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Gear Nerds: Thomas Elliott/Sam Bassal (Harbours)
Current and notable past musical projects you've been involved in ?
SB: I play guitar in Harbours but I also play drums in a band called Ocean Grove.
TE: Harbours is my first band!
What kind of guitar do you play and other notable guitars you own?
SB: I play one guitar live now which was a recent addition and its a 2006 USA Fender Stratocaster Tom Delonge Signature with a bit of mod work done to it. To top it off it's in a rad Surf Green colour. I also play a 2010 Fender CIJ Telecaster Deluxe.
TE: I play a Fender American Special Jazzmaster. Unlike a typical Jazzy, it has stacked humbucker pickups and a Tune-o-matic style bridge which makes it a little more reliable. My backup guitar is a heavily modified Squier Jazzmaster which I bought just because the natural finish matches my amplifier. What are your main influences for your rig?
SB: I love a lot of shoegaze and grunge style bands and the tones that they achieve, but I like to mix it up with a more modern approach to something that you might find in a hardcore band.
TE: The majority of my gear was acquired through swapping. I started with an Orange Dual Terror which I eventually swapped out for a Marshall JCM 900 (cheers Brenton). The tone is a little shitty, but I’m a pretty shitty guitarist so It’s a good fit. Favourite piece of gear and why?
SB: It's a tough choice between my amp and my EHX Micro Pog. I bought my amp head, a Bugera 6262 for $246 in an eBay auction (and how good is that?) and it was the first head I ever owned. I've played a lot of 6505's and 5150's, yet for what we do it just works perfectly and I prefer the sound. I also use my POG pedal quite a lot throughout the set to just make parts sound thicker and 'cooler'. Seriously love turning this pedal on.
TE: I love my Boss HM-2. I’ll probably never have it on my board due to it being too ridiculous for Harbours, however we did use it to create some noise layers on the EP.
Is there anything you would change and/or add to your rig to improve it?
SB: Quite a lot to be honest, but it probably won't ever happen because who has money for expensive pedals? Anything and everything Strymon.
TE: I’d like to eventually create a micro rig that’s a little easier to travel with. My current board was built from an Ikea shelf and has a few nails sticking out of it, so I should probably sort that out too.
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Click here to stream/download Harbours’ new EP ‘Nothing Stays The Same’ Also check them out supporting Basement, Turnover & Break Even in Melbourne @ Arrow On Swanston on the 28th of May
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**GEAR LIST**
Thomas’ Guitar Rig
GUITARS
Fender Jazzmaster American Special
Squier Vintage Modified Jazzmaster AMP
Modified Marshall JCM-900 Hi-Gain 50w PEDALS Boss TU-3
Boss NS-2
Boss DD-20
Electro Harmonix Small Clone
Electro Harmonix Cathedral
Ibanez TS-9
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Sam’s Guitar Rig
GUITARS
Fender Telecaster Deluxe (Japan)
Fender USA Tom Delonge Signature Stratocaster
AMP
Bugera 6262 120W
PEDALS
Behringer Reverb Machine
Boss DD-20 Electro
Electro Harmonix Micro Pog
Ernie Ball VP Jr.
Line 6 DL4
Harmonix Memory Toy
TC Electronic Polytune
TC Electronic Trinity
Gear Nerds: Jackson McCarthy (Lapse)
Name
Jackson McCarthy
Current and notable past musical projects you're been involved in?
I play guitar/sing in Lapse, this is actually the first active project that I’ve done/been a part of.
What kind of guitar do you play and other notable guitars you own?
I currently play a J Mascis Squier Jazzmaster which is completely stock apart from me having switched it from a gold pickguard to a pink one.
As it stands right now I also have a Squire Vintage Modified Mustang and a Kirk Hammett sig LTD warts and all riffstick that I’ve had since I was 14 and still have setup in Open C minor tuning for when I want to get riff happy.
What are your main influences for your rig?
The main influence for the gear that I use and have used for quite a while now has been with the intention of being able to create a very big and enveloping sound which can also at the same time have the ability to be quite sharp edged, however beautiful, tread the balance between the dirty and the cleaner aspects of the sound, and do so beyond some limitation of what people impose is possible for one guitar player.
Considering that Lapse is a 3 piece consisting of only drums, bass and me being the sole guitar player and usual lead singer at the same time means that I’m kinda automatically forced to think of how my playing and setup can subvert a style of music that is often very guitar dominant with several players / layers.
For that reason I personally appreciate a lot of players who I feel can do similar things in terms of being able to make the most of the constrictions that having 3 players can give. Among others and coincidentally enough that my guitar is his signature model, I believe this points a massive cue to J Mascis.
Favourite piece of gear and why?
It would have to be a tie between the Neunaber Wet Reverb pedal and the Jazzmaster. It took a lot of trial and error, but once I found each of them, I thought that were exactly what I wanted. The reverb gives off a vibe and nuance that I absolutely adore and could talk about for days, and the jazzmaster is the perfect mix of gainy-ness and jangle and suits my fit and playing style wonderfully.
Is there anything you would change and/or add to your rig to improve it?
I am always changing the gear that I use and trying to mix it up. I will very soon have a Fender Blender on the pedalboard and that’s something I’ve had my eye on for a while. Other than that theres not too much I feel I need to change besides the possibility of replacing the Carbon Copy with an older Memory Man.
That being said, for other stuff I’ve been fiddling with I’ve also had my eye on the Moog Flanger and Earthquaker’s new Acapulco Gold wink emoticon.
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Click here to listen to Lapse’s Debut EP
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Lapse will be on tour in February with Low Season.
25th February - Newcastle @ Hamilton Station Hotel
26th February - Sydney @ Blackwire Records
27th February - Canberra @ Lacklustre HQ
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**GEAR LIST**
Amplifiers
Fender Twin Reverb (Bassman Side)
Vox AC30
Pedals
EHX Small Clone Chorus
Fender Blender
Loopi Pedals ABY Switcher
MXR Carbon Copy
MXR Micro Amp
Neunaber Wet Reverb
Strymon Timeline
Voodoo Lab Sparkle Drive
Walrus Audio Descent
Gear Nerds: Ethan Reed (Sail On! Sail On!/Treehouses)
Name
Ethan Reed
Current and notable past musical projects you're been involved in?
I play in Treehouses and Sail On!, Sail On!.
What kind of guitar do you play and other notable guitars you own?
I play a Fender American Deluxe Thinline Telecaster. Cost a small fortune but I absolutely love it, and wouldn’t trade it for anything. I also own a Martin D15M acoustic that I use a lot for recording and have used live in the past.
What are your main influences for your rig?
It’s hard to narrow down specific influences, but I definitely lean towards analogue driven gear. I like to keep everything very clean and warm – I run a telecaster into a tube amp, and my pedals are mostly light overdrives (which I use variably to dial in particular sounds).
If I had to list individual influences on my tone, I’d definitely mention Chad from La Dispute, whose tone is so dynamic and clear with just the right amount of break-up. Also as with anything I do I’m very influenced by indie/folk/Americana bands, and their sound is similarly clean and sparkly. I suppose I crank the delay and reverb a bit more than those influences though, which is probably a result of all the instrumental/ambient/post-rock music I enjoy.
Favourite piece of gear and why?
I adore my Strymon Flint pedal. The reverb is awesome and simple to control on the fly, and the tremolo is probably the only modulation style effect I could ever see myself using.
Is there anything you would change and/or add to your rig to improve it?
I’d love to branch out and get dedicated tape delay and analogue delay units, rather than using the Boss DD-20 as I do now. Also would love to take the next step with my amp and get a really nice tube combo, like a fender twin or a Matchless (not that I could ever afford it).
Both Ethan’s bands can be found through the following links
Treehouses
Music - treehousesperth.bandcamp.com
Preorders for Treehouses’ new release can be found here - http://goo.gl/cdqLSz
Sail On! Sail On!
Music - sailonsailon.bandcamp.com
**GEAR LIST**
Head
Orange Rockerverb 50mk1
Cabinet
Orange 2x12 Pedals
Boss DD-20
Boss TU-3
JHS Morning Glory
Strymon Flint
Xotic Effects AC Booster
Xotic Effects EP Booster
Gear Nerds: Paul Pickles (Tired Minds/Suburban Haze)
Name Paul Pickles
Current and notable past musical projects you've been involved in ?
I play guitar in Tired Minds and then also play guitar/sing in Suburban Haze.
What kind of guitar do you play and other notable guitars you own?
For Tired Minds I play a Telecaster I had built for me by Geoff from RTN. It's got a Seymour Duncan Hot Rails in the bridge and a Quarter Pounder in the neck.
For Suburban Haze I play one of the re-issued Fender Starcasters. A Starcaster was my dream guitar from about the age of 14 and when Fender re-issued them I had to jump on it. I also play a Fender Sonoran in surf green or a Tanglewood acoustic for some parts in both bands.
What are your main influences for your rig?
Originally I just wanted something really heavy and when I saw Thy Art Is Murder playing ENGLs I had a look into them. Once I saw the versatility of them I went with that. I got lucky, it's the same head TTNG's main guitarist uses so the clean tone is great and I barely actually use the "heavy channel", the "rock" channel on it is heavy enough.
Pedal-wise I love going for what seem like "gimmicky" pedals and pulling stuff out of them, I think wanting to play with pedals comes a lot from Omar Rodriguez-Lopez and John Frusciante but I love the weird noises bands like Death Grips get going on so try and channel a lot of that.
Favourite piece of gear and why?
I would have to say the Starcaster. It was everything I wanted it to be when I was younger and it just feels right.
Is there anything you would change and/or add to your rig to improve it in the future?
I would consider swapping out my Orange Cab for the Marshall 1960TV cabinet. The Orange I have has the K-100 speakers in it and they get really bass-y when it comes to recording. I played through that Marshall cab at Main Street Studios in Wollongong and really like how much it cleaned my head up. Other than that I am pretty happy!
Both Paul’s bands can be found through the following links
Tired Minds
Music - tiredminds.bandcamp.com
Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/TiredMinds
Suburban Haze
Music - www.suburbanhaze.com
Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/SuburbanHaze
**GEAR LIST**
Head
ENGL Invader 150
Cabinet
Orange Amplifiers PPC Series PPC412-HP
Pedals
Devi Ever Drone Fuck Drone
Digitech Death Metal
Digitech RV-7
Dr Scientist Bitquest
Electro-Harmonix Nano-Pog
Electro-Harmonix Pitchfork
Earthquaker Devices Grand Orbiter
Earthquaker Devices Rainbow Machine
Montreal Assembly Count To 5
Mr Black Double Chorus
Mr Black Super Moon Chrome
Mr Black Downward Spiral
Polytune Tuner
Red Panda Particle Delay
Saturnworks Momentary Feedback Looper
Strymon Timeline
ZVEX Fuzzolo
ZVEX Sonar
Did you order an Apple Watch? Or did you decide that it was all-hype and probably an unnecessary accessory to your iPhone? Greg, Wayne, Perry, and I all bought Apple Watches; these are our thoughts on the latest Apple device.
What made you decide to buy an Apple Watch?
Greg: I’ve wanted an actual “smartwatch” for a while, and I secretly envied Android having one first. I originally wanted to wait until the 2nd edition, but this 1st gen is great.
Judie: I actually ordered and cancelled the Apple Watch twice before finally ordering it and allowing the purchase to go through. I was convinced that this was not much better than a beta product, and I’d be disappointed if I bought one; I was really torn about whether the watch would add that much functionality beyond what my phone could do, and I was bothered by the fact that the watch couldn’t do much on its own without an iPhone. Ultimately, my curiosity got the better of me, and I figured that if the watch didn’t add any extra value to my smartphone experience, then I could just return it.
14 day return policy, right? #sheeple #applewatch
A photo posted by Judie Stanford (@geardiary) on Jun 12, 2015 at 1:57pm PDT
Perry: I’ve been looking for the perfect smartwatch for years now, and since I’m heavily invested in the Apple ecosystem with my iPhone, iPad, and Macbook Pro, I figured the Apple Watch was the best way to go.
Wayne: I anticipated being able to use it with iMessage, and I was not disappointed. I am able to reply to iMessage by voice with surprising accuracy. Receiving notifications on the watch was a secondary reason. I’m surprised how much I like receiving Twitter notifications for now, and I’ve found you must dial back many notifications or your wrist vibrates non-stop all day.
Which model and size did you buy and why?
Wayne: 42 mm Space Gray Sport / Sport Band – – no buyers remorse. I sense the various models are all v1.0 devices so it doesn’t seem wise to spend more on something that will likely get an upgrade sooner than we’d like.
Greg: I bought the Apple Watch Sport 42mm. The price was right, and the Space Grey matched all of the bands I plan on using. Not so much with the aluminum.
Perry: I originally bought the 42mm Stainless Steel version because of the higher quality metal and sapphire screen. However, after battling with the $600 price tag in my head, I decided within the 14 day return period that I would prefer to save $150, purchase AppleCare, and downgrade to the 42mm Space Grey Aluminum Sport version.
Judie: I considered the 38mm watch, but after playing with my friend Chloe’s, I knew that it would be way too small for me. I ultimately ordered the 42mm stainless Apple Watch with the white sport band; it’s just right. I liked that Apple included the smaller strap in the watch’s packaging along with the regular size one; I was able to get a perfect fit this way.
Forget function for a moment, what do you think about the Apple Watch’s build quality? Has the band ever unhooked on you? Are you noticing wear and tear on it from daily use?
Perry: The build quality is superb. It feels totally solid and the button pressing and wheel spinning feels perfect. I have witnessed zero occasions where my watch has come undone and have found no wear and tear after about a month of daily use.
Judie: There is no doubt that the Apple Watch has fantastic build quality. It’s a little bit heavier than the sport model, which I like, and it feels very substantial. I don’t have any kind of screen protector or bumper case on mine, and other than some micro-scratches on the stainless (I call it a patina, not undue wear), my watch looks pristine. I’ve been wearing my watch for a few days over one month, and I’ve walked or jogged an average of 4 miles per day with it on; I’ve never had an issue with the band unhooking. I joked that the bright white strap would turn yellow and crack in no time, but it honestly doesn’t appear to have any wear (I wash it after every workout); it looks as good today as it did the day I opened its box.
Wayne: I have the plastic sport band. Initially it was tricky to get on. I still find it a two hand project to fasten. Other than that I have no complaints. The fit is good and I don’t have any issues during the day. No unhooking to report. The battery ran down to empty completely once mid-day. Since then the battery seems to last all day. Last night I had about 50% remaining at 11pm. During days when I’m more actively walking the watch battery seems to wear faster and I might have only 15-20% remaining at the end of the day.
Greg: I love the fact that the watch holds up sturdy. I purchased AppleCare for accidentals, but I know I still treat my Apple Watch more carefully than I would a standard watch. Using the watch at the gym, I find the band does get a bit dirty underneath with sweat.
Are you using the factory band or an aftermarket band? Have you added any other accessories?
Greg: I’m currently sporting Monowear’s grey Nylon band while at work, and then I switch to my black sports band when at the gym. When I go out I tend to wear Monowear’s mesh band. Personally they are the best third-party bands I’ve been able to find as of yet. Accessories-wise, I like Fuse Chicken’s Bobine Apple Watch dock (review coming soon).
Wayne: Factory everything – no aftermarket band or accessories.
Perry: I’m using the factory black sports band. I’ve been on the lookout for an inexpensive third-party band but haven’t found anything that I’m willing to spend the money on. I purchased the Griffin WatchStand for my bedside table and love it. It’s the perfect accessory that allows you to easily put down your watch for the night on the charger. It also keeps my iPhone 6 Plus propped up as well.
Judie: Like Perry, I am using the Griffin WatchStand, and I love it. I’ve also purchased two Monowear straps (the brown and the poppy red), and while they are nice, their colors aren’t quite as vivid or deep as I thought they would be. I’ve recently ordered a (ridiculously expensive) turquoise Lucrin strap in ostrich with white stitching, and I’ve got a Nomad Pod to use when I travel on order.
I think those are all the accessories I am going to need, or at least, I hope so. =P
This is the @Monoweardesign #applewatch leather strap in poppy red; it’s actually subdued enough to practically be a neutral! #techlife A photo posted by Judie Stanford (@geardiary) on Jun 26, 2015 at 2:43pm PDT
Has anything about the Apple Watch surprised you?
Perry: I’ve been surprised with the quality of the first party apps like messaging, mail, timers, etc. I assumed they would be great, but never imagined they’d be so easy to use on such a small screen. Another thing that surprised me was the quality of the sports band. I thought the sports band would feel cheap, but it feels extremely soft and well designed.
Judie: Battery Life has been much better than I expected. I was positive that I’d run out of juice before the day was done, but even with hard-core use, I’ve never had less than 20% at the end of the day. I still find myself slipping the watch off and topping the charge at times, though. It’s an OCD habit from owning an iPhone, I suppose. I like the motion watch face that shows various flowers opening and closing; it’s a pretty and pleasant thing to watch a new flower open every time I lift my wrist to check the time. There’s also a similar jellyfish or butterfly face, if you don’t want to stare at flowers.
I’m also impressed with the sports band. Once you figure out how it works, it is very easy to clasp and unclasp, and the white still looks flawless after hard-core use.
Not too shabby; I’ve been wearing it since 8am. #applewatch #wearables #techlife #apple #tech #watches #batterylife
A photo posted by Judie Stanford (@geardiary) on Jun 17, 2015 at 3:08pm PDT
Wayne: The ease at which I can select from my favorite people and either call or message. I was not expecting to use that as much as I have. The smoothness with which I can use “Hey Siri” to get times that a store opens/closes. All of these functions are available on iPhone but they’re more steps or more awkward.
The very first day on the way to Costco I called up store hours without knowing what command to ask. For comparison I also have a MOTO 360 smartwatch which answers similar questions, but it seems to me to be a little more awkward to navigate.
Greg: I recently I found out “less is more” as “Motion” has become my favorite clock face. Also, the ability to “clear all” by holding down on the screen a bit has saved me many headaches (thanks, Judie!). I even once used my Apple Watch’s Camera feature to check for something in my teeth today. Exciting.
Are you actively using your Apple Watch for fitness? If so, have you completed your move goal for a straight week? Which trophies have you received?
Wayne: If there is one area that I’m disappointed in an aspect of the Apple Watch, it’s fitness. I constantly forget to turn off the fitness monitor app (usually for walking), I’m unclear whether (or why) I even need to start an activity or if it will track my movements and lastly it’s not at all clear what counts toward your daily activity minutes. Example: Hiked up a hill for about 45 minutes and then another hour back to the car. Received 30 minutes of activity credit.
Judie: I love the way the watch integrates with HealthKit; I don’t use the Workout app, since I use RunKeeper to log my walks and jogs, but the activity summary that reminds you to stand every hour, tracks your steps (my goal is 10K/day), and tracks your calories (mine is set for 500/day) is a great motivator. I have found that the heart rate monitor is surprisingly accurate; I was at the doctor’s recently, and they had my resting heart rate at 69, and the Apple watch said 68; not bad!
Having the ability to answer texts or calls from my watch while exercising is very convenient; it’s one of those things you don’t think you’ll really use until you do … and then you’re hooked!
Greg: I use it for fitness daily. I try to obey the 30 minutes of fitness daily and with the watch it makes it that much more helpful. I haven’t quite completed my daily fitness goal for a week straight, but I’m determined to do it this week. I’ve earned a lot of the “first” trophies, but I’m working on it.
Perry: I’m not what you would call a “fitness enthusiast.” I’m more of a “couch enthusiast,” if we’re being honest. However, I did bring my move goal down to 350 calories and I tend to hit that goal on most days, but I haven’t hit it for a week straight yet. I’m most proud of my Perfect Week (Stand) trophy.
How many apps do you have installed on your Apple Watch? Which are your favorites? Which Glances do you find most useful?
Perry: I have many third-party apps installed on my Apple Watch because they automatically installed when I paired my Watch. I use about three of them consistently: Dark Sky, MLB At Bat, and Spark. These apps are best because their notifications are great and they can be used without holding my arm up for hours. I use the Dark Sky glance mainly because that’s my main weather app, however I’m not in love with the glance itself. There’s not much to it design-wise, and the Apple Weather glance looks much better. I rarely use any other glances.
Greg: 86 apps installed and I still have 5.6GB of data. I doubt I’ll add music to my phone that will take up space.
My favorite apps right now? Spark Mail, Goodtask, Fantastical, and Dark Sky are my favorite. My favorite glances: Spark Mail, Accuweather, MacID, Shazam, Deliveries, CityMapper, Overcast
Judie: I’m trying to keep my watch as uncluttered as possible. The screen is really too small to overload with too many apps, and many of the apps don’t add much functionality on such a small face. Even so, I have these installed.
I probably need to remove a couple of them — it’s constant pruning, because when you install an app on your iPhone that has an Apple Watch counterpart, it will automatically install (although you can turn that option off, I believe).
These are the glances I’ve installed.
My absolute favorite apps and glances on the Apple Watch are Dark Sky, Sunrise, NY Times, Clue, American, and TripIt.
Wayne: I haven’t counted apps but the watch has made me start to pare back on duplicates. I’ve removed some of the extra calendars I’d been trying and focussed on installing a better email app which wouldn’t notify for every incoming email (only the important ones).
I don’t use any glances except for turning on/off the fitness tracking and the default calendar glance for appointments. If anything the watch has prompted me to uninstall more applications so that I don’t get duplicate notifications (mostly via calendars).
Do you find the button and crown placement ergonomic? Do you find yourself using the digital crown more than your finger?
Judie: Greg posted something in our back-channel Facebook feed about wearing the watch upside down and how it is supposed to make the dial and button more ergonomic; I tried it, I actually found the opposite to be true, probably because I’d already been using them in the “normal” position for over a week.
It’s pretty rare that I spin the digital crown to do anything, but I use the Siri feature(long press on the crown) all the time, and I love that a quick press on the lower button brings up my favorite contacts; it makes texting and calls from my watch very easy.
Greg: I also tried to reverse my crown and make it more useful by making the watch orientation the same (left for Crown and wrist), but I still didn’t use the crown more than I did my finger.
Wayne: I definitely use the crown and like it. The buttons work for me. Very smooth scrolling. No problems.
Perry: While using the watch, the button and crown placement is great, however my biggest complaint is that I often press the crown button when my wrist is bent back. I would say that I use the crown 70% of the time and the screen 30% of the time.
Do you have any tips for someone who has just purchased an Apple Watch?
Perry: Don’t expect too much or you’ll be disappointed. I see it as a nice watch and activity tracker with neat notification features that doesn’t do too much yet other than allow you to quickly and easily reply to text messages.
Wayne: • Get rid of as many non-essential notifications as possible. • If you enjoy frequent news updates like I do – find ONE local news station that broadcasts breaking news on Twitter and set your Twitter account to notify you for every tweet. The most important thing here is that you only set ONE news organizations and they ONLY tweet about news or you will go crazy with notifications. • Streamline your notifications – you will go crazy if your watch buzzes constantly through the day. • Begin with just calendar and iMessage notifications – gradually add more notifications. • Get an email app that ONLY notifies you of priority emails instead of every email (I think Outlook is probably the best overall third-party email since it works with Gmail as well as Exchange. You’ll be surprised how many email apps work with just Gmail or iMAP (this is great if you are pure Gmail but if you have any business accounts on Exchange these hobbyist type email apps won’t work well). • Charge overnight – do not wear the watch to bed. • When the phone tells you to stand – get up and manage your notifications while walking around the office. • Key to Apple Watch – fewer but most important notifications on your wrist – keep fine tuning! • Learn Siri voice commands
Greg: If you just purchase an Apple Watch, get the insurance. Next find a band that you will be comfortable wearing for 8 hours. If you work out a lot, get used to the variety of Apple’s Sports bands.
Judie: If you are getting overwhelmed by all of the notifications showing (sometimes they just seem to roll in), you can delete them all at once by using Force Touch on the notification screen; an option to delete all will show.
What would you improve about your Apple Watch if you could?
Wayne: Fitness tracking should be more automatic. I’m a walker. Every time the watch measures that I’ve gone more than 1/4 mile it should automatically (and retroactively) track that workout. It should stop/pause when I’m inactive 5 minutes or more.
Perry: Third party apps need to get 10x better in order for them to be relevant. There is nothing worth holding my arm in the air for longer than 2 minutes. There is not enough information in some notifications/alerts, which is likely due to a lack of native 3rd party apps. I can see that I have a new comment on a post on Facebook, for instance, but have to take out my phone to see what the comment is.
Greg: GPS. I don’t like being tied down to my phone on my outdoor runs, and would personally like the feature, for apps like Nike+.
Judie: I would really like to have sleep tracking; I realize that would cut into charging time (since most of us do it while we are sleeping), but if the battery life were just a bit better, it might be possible. I also despise the fact that your activity isn’t synced to the cloud. I lost three weeks of Activity logs because I did a hard reset on my iPhone, and unlike my notes, my photos, and my music, there was no iCloud backup of my workouts.
What do you think is the best thing about owning your Apple Watch?
Greg: The best thing overall about the Apple Watch to me is the fact they didn’t make it “over customizable”. I’ve seen a lot of hate for the watch because it doesn’t do everything some other Android smartwatches do. But to me, it’s made me stop looking at my phone for phantom alerts, and that, I appreciate.
Basically the fact that the Apple Watch isn’t as customizable as the Android Gear watches isn’t a bad thing. Having the watch work as it should without complications works for me. I want my watch to tell me the time and my notifications/health info. I don’t need fancy themes and a bunch of other gimmicks I won’t ever use.
Judie: I bought the Apple Watch fully intending to send it back before my two weeks were done. Before I bought one, I called it “disposable tech” at a dinner with friends; I said it was “trying to be a jack of all trades and a master of none”. Well, I take it back.
I have played with the Apple Watch, given it a fair chance, used it daily including while traveling and exercising, and I’ve found that there are many things to like. Checking into a plane by flipping my wrist to show the flights QR code to the airline’s scanner is a fun trick.
Yes, it is a first generation model, and I have no doubt that future gens will be even better, but the watch is way more intelligently managed than I originally expected. The fact that you can truly make it yours with apps, notifications, custom bands, and other accessories makes it even better. I find that I glance at my phone’s screen less than I used to, and I like being able to manage messages from my wrist.
Wayne: • Hey Siri voice commands “what time does xxx close?” • Using the watch in the car with voice instead of my awful built-in car console. • Replying and reading iMessage and SMS. • Receiving automatic Twitter messages (but only when you have been very selective and the messages are infrequent and of higher value to you).
Perry: I love it as a watch and being alerted when someone is trying to get a hold of me. I love quickly responding to text messages. I also love quickly glancing at my watch face and seeing what event is coming up next on my calendar. Finally, I love the fact that my watch frees me from looking at my phone all the time. I’m still getting used to not having to take my phone out of my pocket all the time, but the urge to grab my phone every 5 minutes is slowly subsiding.
Have you bought an Apple Watch? If so, how do you like it?
We Each Bought an Apple Watch, and Here’s What We Think About Them Did you order an Apple Watch? Or did you decide that it was all-hype and probably an unnecessary accessory to your iPhone?