Takkun
Ian M.
I agree with Ko.Fe about the function of a watch. It is is to tell the time, instantly, at a glance. The apple watch is not such a watch. I bought an Oris automatic watch in 2010. I was tired of getting batteries changed in my quartz watch. I never had time so I was wearing my grandfather's Cyma and worried I would damage it. That kept perfect time.
I went into the jeweller's and asked for a steel braceleted automatic waterproof watch with a second hand and a big smooth crown as plain as possible. You're kidding aren't you? Nope. He showed me a Raymond Weil and an Oris. Have you heard of these brands? Yes, at least the Raymond Weil. So you'll take the Raymond Weil? No, I'll take the Oris. Not till the sale went through did the guy see that I was the real deal.
Eventually the watch needed servicing and regulating to keep better time. It is now a few seconds fast per day. Knowing I'd be without it for a few weeks waiting on an important part, I went to the second hand watch dealer next door and looked for another watch to be my backup. I didn't like many. I bought an Oris diver's watch that fitted my requirements. I went outside and sent a photo of it to my son. The Oris 65 he tells me quick as a flash. Mine is the 2015 revival version with the big numbers. It's great. It was within 2 seconds per day accuracy. So now I have two good watches, keeping excellent time. I may never buy another watch. The same cannot be said of my son.
I'm with both of you. A watch is a lot more functional than a smart device for me. It's just there. It doesn't need batteries, or a charger. I've got enough gadgets to keep track of. Now even on my bike, with some Garmin gear. At least the bike itself doesn't need charging.
And similarly, while i certainly appreciate them, I can't justify more than a few. They do just one purpose, to tell time. At least cameras have different utilities. (Don't get me started on fountain pens, though as far as collectables go, they don't take up space, and I have the skills to fix up estate sale finds).
For those in this thread that don't see the cost/benefit of mechanical watches, allow me to introduce you to the Seiko 5 series. Cheap and go forever without service, and of course, no batteries. Like the old pre-quartz Timexes, but far more accurate.
As an aside, what I do find interesting looking around at other people's wrists is that I see smart watches far more common among older generations. You'd think it'd be the other way around. Might just be a bit of confirmation bias.