I know you tried to get ahead of it in the post, but I truly think that is your problem and you might be reading too much into it… You don’t get to skip that response just because you mentioned it.
I’m in the UK and honestly never noticed anything like this. Are you talking about people looking in your direction, or staring straight at you for over a minute?
Tbh, nobody cares what you’re doing and nobody wants to stare at you. Maybe there’s the occasional weirdo, but in my experience they’ve usually got some pretty obvious mental health issues.
Not directly related, but they switched me from Virgin Mobile to O2 after their merger. Fucking nightmare, despite them telling me that I don’t need to do anything.
Broke the direct debit, they set me up with an account that will not accept a password even after a reset, then I ran out of data as the new service has different usage notifications that threw me off.
I shortly after cancelled the sim, and dreaming of the day I can switch ISP.
Hmm, we’ll have to agree to disagree there. They can 100% decrease the size of the processing bits and reduce weight.
I just think it’s very shortsighted to look at such an early version of the product and say “it won’t change much”. Especially when however many years ago you could have said that what we’ve got right now isn’t possible.
Also, regarding the adoption of the headset, I think it’s absolutely crazy to say that it probably won’t get less bulky. Tech is constantly getting smaller and that will be the number one priority with the headset.
If they can make the price and comfort level right, then I do think it becomes a mainstream product. Not saying people wear it 24/7, but that most households would have one, and it would become somewhat important for WFH and remote meetings.
I’m not a fanboy for Apple, but personally I just think it is the tech of the (relatively) near future.
Spent a solid 10 seconds wondering how they drew the bottom image so perfectly.