Yeah, I did warn you. :)

I am now settled down with my watch.  I think we’re going to be friends.  I 
don’t believe this is a bad start at all, and I don’t see why people should 
refrain from it.  As I imagined, although being near a phone is nice, I’m much 
more comfortable using this thing as a wireless extension of the phone that 
provides tactic feedback, and incidentally can be made to tell you the time on 
request if you happen to like that sort of thing. :)

Survey these points: the user guide, all of the Apple Watch phone app, the 
watch faces (press on the clock to explore), the notification centre and 
glances (flick up or down on a watch face element to select them) and, last but 
not least, all of the different apps.

There are inevitably weak points: the watch is quite slow, it doesn’t support 
power-preserving mode, not all the components of the watch faces are 
accessible, the power falls off a cliff very rapidly if you aren’t discrete 
with the speaker and/or sensors, the Apple Watch app is rather too detailed and 
the watch not detailed enough, some functionality is inexplicably missing when 
out of Bluetooth range, some functionality is missing for no good reason 
(FaceTime Audio).

But it’s still a very good start indeed!

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