I am breaking up with my Apple Watch. The relationship was, despite all expectations, not what I needed. All the focus on San Francisco and Apple’s next big innovation this week (streaming!) made me realize it was not playing my tune.
Still, I will never regret the weeks we spent together. They taught me some valuable truths about myself.
Like, for example, that I do not want to be defined by a talking point on my wrist.
There
is a reason that I carry the same (no logo) handbag everywhere I go, a
reason my (pre-Apple) watch had no bells or tourbillon whistles; a
reason I gravitate toward clothes that are not identifiable by season or
designer and do not appear in any advertisements I have ever seen.
I
spend a lot of time in a world where products are shorthand for people,
and I know too well the risks of having such semiology attached to
myself (though I fully acknowledge my willingness to attach it to
others).
But when I started wearing the Apple Watch (the 38-millimeter case with a Milanese Loop
band, which is the smaller size with a flexible stainless steel
bracelet), it became a subject of conversation no matter where I was: in
meetings at work, at the bagel store, at my son’s track meet. It has
been so everywhere, marketed to so many people, there was just no
mistaking it.
First everyone wanted to know about it. Then they wanted to try it. Then they made certain assumptions about me.
Which, frankly, I would have made about any woman like myself walking around with a big black box on her arm.
Because
no matter how attractive the Apple Watch is in the context of other
smartwatches or smartbands, no matter how much of an aesthetic advance
its rounded corners and rectangular display, it still looks like a
gadget. Especially on someone, like me, with relatively small wrists.
Not
only does its face effectively span the width of my forearm, but the
cool little screen saver that so many reviewers have lauded — the Mickey
or the butterfly or the galaxy (which is the one I have) or the
pseudo-watch hands (the one that, notably, is always on in every picture
of the watch, and actually makes it look like a watch) — is also
functionally sleeping most of the time.
Every time I see it, I want to shriek, “Beam me up, Scotty.”
Not
that it would do much good. Typing doesn’t awaken the picture. Even
when I rock my arm back and forth energetically, it often takes a few
tries before up the earth pops. The default position is blank.
Just
as my default position when trying to read an email or the text of a
headline on the small screen involves raising my wrist to near eye level
— or, if a phone call is involved and my actual phone is not reachable,
talking into thin air. If your children or acquaintances come upon you,
it’s pretty much an invitation to ridicule.
“Why is that more embarrassing than endlessly looking at a phone?” my friends said when I complained.
It’s
a valid question, but after some contemplation I think the answer is
simple: A phone is hand-held, and we are used to seeing people read
things held in their hands. Like, say, books. But seeing somebody
staring at her wrist (or merely sneaking a surreptitious glance at it)
telegraphs something else entirely: (1) rudeness or (2) geekiness.
This
doesn’t seem to have bothered the tech writers, most of whom wrote
persuasively positive reviews of the gadget, primarily based on what it
could do for you. And it is certainly more subtle than Google Glass, though I am not sure that is saying much.
Granted,
all of this would likely pale in importance if the watch were truly
transforming my life, as my iPhone has. But I have never had a problem
turning away from my emails when I need to concentrate on something else
— I’ve effectively trained myself to compartmentalize — so I need
specific alerts as to what is important.
And
the small screen is simply too small to really read on, so I’ve been
more annoyed than happy when it alerted me to texts from my loved ones;
and when I saw a headline, all I wanted to do was find the rest of the
story.
Besides,
the busywork the watch’s apps can replace — handing over airline
boarding passes, opening hotel room doors — seems less like an advance
than a loss of control. Call me a Luddite, but honestly, I don’t mind
unlocking things with my actual hands. The new watch OS announced this
week may change the situation, but I am not sure I have the patience to
wait.
Likewise (and I know this will be heresy to anyone really excited about the coming Fitbit
initial public offering), the fitness-app aspect — the tracking of my
steps, the measuring of my heart rate, the telling me to stand up when I
am in the middle of an article — seems more like a burden than freedom.
I
have worked hard to wean myself from a reliance on exercise machines
telling me how hard I had worked — how many calories I had burned, how
many stairs I had climbed — in part because I knew I was cheating pretty
much all the time anyway and thus could not trust the results, and in
part because it became an excuse to modify, or not, my ensuing behavior.
But
the truth is, I know when I am in shape; I can see the difference in my
body and feel it when I ride my bike in the park. The watch threatened
to drag me back into a numbers-driven neurosis, and that’s a temptation I
would rather not have. (Also, I have too many friends who look at their
fitness tracker in the middle of conversation, then immediately spring
up and start walking around energetically, to feel it is really additive
to my life.)
I
did like the fact that I could turn my phone ringer off, and the watch
would vibrate when, say, my children were on the line and I needed to
take the call. But in the end that wasn’t enough.
When
I told a colleague about the breakup, he observed that perhaps I wasn’t
the target for the Apple Watch. That I should be sure to tell the Siri
on my wrist, “It’s not you, it’s me.” He may be right.
Except
I don’t think so, and not just because often, opposites do attract. But
because I actually think I am the intended: a nontech person who
wouldn’t otherwise have too many gadgets (a phone, an iPad, a laptop),
but who could be seduced into buying another because of its
desirability.
That’s
the way Apple increases market share and owns a category, after all: by
sucking in those who are not Apple addicts. It’s why the company worked
so hard to get close to the fashion flock.
But
here’s the thing: The watch isn’t actually a fashion accessory for the
tech-happy. It’s a tech accessory pretending to be a fashion accessory. I
just couldn’t fall for it.
JUNE; culled from
No comments:
Post a Comment