Don’t have a lot of time for writing today, so it’s very fitting that watchOS is next in my series of posts about WWDC. There were not a lot of changes and most of them might seem minor at first glance, but could have some big implications.
Watch Faces
The most noticeable thing for the users are new Watch Faces. They look good on the big screen, but I’m not sure they will be functional and will they be available to the older watches? Also, we didn’t get any information on old watch faces – will they be updated? In my opinion, after Apple focused mostly on Health features of the Watch, watch faces became the worst “feature” of the device. It’s hard to find the best one, especially if you don’t have Series 4 Apple Watch.
Chimes and Silent Taps
If I started with the negative aspect, let’s get all out of the way. Chimes and silent tap every hour. I don’t think I imagine myself using silent tap like ever, but maybe someone needs this function, but chimes? Who would need their watch to sing every hour? Just … why?
More personal Health app
One of the most interesting features that got presented was – Activity Trends. This is one of those features that shines on the iPhone, but you still need Apple Watch to gather all the information. Apple Watch gathers so much data, but there is no story behind it. This year Activity Trends brings much needed analysis of the data.
A couple of health related features are very welcome additions. Not for me personally, but I could see how helpful Cycle Tracking would be for women. I know there are apps on the AppStore, but with Apple stance on privacy, this is great addition.
Hearing Health – this could help a lot of people. I could see being at the concert and moving somewhere farther away from the sound source if the watch tells me it’s too loud.
App Store and independence
Probably the biggest feature of this years release of the watchOS – App Store. Sure, at first it looks funny, how you search and scroll, look at screenshots on such a tiny screen, but this is just another step towards independence of the Watch. I can see how in 2-3 years you would be able to buy cellular Apple Watch and set it up without ever needing to connect to the iPhone.
From the development point of view Independent apps, App Store, Streaming Audio and SwiftUI – all those things will help to untie the Watch from the iPhone.
And this last bit is what I meant in the very beginning. Every one of those features by itself may seem minor, but bring them all together and you’ve got a strong contender for the future.