I think you can buy AppleCare+ via phone and only need to run a remote diagnostic to make sure it's ok, so maybe you're good to go.
Care to post a pic btw?
Yeah, forgot you could add via phone. Had no problem doing so, thanks. A pic would be underwhelming; from any reasonable distance it looks like a tiny fleck of something is stuck on it, and that's what I thought it was at first. It is only me that will forever stare at the micro-dent in horror. (for reference, this is a silver; space grey may not show dents as much) Next time around I'll definitely be getting SS.
The biggest problem in my opinion is that quite a few things aren't immediately obvious. Force press is a cool feature but it just means that a lot of functionality is literally hidden without any hint that it's there. This is especially confusing when the music app uses force press for features like airplay and repeat whereas the music glance doesn't offer any force press functions.
Yeah, I'd agree with that. The Force Press is basically a physical hamburger menu, stuffing things into it that they either ran out of screen real estate for, or couldn't find a better place for. Normally I'd say that stinks of bad UX design, but in this case I think it's just that Apple has made a lot of UX sacrifices to stuff everything into the tiny screen. I find switching between tapping the screen and using the crown very awkward, and sometimes my brain freezes on trying to decide which one to use for a particular task.
It's definitely not intuitive the way the first iPhone was. If the Watch had multitouch it would be a lot more straightforward, or at least feel more familiar, but I imagine they prototyped a multitouch version and found it lacking in some way.
The notifications and glances became easier to remember once I realized that they're mirroring the iPhone's swipe-down for Notifications and swipe-up for Control Center. But it also feels a bit weird to swipe on the tiny screen. And it gets really confusing that notifications and glances are only available from the watch face.
I'd say the biggest UI mess on the Watch is the app screen though. It feels like it was designed by Marketing because it looked cool, not because it solved the problem of opening apps the best. It feels like a prototype from a college student. Tapping apps often results in mis-taps, and trying to get an app to be in the center so you can use the crown to open it is a frustrating experience. By the time I get to the app I needed to get to, I could have just opened my phone.