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Apple Watch Series 3 Silver/Space Grey GPS + Cellular, 38mm $439 | 42MM $465 Delivered @ Telstra eBay

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    • +18

      past is the past

      • +3

        Just weird that yours reaches the front page and the earlier post (mine) only got 6 votes even though it’s better. Weird how this place works sometimes.

        • +4

          Timing.

        • +1

          its just timing, happen plenty time in the past ill post something no interest then its posted again month later higher & everyone's interested

          • +1

            @RogueWolf: Lol somebody's bitter.
            This deal is better because it's cheaper.

        • @ihavecentsnotsense Just another example I posted the same deal cheaper 22/11/18 a day before your deal 23/11/18 & that only got 12 likes, today slightly more expensive & no $50 voucher & it gets 44 likes, as said it’s just timing, ozbargains a strange place sometimes..

  • are these locked? want to send one to my dad in overseas and their carriers are supporting apple watch.

  • How do these work, do I have to pay more to my mobile provider?

    • Since im with Voda, I checked their pricing. Its $5/month to link with an existing number. Not sure about telstra but prob same.

      E: $5 for esim for all the majors.

      • it is $5 for Telstra as well. Service is called OneNumber with telstra

    • Cellular? Only from the major 3 telcos, for $5 a month.

    • 12 months free for Optus postpaid customer .
      Maybe expired but when I bought the watch last year it was so.

  • I got the series 4 coming from a series 2 owner. Highly recommend the cellular version. The wifi version series 2 I had to have my phone with me. The cellular ones I can leave my phone at home when I go to the gym, groceries etc etc

    • +1

      I guess that is actually a preference, I've bought a cellular Apple Watch but don't use the cellular feature as I am always with the phone, but couldn't be bothered to sell it and buy a GPS only,

    • +2

      How well does the watch work on its own? Lack of third party messengers seems to be a dealbreaker when everyone is on whatsapp, and no one uses facetime.

      • +4

        Many people use iMessage and FaceTime.

        • Which are Apple products only……

        • I don't think I know a single person who does. But can't really think of anyone who isn't on Whatsapp. Most have android anyway.
          When I got an iphone I asked a long-time apple user if imessage was good and they said they haven't used it in years. And we tried Facetime, and even though the call quality is better, we still just use whatsapp out of habit.

          • +1

            @crentist: It all comes down to your circle of friends, your age, your location, etc.

            I don’t know a single person who uses WhatsApp. I’m actually surprised to hear it’s popular.

            Out of my contacts, half use iMessage/FaceTime, a quarter plain SMS/phone, and the rest a mix of WeChat and Viber.

            • @[Deactivated]: I'm surprised to hear it isn't popular everywhere haha. And yea there are some clear divides in app users (usually national it seems), which can create very different impressions of usage. But lately I've found my circles becoming consolidated by making heavy use of group chats, to the point that old friends around the world are brought back into regular discussions, and people without the same app can end up excluded from a lot of stuff until they install it.

              But since installing multiple apps is so easy, it kinda irks me that Apple made up their own single-platform division that makes it harder for people to stay in touch. Easy enough to install WeChat even if you only have one or two Chinese friends to stay in touch with, but no ones buying a new phone without first experiencing a real threat to their social life. All cross-platform apps are the same, all just as good, and then there's Apple doing their own thing which exactly the same but worse.

              The SMS people are just clinging to the past though. Living overseas myself, I've emailed the SMS friends to get any app because otherwise there's no way for me to stay in touch with them easily

              • +1

                @crentist: The SMS users are usually people on Android handsets talking to Apple users. SMSes are unmetered these days on most plans, so it's the path of least resistance. No need to install apps, it just works.

  • +1

    I'd kinda like it if these got to the point of being a phone replacement. It seems almost there, but needs to be opened up a bit more to third party apps, and tuned more for standalone control than being dependent on a paired phone. With a pair of bluetooth earphones and good voice control these could be great. Obviously internet browsing etc are difficult, but the idea would be to discourage staring at a screen, but still be able to make calls, listen to music, get navigation etc.

    But Apple would only do it with their own apps, which are pretty garbage. Google Assistant, Maps, and Whatsapp (mostly for calls) would make this. And esim through a major carrier just seems expensive. I haven't had the impression Android watches are much better though?

  • can't wait to get prepaid support for these

  • What sort of case you guys use for these watches? I've had a screen protector, but it really looks crap with it, so going bare atm

    • I bought a cheap one off eBay once. The colour kinda blends with the watch so it looks like it’s not even there but because I use to work in retail nights, I must’ve hooked it into something and it knocked it out. After that, I had this annoying scratch on it

  • Do these still require charging every 12 hours?

    • -3

      No it has nuclear powered batteries so you never have to charge it.

  • +3

    Question for smartwatch users. Do you find that getting notifications on your wrist gives the impression you're continually checking the time? Just curious because that behaviour is pretty much universally recognised as being rude in social settings. I can imagine someone getting the impression you're disinterested in what they're saying if you're glacing at the watch and they don't realise you're recieving notifications.

    • +1

      I’ve got a Fitbit. It’s pretty clear that there’s a scrolling message across the face of the band, so most people get it.

      When I’m with older or less technically inclined people who may think it’s impolite, I just clarify. For example: “sorry about that, my watch is alerting me that I’ve got a message - it’s just work, I’ll check it later”. I mean, it’s no more or less impolite than checking your phone, and I apologise when I do that too.

    • +1

      Yes and no - I used to be very a little conscious of this, but with more and more people getting smart watches and people understanding notifications occur, it's not too big a deal any more.

    • +2

      Probably as rude as someone grabbing there phone to check notifications while someone is speaking to them.

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