I wonder whether the captain told the passengers they are about to use the system for the first time

I know, I know, it has been tested lots. I know, but maybe they don't

On a more serious note, I understand that unlike the ILS, which depends heavily on ground equipment, the WAAS works with GPS so it will never be unserviceable on any given airport? This would be great news...
On the other hand, the ILS "beams" exist materially so either these don't work at all or they point to the right location. Unlike this again, GPS coordinates are just numbers so a wrong bit anywhere would spell disaster. Of course this is very unlikely to happen, but this is just another bit of our lives that goes "digitized". Now how much is just too much? I hope not to learn it...
Unless the "Butler jihad" comes and reverses the process (I hope enough people here are familiar with the term

- and no, it's not about Middle East)
Andrei