I'll have to try. I'm not easily embarrassed, but it feels pretty dumb when the watch doesn't work. Like who's this dork, holding everyone back with their nerdery???
On the flip side, when it works, everything feels so seamless. There's definitely appeal to an LTE enabled watch anyways, for connected bike rides or runs, without a phone.
I'm still learning to trust availability of tap to pay, even with the phone. I've got my wallet along as backup at any new merchant.
I reserve cash for private party transactions, where I'll get a better price. Also cannabis. Otherwise, it's annoying to get, count, keep track of etc. I don't get 2% back on the transaction. The purchase isn't automatically logged for my budgeting. Some places are cashless. The credit card gives me consumer protections too.
While I'd originally hoped cash would offer consumer privacy, I think that ship has sailed. License plate readers in lots, tracking via cameras and mac addresses in stores. My actions are already the merchant's data.
A digital wallet improves on the credit card. Every merchant automatically gets a unique transaction token, instead of disclosing your card number. It's also faster than getting the credit card out and putting it away. Yeah Google gets my transaction, but I bet they were going to anyway.
Moving to a watch simplifies that further. Get nothing out, pay hands free. Removed from the wrist, the watch immediately relocks payment abilities.
I admittedly only have a couple in person transactions a week. So I'm not sure it's worth having the lock on my watch day to day. But I do like nerding out with a new toy.
The barriers I'm finding, suggest this is the early adopter end of digital tooling. For instance, I couldn't trivially transfer my audiobook m4b files. A great player isn't available either. The audible app is recent and minimally featured.
If I want Chat GPT integration, I'd have to download a wrapper app and potentially provide my own API key. With all the trade offs that implies. I imagine Google will replace the assistant with Gemini soon enough though.
It does look to me like a disruptive innovation space, where all other wearables will be superceded by Apple (WatchOS) and Google (WearOS, used by Samsung too). Maybe the Garmin hardware will hold an extreme endurance niche, but that's about it.
My used $130 watch has 32 gigs of storage and 2 gigs of RAM. That's a lot of potential. While currently a phone is needed to administer the watch, I could see that changing. This watch already does more than most dumb phones.
Imagine it as the network connected brains for a pair of AR glasses. That doesn't feel very far off.