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#16
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Unfortunately according to reps at Apple the trade in value is 0 on series 3 watches.
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#17
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Technology is changing quickly, and you just have to plan on regularly replacing watches and phones. Five your old technology is no good. New watches are inexpensive.
Jeff |
#18
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I just don’t get it though….I get tech changing rapidly, however when a product works fine until you do an update they force on you and then it breaks product that is just not right. If we did nothing it would still be working. It’s like I handed it to a stranger that slammed it with a hammer and says it was old, get a new one.
Some watches are inexpensive. When we bought this it was not (to me at least) and a replacement is over $200. A lot of money to me, even more for my son who’s 13. It’s going to take him long time to earn money to replace! |
#19
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My Samsung phone is 6+ years old. It works, takes pictures and I can cruise the web. It doesn't have 15 photo lenses or a fruit logo. It has some character marks.....it's all good.
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#20
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A 13 year old ought to be able to hack that watch in a couple of evenings.
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#21
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Quote:
Jeff |
#22
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Trust me, he’s trying
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#23
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If they don’t mind taking a hit on general use, I second the recommendation for a garmin forerunner. They are pretty slim these days so fit well on the petit runners wrist and I’ve found that the hardware as well as the software are fairly indestructible relative to friends Apple Watches. I think the software stability comes from their relatively “dumb” feature list/UI relative to the Apple Watch. As mentioned, they have fantastic training stats though.
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#24
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That’s awesome!
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#25
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__________________
Chisholm's Custom Wheels Qui Si Parla Campagnolo |
#26
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Quote:
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__________________
Chisholm's Custom Wheels Qui Si Parla Campagnolo |
#27
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It is annoying that devices go out of support periodically. But, there is a cost to the vendor to keep the software secure and up-to-date. And consumers generally don't want to pay for updates, so that cost is baked into the purchase price with an implicit expectation that the life of the device is limited. That said, bricking a device (as happened with the OP's watch) is a ****ty thing to do. The software should have been written to allow the watch to continue being used, but without any connectivity back to the phone (although that makes the smart watch pretty not-smart). |
#28
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Yeah it's a companion piece....you can't run a watch without an iPhone as far as I know. The watch is basically a shared screen and a sensor or two. |
#29
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#30
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So, it's not an intentional bricking. It's more like a "properly QAing this update costs too much; we'll let the consumer beta test it for us, and if it blows up, we'll just tell them to buy new watches." |
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