A Blog by Jonathan Low

 

Sep 12, 2014

Should You Wait for the Second Generation Apple Watch?

The trade-off has less to do with what you might actually use the thing for and more to do with what sort of personality you are.

Are you desperate to be seen as the earliest of early adopters? Someone on the bleeding edge who knows how to use - and has to have - the latest and greatest?

Or are you more the tortoise than the hare: the kind of person who cares about functionality and value?

Because that is the choice you are being offered. As the following article explains, industry analysts are being polite but not exactly effusive about the new Apple watch. In effect, they are saying that it is underpowered and therefore under-delivers. The company can not or choose not to explain what this product does that a good smartphone doesn't already do. And it has offered no rationale as to why this is a great leap forward in technological performance. In short, it's a fashion accessory whose functional purpose is ill-defined, but which addresses the demand that Apple do something new and innovative rather than iterative.

There is nothing wrong or ignoble about fashion accessories. Indeed, a significant part of the iPhone's success is based on its consumer appeal. But it also happens to have changed people's lives.

So the question really comes back to whether you crave the attention you will receive as you shoot your cuffs and let everyone know you are sporting the new, new thing or whether you actually want to use it in ways that might make your life more efficient and productive. JL

Mark Sullivan reports in Venture Beat:

It’s a good bet that Apple will create thinner and more powerful watch on the second time out. But it also needs people to buy the first version.
The new Apple Watch has a pleasing (if conventional) hardware design and some clever software, but many observers are already looking forward to the second generation of the device — only one day after the first version debuted.
One could argue Apple wasn’t ready, or the technology wasn’t ready, for a major disruption of the smartwatch space, such as it is.
The limitations of Apple’s smartwatch sound familiar: immature app selection, no cellular or GPS radios, dependence on the phone, hard-to-navigate interface, etc. These are the same criticisms leveled at other smartwatch makers, like Samsung and Motorola. The Watch may look to some like a somewhat pretty also-ran.
The analysts I talked to about the Watch Wednesday were less than fully enthusiastic.
“I have mixed feelings about it,” Technalysis Research analyst Bob O’Donnell told VentureBeat. “Yes, it is a nice watch, but it has the same problems that the rest of the category faces: That is, it doesn’t do a lot of things that the phone doesn’t do already.”
“So you might have the nicest device in a category nobody cares about,” O’Donnell says.
Did Apple jump into the smartphone space too early? Apple’s M.O. in the past has been to wait until consumers have become aware of a particular kind of widget (MP3 player, smartphone, tablet), then release a widget that’s prettier, better designed, and more functional than anything else on the market. This doesn’t seem to be the case with this release.
One of the main things the Apple Watch seems to lack is a clear use case.
“The good thing about Apple is that they always explain exactly why you need its product, then they explain how the product fills that need, but they didn’t do that for the Watch,” says Current Analysis analyst Avi Greengart.
Greengart suspects that the reason Apple released the first version of the watch now is that it wanted to get developers excited about building apps for the watch. He says we might hear Apple really start to define the use case when the second version of the watch comes out.
But in the meantime, it might be up to the developers to build apps that answer that question, Greengart suggests.
Additionally, by the second version, Apple may have gotten past some of the technical limitations — like the lack of smaller, more powerful batteries and more power-efficient screens — just as it has done with successive versions of the iPhone.
It’s a good bet that Apple will create thinner and more powerful watch on the second time out. But it also needs people to buy the first version when it comes out next year.
And, as Technalysis’ O’Donnell points out, some people won’t want to upgrade their existing wristwatch in the same way they upgrade their phones. “There is no generation one in a piece of jewelry; a watch is something you buy once and keep for a long time,” he says.
This may be true, especially when some of the blingier versions of the Watch might cost as much as $2,000.
IDC analyst Danielle Levitas also believes waiting for version two of the watch is a good idea for many people.
“If you already have an iPhone, or you’re planning on getting one, and you have a lot of money, and you love technology, sure, buy one,” she says. “But if you already have an iPhone and you don’t have a lot of money, I would say you should wait.”
Levitas believes the second generation of Watches could come out in as little as twelve months, and that it’s likely that watch will be thinner and will do more things.

No need to take over the world

Still, there are good reasons to believe that Apple doesn’t need a full-scale Steve Jobs-style category assault to be successful with the smartwatch. The numbers suggest that demand is large enough to make the new watch a success in the first year.
According to IDC, 265 million devices worldwide (including iPhone 5 and iPhone 6 models) will be compatible with Apple Watch by the time the new device launches next year. And 42 million “intelligent wearable devices” will be sold world wide next year. So even if 10 million of those devices were Apple Watches, that would be a very positive first year sales number for Apple.
And, Levitas points out, Apple has a lot of loyal and affluent customers who are likely to buy the first generation iPhone.
Looking at it another way, Apple isn’t really trying to dominate an emerging space as it has with earlier devices. It may be just trying to get a foothold in a very old space –wristwatches. There’s evidence to support this.
“It’s certain from the price point they’re going after premium watch brands, certainly not Cartier or Rolex, but maybe Tag Heuer or Movado,” Reticle Research analyst Ross Rubin tells VentureBeat.
Movado watches, for example range in price from $300 up to $4,000. “In terms of those other products its definitely affordable,” Rubin says.
Apple said its basic watch will cost $350, but there’s a wide range of models and bands, and the range could go as high as $2,000 for the gold-plated, delivered-in-a-jewelry-box version.
“They are preserving more aspects of the traditional watch in the Apple Watch than they did (with the) traditional phone experience in the first iPhone,” Rubin says.
Technalysis’ O’Donnell agrees. He points out that there was a lot of speculation before the launch about whether the Apple device would look like a watch at all. But the new device fits squarely (no pun) within the wristwatch paradigm, he says.
“The screen is square, and they even measure the size of the screen in millimeters like they do in the watch industry,” O’Donnell says.
Bottom line: The analysts agreed that the Watch still faces some very difficult design challenges, and that for many people it might be better to wait for the second generation of the device to in

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