I used to be a watch fan. Not hardcore - I didn't collect or anything, but I liked good quality quartz watches.
Then I got given a Huawei smartwatch as a gift. It's good.
Firstly, it looks nice. Maybe not as good as a high-end Swiss watch, but it's much nicer than a Pebble (I think it's nicer than a iWatch, but YMMV). Also, changing faces is fun.
Secondly, it's amazingly useful. I can be in a meeting or talking to someone, feel my watch buzz and check to see if I need to respond to a message without pulling my phone out.
Also, the battery life is really good. I went away and forgot my charger and got 2 1/2 days out of it.
Yes, it surprised me too. I've got that written on a number of watches that I never wear anymore.
I thought it would be really annoying - who wants to worry about charging a watch, right?
I was wrong. I've never really noticed it - I never have liked sleeping with a watch, so dropping in on the charger was roughly the same as what I was doing anyway.
I travel a reasonable amount, and remembering the custom charger is the only real annoyance I've found with it.
I'm old enough to remember when phones went weeks between charges. I guess we can adapt pretty easily.
> I can be in a meeting or talking to someone, feel my watch buzz and check to see if I need to respond to a message without pulling my phone out.
You don't need to check your smart watch or pull out your phone to know whether you should respond to a message when in a meeting or talking to someone: the answer is that you shouldn't. You owe your attention to the others in the meeting or the other to whom you are talking.
If there is something higher-priority going on (e.g. your kid is in the hospital), then you shouldn't be in that meeting or talking to that person: you should be attending to that higher-priority circumstance.
It's a bit like GTD or project management: prioritise the calls on your time, and spend your time on the highest-priority. Don't try to multi-task; it works no better for paying attention to meetings or conversations than it does for writing code.
This just isn't always the case. My job is multitasking, and I'm good at it.
I'm not rude, and nor am I distracted. But there are always multiple high priority things going on, and my job isn't to give one of them 100% attention, it is to make sure they are all done.
I'm sure that you think that you are, but I don't believe we're nearly as good at multitasking as we believe we are; indeed, I think that's a truth cognitive science has been exploring for some time now. The time it takes to context-switch from listening mode to watch- or phone-checking mode and then back into listening mode is longer than we subjectively realise, and long enough to miss important information.
I'm on call during work hours, and I also work on other projects while on call. Production outages preempt future planning, that's just the way things go.
If someone was in the hospital, that would preempt both production outages and future planning ;)
I agree with the other poster that says "my job is multitasking". Very few people have the liberty of doing only one thing at a time.
Then I got given a Huawei smartwatch as a gift. It's good.
Firstly, it looks nice. Maybe not as good as a high-end Swiss watch, but it's much nicer than a Pebble (I think it's nicer than a iWatch, but YMMV). Also, changing faces is fun.
Secondly, it's amazingly useful. I can be in a meeting or talking to someone, feel my watch buzz and check to see if I need to respond to a message without pulling my phone out.
Also, the battery life is really good. I went away and forgot my charger and got 2 1/2 days out of it.