APPLE SPECIAL
With WatchOS 4, The Apple Watch Might Finally Free Us From Our Phones
Apple’s upcoming smartwatch software will allow for faster, smarter, and
less iPhone-dependent apps.
The
Apple Watch was supposed to be more than just a fancy fitness tracker with
fashionable wrist straps when it launched in 2015. As Apple executives explained at the time, this device was supposed to save us from our
phones, making our digital lives more efficient while keeping us engaged with
the real world.
Things
didn’t quite work out that way, as the Watch’s non-fitness elements proved less
compelling than Apple imagined. Consequently, the product’s direction has
changed dramatically over the past two years. With the Watch Series 2, Apple
made fitness the primary selling point, and last year’s WatchOS 3
update overhauled the entire interface, demoting unpopular
features and de-emphasizing third-party apps.
WatchOS
4, the upcoming software update that Apple announced this week, doesn’t seem
like a major shift by comparison, at least not on the surface. But beyond its
obvious new features–like a new Siri watch
face, better workout tracking, and the ability to grab exercise data
from gym equipment–WatchOS 4 brings lots of behind-the-scenes changes,
especially for third-party apps. Together, they add up to a significant change
that could bring the Apple Watch much closer to its original promise.
FASTER APPS
Third-party
apps on the Apple Watch used to be mostly worthless. Navigating through WatchOS to reach them was
a chore, and the apps themselves were so unresponsive that taking out your
phone was almost always faster and easier.
WatchOS
4 aims to be a breakthrough for standalone apps. Although Apple has allowed
third-party apps to run directly on the watch since WatchOS 2,
the next update will combine each app’s code and interface elements into a single
process that loads at runtime. Native apps should automatically become
smoother, more responsive to the touch, and faster at loading new screens as a
result.
“This
is going to make a huge difference in the performance of your apps,” Ian Parks,
who works on the WatchOS software team, told developers during a presentation at Apple’s WWDC.
Apple
is also making a few tweaks to alleviate the Watch’s navigation woes. Users
will be able to sort the app dock by recency, instead of having to pick
favorites, and the home screen will offer a list view as an alternative to the
cumbersome honeycomb grid. Another change seems more subtle, but elicited
cheers from developers at WWDC: Apps that use a horizontal page layout can
launch on any page, not just the left-most one. If you’ve ever swiped right on
a smartphone app to pull up a menu, this will allow Watch apps to have a
similar layout. The redesigned dock can be sorted in order of recent apps.
Meanwhile,
Apple is trying to streamline its own apps as an example for developers to
follow. Apple’s Workout app, for instance, will allow users to launch new
exercises from within existing ones. And by default, those exercises will use
whatever goal the user had set previously. What used to involve a half-dozen
steps will instead require just a couple of taps.
“This
is a great example of building a responsive user experience, where it’s not
just about updating the data in your UI, it’s also about thinking of what the
user might want to do next in your app based on what you already know,” Parks
said during his developer presentation.
SMARTER APPS
Aside
from improving performance, Apple is also letting Watch app developers pull
some new tricks.
For
instance, they’ll be able to gather location data in the background, then use
sounds or haptic feedback to announce when something important happens. A
mapping app might be able to signal upcoming turns this way, and an augmented
reality game (think Pokémon Go) could alert users to nearby activity. WatchOS
4 streamlines the behavior of third-party apps to make them run faster, as
shown in this slide from a WWDC presentation.
Apple
is also extending background privileges for audio recording, allowing apps to
capture sound while the watch screen is off. If you can imagine a music app for
recording jam sessions with a built-in haptic metronome, or one that delivers
spoken translations in real time, WatchOS 4 will enable them in a way that
doesn’t destroy battery life.
Similar
to WatchOS 4’s performance improvements, one of the most significant feature
changes seems mundane on its face: Upon request, Apps can remain in an open
state for up to eight minutes instead of the default two minutes, and then
close once a given task is complete. Picture a shopping list that continues to
pop up when you raise your wrist–but only until all the items are checked
off–or a ride-sharing app that updates the driver’s location through to the
time of arrival. WatchOS 4 will help avoid instances in which the app has
closed, and users have to navigate back to it from the home screen.
“This
is something we are really excited about, and I think it’s going to change the
way that we think about creating our Watch apps,” Parks said.
FREEDOM FROM THE PHONE
Even
with WatchOS 4’s app improvements, many apps still won’t fully function without
a nearby iPhone. But while rumors of an Apple Watch with cellular connectivity
have circulated for more than year, Apple may not need to go that far to make its
smartwatch less iPhone-dependent.
The
Apple Watch can already run some standalone apps and make payments through
Apple Pay without a data connection, and it can use Wi-Fi networks for
connectivity when a paired iPhone isn’t in range. With WatchOS 4, Apple is
taking that independence a step further by letting the Watch connect directly
to nearby Bluetooth devices.
Tim
Bajarin, the president of analyst firm Creative Strategies, says this is of
great interest to him personally. Bajarin is diabetic, and has a device
implanted on his stomach that measures blood sugar and transmits the data to
his iPhone via Bluetooth. WatchOS 4 will allow him to get that data directly
through the Apple Watch. (Dexcom, which makes the glucose monitor that Bajarin
uses, was one of the partners Apple highlighted for WatchOS 4’s Core Bluetooth
functionality.)
“That
to me was really a big deal,” Bajarin says. “Now, if I leave my phone
downstairs, and I go upstairs, it doesn’t matter, because I’m going to get that
blood glucose reading on my Watch no matter what.”
Core Bluetooth
will let the Apple Watch connect directly to other fitness devices, such as
smart surfboards.
The
Watch’s new Bluetooth features should also let users connect directly to more
specialized health and exercise devices, such as EKG monitors, smart surfboards,
golf-swing monitors, and tennis trackers. Down the road, Bajarin theorized that
the Watch’s Bluetooth smarts could connect to future Apple wearable devices,
such as augmented-reality glasses.
“I
feel that particular piece is an important technical building block that
eventually makes the Apple Watch even more useful” to other products, he says.
WatchOS
4’s ability to grab workout data from gym equipment could also foreshadow
greater smartwatch independence. Outside of Apple Pay, it’s the first instance
of Apple using the Watch’s near-field communication chip to interact with
objects in the real world. Apple is already opening up NFC chip access on the iPhone in iOS
11, so it’s reasonable to think the watch may follow.
“It
does show you that Apple is thinking about much more aggressive use of NFC, and
this is just another good example,” Bajarin says.
For
what it’s worth, Apple itself seems to be downplaying the potential for greatly
improved apps in WatchOS 4. Many of the improvements mentioned here are
practically a footnote on the company’s WatchOS preview site, and
some don’t get mentioned at all. Fitness still reigns as the ultimate Apple
Watch selling point, and probably will long into the future. But WatchOS 4 is
the surest sign yet that the dream of saving us from our phones hasn’t died.
BY JARED NEWMAN
https://www.fastcompany.com/40430036/with-watchos-4-the-apple-watch-might-finally-free-us-from-our-phones?utm_source=mailchimp&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=fcdaily-top&position=1&partner=newsletter&campaign_date=06102017
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