FAQ: watchOS 7
Try the newest watchOS early this year.
It’s not just the iPhone and the Mac that are getting sweet new features in the autumn. Apple also unveiled the newest watchOS features that are coming to the Apple Watch, and there are some major changes in store. Here’s everything we know so far.
What are the new features? Complications
Apple hasn’t unveiled any new watch faces just yet – we assume those are coming with the Series
6 update likely due later this year – but there are major changes coming to the existing faces. You’ll be able to set more than one complication per app, so developers will be able to offer more than just a single option. For example, a weather app could offer complications for temperature, conditions, UV index and wind speed, which would all be available on the same face.
To get things started, Apple has added a couple of new complications of its own, including a tachymeter on the Chronograph Pro and a single giant complication on the minimal X-Large face. We expect more will be added before watchOS 7 launches in the autumn.
Watch faces
Apple still isn’t allowing for custom faces, but we’re getting the next best thing: watch face sharing. You’ll now be able to share your favourite faces – complete with all of your complications and colour choices – with your friends, either directly or through social media. Developers will be able to offer specialized faces based on their own apps that you can download right to your watch.
Sleep tracking
If there’s one feature we’ve wanted since the days of the original solid-gold Apple Watch, it’s sleep tracking.
And we’re finally getting it in watchOS 7. Sleep tracking is part of a larger focus on sleep health in iOS 14 that works with your iPhone to develop habits that will help you sleep longer.
Sleep tracking on watchOS 7 is part of the iPhone’s new Sleep Mode, which will limit access to chosen apps so you can begin preparing for sleep. Once your set bedtime is reached, your Apple Watch will enter Do Not Disturb mode and the screen will no longer wake when raised or tapped. Additionally, a new Wind Down feature assists you in establishing a bedtime routine with shortcuts that help you relax, such as opening a meditation app or dimming your Philips Hue lights. It’ll even play a short lullaby when it is time for bed, and haptics will help wake you up.
In addition to helping you get to sleep and wake up, watchOS 7 will also keep track of how much you sleep. Each morning you’ll get a chart showing your time in bed and your time asleep, and your watch will offer charging reminders both before you go to sleep and after you wake up, in case your levels are too low. You’ll also see weekly and monthly trends, and heart-rate data to get a complete picture of your sleep health.
Fitness
Apple is bringing four new workouts to the Fitness app on the Apple Watch. Functional strength training and core training are for hardcore athletes; cool-down tracks your post-workout stretching regimen; and dance, which uses ‘advanced sensor fusion’ to detect when just your arms or just your legs are moving, or when everything is grooving at once so it can deliver an accurate cardio
reading. Apple is also renaming the Activity app in iOS to Fitness and giving it a cleaner interface.
Handwashing
Since the effects of the coronavirus pandemic will likely be felt for years to come, watchOS 7 is bringing automatic hand-washing detection to the Apple Watch by using the watch’s motion sensors, microphone, and on-device machine learning. When your watch detects that you’ve started washing, it’ll start a 20-second counter and gently chide you if you finish up too quickly. And so you don’t forget, your watch will even prompt you to wash up when you get home.
Hearing
Building on the Noise app introduced in watchOS 6, Apple will now offer weekly listening summaries to show how long you’ve listened to high-decibel sounds. And you’ll get headphone audio notifications that will let you know if you’re listening to your tunes at dangerous levels. When total listening with headphones has reached 100 per cent of the safe weekly listening amount – which is 80 decibels for about 40 hours per week according to the WHO – your Apple Watch will send a notification letting you know that the volume has automatically been lowered to protect your hearing.
Siri
Apple’s assistant has a few new tricks up its sleeve in watchOS 7. When you ask it to say something in another language, it will use the speaker to say the word aloud. It also supports Siri shortcuts so you can easily run one from your wrist and dictation is now processed on your watch, which means responses are quicker and more accurate.
Maps
Apple Watch is picking up cycling directions so you can follow the safest path when riding, along with route
options that suggest different paths, depending on how long you want your trip to be. It’ll also let you know if there’s any obstacles that require you to get off your bike and you can search along your route if you need a drink or a fill-up.
Supported devices
Apple isn’t supporting as many watches as last year. You’ll need an Apple Watch Series 3 or later. That means Apple Watch Series 1 and Series 2 are stuck on watchOS 6 forever.
Public beta
Normally, you’d need access to a developer account to get the watchOS beta, but for the first time, Apple will be offering it to the public. When it arrives in July, you’ll be able to sign up at Apple’s Beta Software Programme site (beta.apple.com), download a new profile, and install it on your watch. Assuming it works the same way as the iOS beta, you’ll be signed up for future watchOS 7 betas as well, even after the official release lands in the autumn.