Responding to Raduque's questions/concerns from the other thread:
It's more the accessibility and priority than anything. In Android Wear, you have to either speak out the name of your app (which is usually a terrible idea) or scroll all the way to the bottom of a menu before you can even start browsing apps. On an Apple Watch? Tap the crown. Watch apps can only be so sophisticated, but it'd nice to have an OS that actually encourages you to start tasks from your watch instead of Google's "oh, if you must" attitude.
I think it's more that apps are a "side" function for AW vs being a primary function. You're more meant to access apps through their cards, rather than launching apps as you do on a phone. I think Google looks at "Apps" as being little more than a backend info provider for the Cards display system.
On the Apple Watch, a "force touch" (basically, a hard press) brings up a contextual menu for the app at hand. You can tell the music app to stream to your TV, for example. True, Android Wear could get something like this soon... but it doesn't have that now.
As the Apple Watch isn't out yet.... it technically doesn't have that now either.
Software parity is likely coming.
Apple's not asking you to type. If you get a text message on the Watch, you can also use a pre-selected text response (if someone asks "A or B," for example, you can respond with A or B) or record a short voice message. There's also a walkie talkie mode that lets you have a back-and-forth voice chat, although you'll need Apple Watches on both sides for that to work.
I think you can do some of this functionality (minus the walkie-talkie stuff, which honestly sounds pretty cool. Very Dick Tracey-ish) currently with AW and Hangouts, but I don't use Hangouts so I can't do anything but read and dismiss single SMS' from my watch.
That's what the crown is for. You can zoom and scroll in apps without having to put your finger on the screen and obscure what you're looking at.
I disagree that zooming is necessary on a watch, as all content should be readable in a single screen-view "page". Scrolling isn't really needed either, IMO, if you need to read a multi-line SMS or email, you should go to the phone. Keep in mind this is just my opinion, and the way I use my watch.
There's a couple of reasons. First, it allows for high-bandwidth tasks that wouldn't work so well over Bluetooth. I'm not sure how often that'll crop up, but it's there. The more important one is that you're not limited by Bluetooth's 33-foot range -- you could still get data without having to be close to your phone.
Wifi is a significantly higher power-usage tech than BT, isn't it? This is going to be terrible for battery life. What sort of tasks would/could you do on a watch that need more bandwith then BT is capable of? For that matter, will it be a wifi direct connection, or is it simply the phone and watch sharing data over a mutual wifi network? I don't think this is something that is really needed. More of a "throw this in there and think of some usage cases for it, cause TECHNOLOGY!"
This was a specific gripe with the ZenWatch, not Android Wear stuff in general. Although it is true that a lot of Android Wear devices sadly resort to cables and cradles.
#1 reason right here why I own a Moto360. Charging docks with pogo pins are terrible.
The general rule is that you don't want an oversized watch on your wrist -- otherwise, you look like the smartwatch equivalent of Flavor Flav. The real issue, I'd say, is that most of the current Android Wear crop basically doesn't acknowledge that you exist if you either have thin wrists or prefer relatively subtle wristwear. Here's what the smaller 38mm Apple Watch looks like on an average man's arm (via Hodinkee
http://www.hodinkee.com/blog/hodinkee-apple-watch-review ):
See what I mean? That looks more like a watch and less like a giant screen strapped to your arm. A subtler design like this makes smartwatches more accessible, more socially acceptable.
I still think it's more a subjective thing than anything else. I don't like any square watch, and I don't think they look good on anybody, no matter what. It was because of this that I hadn't considered any smart watch till the M360.