I bet. I bought three watches in the first part of the 2000s and never wear any now. My son only wears his Android watch that he speaks into and plays music for him.
I wear a watch whenever I go out. A cell phone may be a good way to tell time but a wrist watch is more than just function. It is part of your attire. As for “talking” watches I have enough to do to figure out my Bluetooth headphones;
My colleagues recently commented that I was the only one (out of 8) who wears a watch. Everyone else refers to their cell phones. I do wonder if I will bother replacing mine when it gives up the ghost.
That’s precisely why I may not replace mine. At this point the batteries would probably cost more than the value of the watch. I previously had a vintage wonder watch but it quit keeping time accurately.
You have a point. I wonder if cell phones in general have affected the sale of wrist watches? If they have that is a shame.
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I bet. I bought three watches in the first part of the 2000s and never wear any now. My son only wears his Android watch that he speaks into and plays music for him.
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I wear a watch whenever I go out. A cell phone may be a good way to tell time but a wrist watch is more than just function. It is part of your attire. As for “talking” watches I have enough to do to figure out my Bluetooth headphones;
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My colleagues recently commented that I was the only one (out of 8) who wears a watch. Everyone else refers to their cell phones. I do wonder if I will bother replacing mine when it gives up the ghost.
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I would wear mine if the batteries didn’t die before a year was up. It’s like a bracelet with a clock. 🙂 Are your batteries working?
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That’s precisely why I may not replace mine. At this point the batteries would probably cost more than the value of the watch. I previously had a vintage wonder watch but it quit keeping time accurately.
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