She’s dead, Jim.
You killed it. Time for a new one.
She’s dead, Jim.
You killed it. Time for a new one.
You get what you pay for. In the case, you got screwed. Sorry to see it.
Optimized Charging and optimized charge limit is not the same as charge “consistently” in short bursts several times a day.
Optimized charging is meant for people who pop the watch on once a day around the same time and leave it until they wear it. So either at night because they’re not sleep tracking or whenever they’re showering and/or getting ready.
You putting it on the charger several times a day won’t trigger optimized charging because the watch doesn’t know for sure that you’re only want it at 80%. Or when you’ll charge it next as you’re not charging it based on sleep schedule or anything else consistent from a machine learning POV
AWU1, no cellular, no workouts, no sleep tracking, but fairly active during the day. Charged to 100% Wed at 05:00. Now 25% at not quite 14:00 on Thursday. So that’s… 33 hours?
So I’m on track for 40ish, but how are you 72 hours in? What are you other relevant settings for display and sensors and background activity?
They aren’t that far off from each other insofar as an easy breezy analogy requires. The only difference that your person obviously isn’t as replaceable or repairable as your phone.
Depends. The way I see it, AppleCare is insurance against catastrophic damage that would cost more than the premium and service fee to repair otherwise. If you have good luck with personal electronics and won’t be taking it where angles fear to tread, you’re probably fine without.
So I have AppleCare for peace of mind basically. Either way, I don’t use mine as a “case” to protect against scratches and everyday dings, because service fees. I still get a screen protector and a clear case or nicely colored/vanity case. Currently I’m favoring an ESR Armorite screen protector and the Spigen Zero One case (and individual lens protectors for that big honking camera array).
Good! It’s a great feature. I use it for a contact that is a list of number that might call me when I’m on call for work. Turn it on at the start and then off again when I’m done.
Works very well if your VIP contacts rarely ever actually call you (as opposed to just messaging you or whatever). It’s a handy option to have.
Optimized battery enthusiast
You know what? I like that. I’ll give you that over “charge micromanager.”
From experience with past Watch models, turning off raise extended battery life noticeably although I’m not sure the exact percentage as I never formally measured it. If you have a newer watch, it’s possible you could still see somewhat longer battery life by disabling Raise to Wake while leaving Always On Display enabled
I would take the 14 Pro over the 15 regular. There won’t be much difference in cameras that you would notice day to day, aside from the zoom, and they have the same processor, but you probably will notice things like the greater refresh rate.
Good question. As soon as you begin unpairing a Watch, it performs a backup to the iCloud associated with that Apple ID. That should be your son’s account. But in any case, all he is likely to loose is any Faces he had saved or any specific settings. Things like activity awards are saved to the iCloud, not the Watch itself. And you would be setting up his iPhone before pairing the Watch to it.
Double check with Apple Support.
I think Nintendo would shut you down so fast I wouldn’t bother with your app, were you to use actual Pokémon designs. I’d focus your efforts on original creature designs.