badcrumble
Member
Didn't Jony Ive even design a specific set of dimensions for attractive/friendly display of circular content in those guidelines for iOS 7 app icons?
still find it silly for round face smart watches. Analog watches I get because clocks are circles... you don't need that limitation for smartwatch right?
besides the new pebble any other smartwatches atm are going for the curved look?
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Or maybe in ~5yrs we'll all be laughing about the space wasting skeuomorphism of round smartwatches.This reminds of the whole 3.5" is the perfect size for a smartphone. When Apple offers a round iWatch in ~5yrs nobody will care that it is not optimized for text.
It got old and rampant man. Tastes change. iOS 7 looked so refreshing.I do appreciate the complete turn around from both android and Apple fans in regards to how the view skeumorphism.
I do appreciate the complete turn around from both android and Apple fans in regards to how the view skeumorphism.
I do appreciate the complete turn around from both android and Apple fans in regards to how the view skeumorphism.
Part of the problem is that amid the trend shift toward flat design, the term 'skeuomorphism' got misused fucking constantly. The iOS 6-era chrome with stuff like Corinthian leather was revolting, sure, but literally anything where you're dragging an "object" around on a screen is skeuomorphism, as is the desktop metaphor on personal computers. Certain skeuomorphic stuff is great (like page-turning in iBooks). It's a design concept that can be really helpful when used correctly.
But isn't the idea of using a less efficient circular watch design just so it looks more traditional the kind of skeumorphic design people were giving Apple crap for before ios 7?
But isn't the idea of using a less efficient circular watch design just so it looks more traditional the kind of skeumorphic design people were giving Apple crap for before ios 7?
i don't think we should be making such bold claims about usage patterns of this product category that's not even in its infancy yet.The iWatch has analog 'skeumorphic' watch faces too. Indeed all Apple's included analog watch faces are circular**. If you think that a major feature of a smartwatch is fashion, as Apple does, and you offer the option of an ambient always-on watchface, as Android Wear does, then the majority of the time a smartwatch will be spent showing off an analog watchface instead of displaying text to be read. In that case, it makes sense to offer a round option for people for prefer that.
I don't know how many people here have actually owned a smartwatch before but, in my experience, you just won't spend a lot of time reading large amounts of text on it (especially when the watch has to be tethered to a smartphone with a larger, better screen). Even Apple's iWatch UI design guidelines suggest developers optimize for interactions measured in "seconds". Nobody is going to be browsing their photo albums or reading War and Peace on a smartwatch.
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you know... something I didn't think about after my iphone 6+ hard crashed and rebooted for like the 4th time this week after trying to switch to another app (double hit home button)... I do hope apple at least tries to give a damn about stability for the watch.
Think my pebble crashed maybe once every 3-4 months? Anybody here have any experience with how (not) stable android gear is?
you know... something I didn't think about after my iphone 6+ hard crashed and rebooted for like the 4th time this week after trying to switch to another app (double hit home button)... I do hope apple at least tries to give a damn about stability for the watch.
You must have had a magic Pebble. Mine crashed all the time.
*shrug* I've been using smartwatches for ~3-4 yrs. The iWatch isn't that much different. And lol, that LG Watch R notification shows more information than an alert on an iPhone. yet the LG Watch R fails because it's round loli don't think we should be making such bold claims about usage patterns of this product category that's not even in its infancy yet.
I'm not sure that 2007 me would have been able to predict how we'd be using our smartphones nowadays.
also, maybe try not to exaggerate so much.
we're talking about full tweets, maybe.
Where's the point if i get a notification of my girlfriend texting me "hey, your mom called. your father just ..." just to have me take out my phone to read "farted"
look at this shot of the G watch R again.
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i think it fails as a notification device in its current iteration of AndroidWear
Someone needs a nap...Why the fuck do you need lines of text on a goddam Smartwatch?
Do you not have ANY common sense? They excluded a keyboard because our fingers are too fat to reliably tap 2mm buttons, not because they think text doesn't belong on your wrist.I mean Apple even preferred to offer an emoji/heartbeat thingie instead of a keyboard.
It's not so much the "look," but rather the feel of how it conforms to the shape of your wrist. But the last time I checked, my wrist in a relaxed state is actually concave, not convex.besides the new pebble any other smartwatches atm are going for the curved look?
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*shrug* I've been using smartwatches for ~3-4 yrs. The iWatch isn't that much different. And lol, that LG Watch R notification shows more information than an alert on an iPhone. yet the LG Watch R fails because it's round lol
Someone needs a nap...
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Do you not have ANY common sense? They excluded a keyboard because our fingers are too fat to reliably tap 2mm buttons, not because they think text doesn't belong on your wrist.
It's not so much the "look," but rather the feel of how it conforms to the shape of your wrist. But the last time I checked, my wrist in a relaxed state is actually concave, not convex.
I prefer my mechanical watches to be small and round (my largest watch is 40mm), but if I'm dealing with a smart watch that has lines of text, then something rectangular would be preferred. The round smart watches you cited are all pretty big, and that's probably necessary to alleviate the defiencies with displaying lines of text on round faces. I'd like to see a round smart watch with a case size under 40mm and see how that fares, in terms of text fitting and spacing. Until then, I'd probably make the tradeoff for something rectangular so it can display more information on a smaller display.Hey, it's possible to use a triangle screen if you scroll text like the Star Wars intro. But seriously people are already using the Moto360, LG Watch R. Reading text on it is not as bad as some claim and, if you prefer the round, the tradeoff is well worth it despite some cutoff corners.
*urgh* looks like Apple is trying to put a smartphone on a wristSomeone needs a nap...
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Fair enough, I would probably make the same tradeoff. My point is that its not the only choice and some people prefer differently.I prefer my mechanical watches to be small and round (my largest watch is 40mm), but if I'm dealing with a smart watch that has lines of text, then something rectangular would be preferred. The round smart watches you cited are all pretty big, and that's probably necessary to alleviate the defiencies with displaying lines of text on round faces. I'd like to see a round smart watch with a case size under 40mm and see how that fares, in terms of text fitting and spacing. Until then, I'd probably make the tradeoff for something rectangular so it can display more information on a smaller display.
Where you getting at? The photos are probably zoomed in by default. Not that the watch is a prime device to see photos anyway. Just like on the iPod nano, the feature is just there because.I'm more intrigued about the OS than the hardware at this point. It seems very pretty and thought through.
One thing though...
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I know they like to fill up content to match the screen, but photos are not taken with that aspect ratio.
The photos are probably zoomed in by default.
You zoom out. iPad and iPhone zoom lots of things by default if they aren't the same ratio as the screen and you just zoom out if you need the full different ratio in sight.Cropping all photos in your photo library for the sake of filling up the screen is not a good idea.
You zoom out. iPad and iPhone zoom lots of things by default if they aren't the same ratio as the screen and you just zoom out if you need the full different ratio in sight.
iWatch
please guys
Do you not like me having the option to read texts/emails/directions, or is it just the interface?*urgh* looks like Apple is trying to put a smartphone on a wrist
But I said zoomed in. Should work like PANTHEON is saying, but in any case I fully expect for it to display a Watch optimized version of your photos, for the sake of saving precious bandwidth and memory. edit: involving mainly a massive resolution reduction and I wouldn't be shocked with a mild crop as well - although I doubt it. How would that even work with, say, landscape oriented photos. Don't take an early video at face value.Cropping all photos in your photo library for the sake of filling up the screen is not a good idea.
you do know that watches are circular for one singular reason: because the minute hand goes all the way round, right? - there's no natural, ergonomic, reason why a watch should be of circular shape.
on your wrist, a circular shape is an artificial reduction in useable screen real estate. the Moto 360 and LG G watch are are as much "form over function" as it gets.
they look neat, but i don't think "resembling an actual watch" is a category that manufacturer's should aim for.
To get the same amount of useable screen real estate (i.e. pixels) as a rectangular screen, a circular screen would have to be roughly 10% wider. Let alone the fact that designing a UI that properly and efficiently fills a circular display with information is a lot tougher.
I wouldn't say modern smartphones "resemble an actual phone" from way back when.
Yeah people are really overlooking how nice it'll be to know for sure that your device actually vibrated and easily see what just made it happen.I've been waiting for a release date! Now I can finally leave my phone on silent forever.
Didn't think about that. Pretty cool to never pull your phone out for calls you wanted to skip.Yeah people are really overlooking how nice it'll be to know for sure that your device actually vibrated and easily see what just made it happen.
Yeah people are really overlooking how nice it'll be to know for sure that your device actually vibrated and easily see what just made it happen.
I've been waiting for a release date! Now I can finally leave my phone on silent forever.
Yeah people are really overlooking how nice it'll be to know for sure that your device actually vibrated and easily see what just made it happen.
Ok, this just made me want this watch...Didn't think about that. Pretty cool to never pull your phone out for calls you wanted to skip.
Didn't think about that. Pretty cool to never pull your phone out for calls you wanted to skip.
Fuck me I just turned truly excited for this.
Gimme that black sports one, just dunno if the bigger or the smaller.
I don't care how much of a 1st gen Apple product this will be. It will still hold a nice resale value if I want to upgrade 1 year later.
1 year is a hella lot of time folks.
Lot of time get it.
i don't think "1st gen Apple product" matters on the watch as much as it matters on your other iDevices.
Since the watch is, per design, mostly limited to acting as a screen extension of compatible phone apps.
So other than next year's model having GPS built in (which i doubt), i don't see how there could be many improvements that would make you regret being an early adopter. It certainly shouldn't be a iPhone -> iPhone 3G -> iPhone 3GS or iPad -> iPad 2 -> iPad retina difference.
it's lifespan should be more compareable to the AppleTV, another 'companion device'.
the computational tasks happen on your phone, so as long as the gen 1 watch delivers a lag free, crisp UI, i think it should serve its duty for several generations.
this is just me stating my hopes here, btw. - since i'm upgrading my iPhone on a 2 year cycle and my iPad maybe every 3rd generation, i don't particularly desire for there to be another device that i'd feel like needing to replace every other year.
Then again, it's (supposedly) half the price of an iPhone, so it's pretty much an impulse buy during times of "gadget draught"
i don't think "1st gen Apple product" matters on the watch as much as it matters on your other iDevices.
Since the watch is, per design, mostly limited to acting as a screen extension of compatible phone apps.
So other than next year's model having GPS built in (which i doubt), i don't see how there could be many improvements that would make you regret being an early adopter. It certainly shouldn't be a iPhone -> iPhone 3G -> iPhone 3GS or iPad -> iPad 2 -> iPad retina difference.
it's lifespan should be more compareable to the AppleTV, another 'companion device'.
the computational tasks happen on your phone, so as long as the gen 1 watch delivers a lag free, crisp UI, i think it should serve its duty for several generations.
this is just me stating my hopes here, btw. - since i'm upgrading my iPhone on a 2 year cycle and my iPad maybe every 3rd generation, i don't particularly desire for there to be another device that i'd feel like needing to replace every other year.
Then again, it's (supposedly) half the price of an iPhone, so it's pretty much an impulse buy during times of "gadget draught"
The improvements I'm expecting/hoping the most for future gens are in the battery department, it would be nice to have some sort of advancement that would allow for sleep tracking.
Incidentally, sleep tracking is what I think the Apple Watch will be missing the most for me, coming from a Jawbone UP24.
i don't think "1st gen Apple product" matters on the watch as much as it matters on your other iDevices.
Since the watch is, per design, mostly limited to acting as a screen extension of compatible phone apps.
So other than next year's model having GPS built in (which i doubt), i don't see how there could be many improvements that would make you regret being an early adopter. It certainly shouldn't be a iPhone -> iPhone 3G -> iPhone 3GS or iPad -> iPad 2 -> iPad retina difference.
it's lifespan should be more compareable to the AppleTV, another 'companion device'.
the computational tasks happen on your phone, so as long as the gen 1 watch delivers a lag free, crisp UI, i think it should serve its duty for several generations.
this is just me stating my hopes here, btw. - since i'm upgrading my iPhone on a 2 year cycle and my iPad maybe every 3rd generation, i don't particularly desire for there to be another device that i'd feel like needing to replace every other year.
Then again, it's (supposedly) half the price of an iPhone, so it's pretty much an impulse buy during times of "gadget draught"
Not sure I agree with this. I expect the endgame for the watch is to become a completely independent device, one that can be used standalone or in conjunction with the phone. The first gen is obviously not that device, but theres a lot of room for improvement.
Even if it never evolves to being a full-fledged standalone, things like more onboard storage or more computational power are things that I expect to be upgraded year over year that will reduce the watch's reliance on the phone.
You're right though, this is the least '1st-Gen' feeling Apple product they've ever launched.
Incidentally, sleep tracking is what I think the Apple Watch will be missing the most for me, coming from a Jawbone UP24.
already has sleep tracking, no?
How can you say that about something that hasn't launched? It seems pretty first gen in how limited its going to be,design and battery life.
I don't believe so. I think you're supposed to charge your watch every night, and maybe because of that sleep tracking isn't a feature... yet.