gave up and spent an obscene amount of money on a set of Sennheiser MM 550-X Bluetooth headphones. So far they have, well .... just worked. I also have a couple of sets of Sennheiser MM200 earplugs phones, also Bluetooth. Same story here, they just work. The first set finally wore out after three years of daily use so I bought a second one on sale since this model is out of production now. The only complaint I have so far is that the audio quality suffers a bit because of the Bluetooth link but not so much that I'd forgo the comfort of being wireless.
Speaking of special purpose devices, what I'd really like for safety reasons is a __proper__ HUD for my car. There are after market ones but most of the suck, a HUD should be standard equipment in every car.
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Well, there's that. And they also have to provide some functionality that users actually want. Before the iPhone, I could imagine wanting a pocket-sized device with a decent address book synced to my computer, and full web access, and nice apps. (Note, I am certainly not claiming that I anticipated the actual design, just that I could imagine wanting those particular functions in my pocket.) I cannot imagine anything that I really want a smart watch to do.
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If Google want Glass to be well-adopted they can simply drop the camera; the camera is not all that useful in smartwatch-type applications, and is worthless as an AR device given that the display is tiny and off in the corner of your vision.
Unfortunately Google think that they can just brow-beat and market their way around an engineering and design problem in this instance.
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Except that, for Glass, it makes all the sense having a Camera. Being able to capture what you see (be it for fun, security, or even mischievous purposes) makes a whole lot of difference.
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The camera could be a small removable module
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Yeah, I agree. Skipping the camera could make it lighter and remove most of the stigma - I for one would consider getting a google-glass like device which is display-only (and integrated/clip on to my prescription glasses). I honestly don't see any use for a tiny crappy camera attached to my glasses.
If I want to take pictures, I can use the cell phone in my pocket OR a real camera. Actually, many new system cameras have integration with smart phones, meaning that you can see the viewfinder, control exposure
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Unfortunately Google think that they can just brow-beat and market their way around an engineering and design problem in this instance.
I'm not so sure. Glass seems to be taking an awful long time to come to market. They seem to be aware most people want nothing to do with it. I can see it being dropped even before it's publicly released.
Re:Wearable device feasibility (Score:5, Insightful)
The kind of person that thinks wearing some electronic spectacles is equivalent to being Copernicus is indeed a Glasshole.
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technology for smart masses
Space constraints (Score:2)
I cannot imagine anything that I really want a smart watch to do.
Exactly. I don't carry a watch except rarely because it is A) redundant (my phone tells me the time), B) annoying to wear, and C) has limited functionality. The only time I really can imaging carrying a watch is for some specific task where I need certain data or sensors but weight or bulk is an issue. For instance when I'm jogging or doing some other athletic activity where a smartphone is too bulky to carry.
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Yeah, that's the thing. I could see wearing a fitness tracker...when I'm exercising. But not all day. It's just going to tell me that I sit at a desk.
Also, I do wear a watch, partly to tell time, but also as jewelry. It's the only jewelry a guy can really wear. I have a moderately expensive Ebel. It looks great, I get compliments on it, and I like looking at it and all shiny and everything. If I were to wear a smartwatch, it would have to look about as good as my Ebel, and I don't see that happening.
Glasses
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As you get older your priorities may well change. Playing at being a cyborg might become less interesting, and the reality of not being immortal, and possible chronic health conditions may make health monitoring products more attractive.
There are many sorts of people that make a market, and we all change what sort of people we are as we age.
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As you get older your priorities may well change.
Probably but I doubt I'll ever wear a watch. I'm just not that obsessed with time or showing off to justify the annoyance of wearing a watch if I don't really need to. I have one but I only really wear it when I'm hiking in rural areas or doing a competitive run. I don't object to wearing a health monitor should there be a need but in most cases I figure my cell phone (which I already carry) could probably do the job adequately for quite a few use cases. I'd be more interested in something like a fitbit
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There are many people I know who dislike bluetooth headphones just because after a while they get tired from sychronising them with the device, finding the proper frequency, there is noise and interference and whatever have you.
What bluetooth headphones are these people using? I've only had to pair mine once with each device I use it with, and never had to mess with changing frequencies. I have to charge it once a week for like 2 hours, but that's a fair trade-off for not having a wire attached.
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Agreed. Simple wins. I have really thought that my Pebble would get forgotton as time went on, but I find it so easy and so convenient that I really miss it. The Pebble (unlike the gear) is simple, sleek and performs one function well. You barely even have to charge the thing.
In a world where a clock on the wall is increasingly rare, having the time on your wrist is massively useful. Not everyone wants to drag a smartphone out just to tell the time.
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Clocks on the wall are maybe rarer, but tons of other devices shows a clock on their displays, which perform much of the same function.
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Well, you're in luck. Just sign up for the F-35 program and get fitted for one of these bad boys [defensetech.org].
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That sounds like an amazing product. Once Google Glass can do that, I'll buy one.
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Wearable devices will not be massively popular unless they will be as simple to use as headphones
- and give the user something they actually want or need. The smartphone is popular because it is flexible enough to cover a wide range of needs that people have, not because it is cool or "wearable". In fact, I suspect that being wearable often counts against a device, because it so often has to be worn in a highly specific way, unlike a phone, which you just stuff into a pocket, bag, glove compartment or whatever.
Obviously a working model for some companies (Score:2)
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You've got remember most of these people still think the digital watch is a pretty neat idea :D
There was a niche market for even that.
We were required to pass a basic skills assessment test to advance a grade in school that included telling the time by the hands of the clock.
I don't recall what grade it was, but one year there was a plausibly dyslexic chap who was rescued on the third makeup test by borrowing his grandfathers Pulsar.
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Just keep banging the rocks together, guys.
Yea, but... (Score:3)
wearable devices are a hit compared to the rate of married couples who stay together. Does that mean marriage is a fad?
Re:Yea, but... (Score:4, Funny)
I can wear my phone just fine, in a pocket (Score:5, Insightful)
Pants have pockets. Phones fit in pockets. Problem solved. And I know that women tend to not use pockets - I cannot understand why - but they have purses and handbags that are specially designed to hold many things including a phone. Either way, the problem that a wearable smart gadget tries to solve is not a problem in the first place.
Also, I don't have to track my fitness, because I am usually there myself to observe my fitness with my own eyes.
Women's clothing (Score:4, Insightful)
And I know that women tend to not use pockets - I cannot understand why
Because a lot of women's clothing tends not to have pockets. Can't use it if you can't buy it. Furthermore there are aesthetic reasons why they tend not to use pockets. Women have a different set of social pressures for appearance than men do.
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The aesthetic reasons are stupid.
I'm just guessing here that you don't date a lot. Aesthetics matter whether we like it or not. Looking nice sometimes doesn't involved practicality for better or worse. I'm not exactly the most fashion forward guy myself but I understand that sometimes how I look is important. People care about how others look and no that isn't always stupid. It's only stupid when one makes harmful decisions based on aesthetics when the important information is not aesthetic. Dressing nicely isn't just for your bene
Re:Women's clothing (Score:4, Informative)
In this particular case, the "aesthetic" appearance of pants that have pocket outlines but not pockets is dumb. Plain and simple. Either have real pockets, or don't even try to pretend and have the front panel of the pants be smooth.
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Say what? Aesthetics are a very important part of sexual attraction, which, evolutionarily speaking, is about as functional as you can get.
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But they do often carry a (sometimes huge) bag.
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Maybe if women didn't bend to those social pressures they'd no be pressures anymore
Grow up. Social pressures always exist and they aren't always bad things. You probably put on pants today and social pressure was a component of that action. Are you going to argue that you shouldn't bend to that social pressure anymore?
Peer pressure is a lame excuse for anyone over the age of 8.
Really? You do whatever you want regardless of the social consequences? (If you answer yes to that then you are either in jail or a liar)
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Public decency laws are not a social pressure.
They most certainly are a social pressure. Why do you think we have such laws in the first place? It's a social pressure codified into law. There is no functional reason to require people to be dressed in public and yet we insist that they are. Why? Social pressure.
That slanderous bitch down the hall is a social pressure.
I sense you have issues you need to work out...
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Sorry, but you seem to be the one with no idea how society works. Suppose you work in an office, and there is a girl there, always dressed nicely, who you would like to date. You ask her out, and she says yes. You make reservations at a nice restaurant. Are you going to dress nicely for your date, or are you going to wear an old tee shirt and worn out jeans? Gasp! You have just caved in to societal pressure!
Womens clothes don't have pockets because most people do not consider it attractive for a woma
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No one - or at least no adult - dresses to impress the other people in the room when out on a date.
I guess then the problem is that there are a lot of non-adults in today's societies. You need to incorporate those into your model.
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Oh, it's biological, is it? OK, exactly which gene is it that says 'coat and tie good, tee shirt bad'?
What, exactly, do you think it is that determines whether she thinks you are impressive or not? She is using the measure of societal norms, and nothing else, to determine that. You are using your knowledge of societal norms to try meet her expectations. And, in case you are unable to realize it, trying to meet societal norms is the very definition of societal pressure.
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Uh, no. The people you are describing are children, not adults. An adult who does not modify his behavior based on societal expectations has some serious problems. For instance, a small child would have no problem walking up to a total stranger and saying "you're fat". A normal adult would never do that, because society says such behavior is unacceptable.
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I used to think that way. Then I rejected the idea. That's called growing up, and it's what most people don't do.
Society puts all kinds of funny pressure on people. A lot of things are flat wrong, and I have tended to tell people this. Look at stock advice and idioms: don't look a gift horse in the mouth, don't judge a book by its cover, don't make assumptions. Yet people give away shit that's broken and you wind up paying more to fix it or dispose of it than you would to replace it. You can't rea
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Suit pants don't have the right shape if you stuff things like a phone in the pockets. The interior of the suit jacket is already occupied by the wallet.
I would like to have a way to carry my phone when I'm wearing a suit, better than attached to the belt. A "watch" might be the solution but the existing solutions are not good enough to replace a smartphone.
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The interior of the suit jacket is already occupied by the wallet.
Use another pocket then. Most pants have two or more. I find the bigger problem is that my phone starts dialing people. I guess I should get a clamshell phone to keep that from happening.
Having said that, I bet there are people who can't stand to have anything in their pockets. If they can tolerate wearing the smartphone in that situation, then that's a case where wearable works.
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A device as heavy as a phone in a pocket while running is annoyingly unpleasant. I have a stretchy belt that holds mine snugly so it doesn't bounce. I suppose I'm agreeing with you. I don't need a wearable smart phone, I just need to wrap a thing around my smart phone which makes it wearable.
Eh, what works for you and what works for others are just different things. I can observe my own fitne
i like my wearable device dumb watch (Score:2)
They don't do anything important (Score:2)
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My proof-reader is fired.
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My proof-reader is fired.
What sort of severance package do I get?
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More fired. This isn't wall street!
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Arguably, having the thing attached to your wrist makes some functions *less* convenient than holding your smartphone in your hand. I'm not arguing against the fact that these devices exist on the market, but the expectations for their uptake should be much lower, and
Summary (Score:2)
I've got drawers full of returned windows mobiles and early smartphones. Blackberries and iPhones were of course very different, but early smart phone sales definitely were returned or misused a lot. I can see wearable being exactly the same way!
Jason
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Maybe the real problem with wearable devices is (Score:3)
Citationless assertion (Score:2)
"You wouldn't find people from the early days of the smartphone saying that they'd abandoned their BlackBerry, Treo or Windows Mobile or Symbian phone."
I absolutely abandoned my early Palm, I could only afford it because the guy was selling it for a loss after he too abandoned it, it ran through batteries like crazy, had limited utility, and frankly a paper notepad was vastly more useful than "Graffiti" It's a very strange assertion because we don't have the metrics of these early devices, they weren't conn
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At least with your Palm you understood that you wanted something like that, but better. I don't think there's too many people who feel the same way about smartwatches that aren't the Pebble.
2 out of 3 (Score:2)
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I love my MOTOACTV (Score:2)
But I don't wear it, my bike does.
I am ready to dump everything (Score:2)
Galaxy Gear (Score:2)
The numbers on activity trackers are more interesting. I currently have a Fitbit on one wrist, and a Basis activity tracker on the other while I evaluate each. It seems like the current generation is pretty limited, with the FitBit just tracking motion, and the Basis tracking heartbeat poorly, especially when active, so I can see why people would be dissatisfied.
I avoided bluetooth for years... (Score:5, Insightful)
I avoided bluetooth for years becuase it was unreliable and awkward. The headsets were expensive and uncomfortable. Some didn't work in that they required pairing every time you turned it on. (Both the phone and the device completely forgot about each other.) Buying a corded headset was far cheaper, had far better quality, and was far more comfortable.
But times change, as do needs. Most bluetooth devices now have just enough non-volatile memory to remember what they were last paired with and most bluetooth hosts will quite happily keep a list of every device it's ever pair with. Other than the initial setup (which can still be awkward and annoying) it's quite simple to use now. Hold the button for a few seconds until the light blinks and/or the sound chimes. Now I have a whole host of bluetooth devices. A headset, a car, a smart watch, a pair of headphones and a keyboard.
Wearables are very much in that early adoption phase. Everyone who owns and actively uses one knows this, I should think.
"Why would I want to read a text message from my watch? I've got a perfectly good phone in my pocket."
"Why would I want to check my email from my phone? I've got a perfectly good laptop in my briefcase."
"Why would I want a laptop? I've got a perfectly good computer back at the office/at home."
Well, yes. (Score:5, Funny)
The trouble with devices that claim to track your steps is they're so easily hoaxed by waving your arms around.
No kidding. My girlfriend is Italian. Every time she has a conversation, her FitBit records her running a marathon.
The problem of solutions looking for problems (Score:2)
These gadgets seem to fall into two categories:
1. A problem looking for a solution
2. A solution looking for a problem
One has a future and some value while the other does not.
(This comment is best read in the voice of Agent Smith.)
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"Renaissance
"The first well-documented use of a diamond ring to signify engagement was by the Archduke Maximilian of Austria in imperial court of Vienna in 1477, upon his betrothal to Mary of Burgundy. This then influenced those of higher social class and of significant wealth to give diamond rings to their loved ones."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/E... [wikipedia.org]
"De Beers... was founded in 1888"
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/D... [wikipedia.org]
It's early days yet. (Score:2)
There were a whole bunch of smartphones before the iPhone. Anyone remember them? I stumbled across my old Palm Centro the other day, which replaced a Treo 680. These devices were useful to some (I was one of them), but the cost/benefit calculation was finicky, and they didn't find widespread adoption.
Pop consensus was that smartphones were a niche market. Then, someone got one right (iPhone) and the whole industry took off. These days, people don't even realize they're using a "smartphone" (I can remember t
I Forgot My Phone (Score:2)
Hopefully people will use them only when face-to-face isn't available.
I Forgot My Phone
http://youtu.be/OINa46HeWg8 [youtu.be]
Only the best wearable devices stay popular.. (Score:2)
Tricky Tricky (Score:2)
The trouble with devices that claim to track your steps is they're so easily hoaxed by waving your arms around.
Several of my co-workers do the "fit bit" thing, and have a group. I've seen several of them attach the fitbit to a necklace and hang it from the rear view mirror in a car. They record lots of steps when you're driving around - especially when you've stopped at a red light and it's swinging like mad.
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Useful new technology has to replace or simplify some function, ideally; otherwise it has the challenge of persuading us that we need this entirely new thing.
These devices do replace older devices that do the exact same thing. Pedometers have been around for hundreds of years. What's new is that the things integrate with your cell phone and by extension the web. More info: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
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In other news I stopped wearing a watch back in the eighties when my beeper stated telling the time. My iPhone 5s has a motion sensor so no need to wear anything for use with FitBit and fits nicely in my pocket. Plus I use an iPhone wallet case so often I don't even carry a purse when shopping. Last time I want is even more crap to carry.
I love a good watch. They are stylish and much more convenient to use rather than having to reach into my pocket to check the time. This is especially true when I am trying to be discreet during a meeting, date, or while listening to a coworker's inane babbling. There are times when I cannot wear a watch, though, and I am happy that I have my phone as a fallback.
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Before that, people had pocket transistor radios, or carried around a larger cassette player (or a even a boom box). There was apparently an unreleased invention called the Stereobelt [wordpress.com] which predated the Walkman but was unable to secure funding, and something called the Bone Fone [modernmechanix.com] which came out around the same time as the Walkman, but which was not successful. But overall, agreed, the Walkman was a revolutionary product.
Re: (Score:2)
But given that 41% of people run with their smartphones
I guess that means that 41% of people who run, carry their smartphones with them. Looking around, I have serious doubts that 41% of people run. In fact, I would guess that 41% of people would have heart attacks if they tried to run, with or without their smartphones.