electricpete
Android Expert
As you may have seen in the news, the updated google clock app (for phone) now coordinates with Android wear.
I tried it out and like it. Here's my comments:
===========Pros ================
P1 - Phone alarm is customizeable with slowly increasing volume. Starts imperceptibly soft and increases over customizable interval (5 seconds, 20 seconds, whatever). That is a gentler way to wake up.
P2 - When the alarm that you set on your phone goes off, it also activates the watch alarm with continuous vibration until alarm is dismissed or snoozed.
P3 - The alarm that you set on the phone can be snoozed/dismissed on the watch.
P4 - Combining all of the above does give an extremely effective way to give yourself a high priority reminder that won't bother people around you and certainly won't be missed:
P4A - Why you won't bother the people around you: because it starts very soft and vibrates your wrist. You'll be the first to notice it AND you can dismiss it quickly from your watch rather than fumbling to find your phone.
P4B - Why you won't miss it: If for some reason you're distracted, it'll keep getting louder and louder and louder...as loud as it takes for you to notice it (setting controls max loudness).
====== CONS ===================
C1 - When the alarm sounds and display appears, the label/name that I assigned is difficult to read on the watch because it is small white text with half of it on a very-light-blue background.
C2 - When alarm sounds, there are three different possible displays, depending on the context:
C2A - Watch has snooze icon on the right and dismiss icon on the left (swipe to activate)
C2B - Phone (when alarms from locked condition) has snooze icon on the left and dismiss icon on the right (swipe to activate)
C2C - Phone (when alarms with screen on) has snooze icon on the left and dismiss icon on the right (tap to activate rather than swipe)
C2 Discussion - The difference C2A vs C2B is not as big as it sounds. Swipe direction is the same. It is a matter of whether they are labeling the beginning of the swipe (watch) or the end of the swipe (phone... swipe always begins in the middle of the screen on phone). For a given action, the finger begins at different sides of the phone for c2a than c2c! There are certainly enough visual cues that any one interface alone is simple. But why three slightly different interfaces for the exact same function? The last thing people want when waking up bleary eyed and groggy is to dismiss when they thought they were snoozing. I'm pretty sure after studying it that I'll be ok (it's easy to remember that swipe right means dismiss, just like for notifications), but I think they should settle on one interface for that critical function.
C3 - When you launch the app on phone you go to a clock screen. Requires an additional swipe to get to the alarm screen. Why not take me directly to the alarm (who would ever need to open an app to see a clock).
C4 - Deleted.
C5 - Any alarm that you set on the watch does not activate the phone alarm (lives on the watch only). This is a disadvantage for two reasons:
C5A - It would be convenient to set a "real" (phone) alarm from the watch, including voice command.
C5B - It could be another "gotcha" for someone new to this app ...seeing that the alarms seem integrated and are shared from phone to watch ...incorrectly assumes that they are also shared from watch to phone (imagine setting your wakeup alarm from the watch and then taking the watch off for charging).
C6 - When setting a weekly alarm, you have to tap every day that the alarm doesn't sound (rather than tapping the days the alarm does sound). A little counterintuitive if you ask me.
The con's are not meant to be overly negative, I'm just talking through the different things that struck me as I tried out the app...
Overall I like it and I'm going to use it instead of the stock alarm app. Try for yourself and post what you think.
I tried it out and like it. Here's my comments:
===========Pros ================
P1 - Phone alarm is customizeable with slowly increasing volume. Starts imperceptibly soft and increases over customizable interval (5 seconds, 20 seconds, whatever). That is a gentler way to wake up.
P2 - When the alarm that you set on your phone goes off, it also activates the watch alarm with continuous vibration until alarm is dismissed or snoozed.
P3 - The alarm that you set on the phone can be snoozed/dismissed on the watch.
P4 - Combining all of the above does give an extremely effective way to give yourself a high priority reminder that won't bother people around you and certainly won't be missed:
P4A - Why you won't bother the people around you: because it starts very soft and vibrates your wrist. You'll be the first to notice it AND you can dismiss it quickly from your watch rather than fumbling to find your phone.
P4B - Why you won't miss it: If for some reason you're distracted, it'll keep getting louder and louder and louder...as loud as it takes for you to notice it (setting controls max loudness).
====== CONS ===================
C1 - When the alarm sounds and display appears, the label/name that I assigned is difficult to read on the watch because it is small white text with half of it on a very-light-blue background.
C2 - When alarm sounds, there are three different possible displays, depending on the context:
C2A - Watch has snooze icon on the right and dismiss icon on the left (swipe to activate)
C2B - Phone (when alarms from locked condition) has snooze icon on the left and dismiss icon on the right (swipe to activate)
C2C - Phone (when alarms with screen on) has snooze icon on the left and dismiss icon on the right (tap to activate rather than swipe)
C2 Discussion - The difference C2A vs C2B is not as big as it sounds. Swipe direction is the same. It is a matter of whether they are labeling the beginning of the swipe (watch) or the end of the swipe (phone... swipe always begins in the middle of the screen on phone). For a given action, the finger begins at different sides of the phone for c2a than c2c! There are certainly enough visual cues that any one interface alone is simple. But why three slightly different interfaces for the exact same function? The last thing people want when waking up bleary eyed and groggy is to dismiss when they thought they were snoozing. I'm pretty sure after studying it that I'll be ok (it's easy to remember that swipe right means dismiss, just like for notifications), but I think they should settle on one interface for that critical function.
C3 - When you launch the app on phone you go to a clock screen. Requires an additional swipe to get to the alarm screen. Why not take me directly to the alarm (who would ever need to open an app to see a clock).
C4 - Deleted.
C5 - Any alarm that you set on the watch does not activate the phone alarm (lives on the watch only). This is a disadvantage for two reasons:
C5A - It would be convenient to set a "real" (phone) alarm from the watch, including voice command.
C5B - It could be another "gotcha" for someone new to this app ...seeing that the alarms seem integrated and are shared from phone to watch ...incorrectly assumes that they are also shared from watch to phone (imagine setting your wakeup alarm from the watch and then taking the watch off for charging).
C6 - When setting a weekly alarm, you have to tap every day that the alarm doesn't sound (rather than tapping the days the alarm does sound). A little counterintuitive if you ask me.
The con's are not meant to be overly negative, I'm just talking through the different things that struck me as I tried out the app...
Overall I like it and I'm going to use it instead of the stock alarm app. Try for yourself and post what you think.
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