For me these little things matter. I use an alarm clock nearly every day and I'm amazed at how awful most of them are. In a previous era it was the LCD kind, and there were two buttons to adjust the alarm time. Each button advanced the time by only one hour or one minute, and you could have only one alarm, and it jolted you awake. Awful. I was amazed to find a LCD alarm clock that had 10 number buttons to set the time rather than the lousy two buttons.
At the end of my era of dedicated alarm clocks I had the Now and Zen, which sounds great but is still annoying to set, and the Philips wake-up light, which actually is pretty great.
In the smartphone era it's incredible how many alarm clock apps will crash or fail to sound the alarm, which instantly gets the app a failing grade seeing as reliability is the essence of an alarm clock. They also have horrible interfaces, with skeumorphic spin dials to set the time--come on, this is a $500 smartphone, give me a keypad!!
I have tried many Android alarm clock apps since the one in Android, while previously decent, was ruined a few versions back. The interfaces are bad and cluttered or full of skeumorphic nonsense. Some are unreliable.
It's clear that the designers of Timely put a lot of thought into their alarm clock and, yeah, it is enjoyable--which is a lot better than "aggravating," which is how I would describe a lot of alarm clocks, both dedicated and software models. Timely actually is intuitive and fast and it makes good use of the touch screen form factor. There are a few features I wish it had, but I also appreciate that if they jammed every possible geeky feature in there it might collapse into an unusuable mess or, worse, it would be harder to test and thus as unreliable as some of the other clocks I've tried.
Too many things used every day get no design attention, so I'm glad Timely is elevating things a bit.
At the end of my era of dedicated alarm clocks I had the Now and Zen, which sounds great but is still annoying to set, and the Philips wake-up light, which actually is pretty great.
In the smartphone era it's incredible how many alarm clock apps will crash or fail to sound the alarm, which instantly gets the app a failing grade seeing as reliability is the essence of an alarm clock. They also have horrible interfaces, with skeumorphic spin dials to set the time--come on, this is a $500 smartphone, give me a keypad!!
I have tried many Android alarm clock apps since the one in Android, while previously decent, was ruined a few versions back. The interfaces are bad and cluttered or full of skeumorphic nonsense. Some are unreliable.
It's clear that the designers of Timely put a lot of thought into their alarm clock and, yeah, it is enjoyable--which is a lot better than "aggravating," which is how I would describe a lot of alarm clocks, both dedicated and software models. Timely actually is intuitive and fast and it makes good use of the touch screen form factor. There are a few features I wish it had, but I also appreciate that if they jammed every possible geeky feature in there it might collapse into an unusuable mess or, worse, it would be harder to test and thus as unreliable as some of the other clocks I've tried.
Too many things used every day get no design attention, so I'm glad Timely is elevating things a bit.