The Apple Watch is a music player like an iPod, a fitness tracker
with heart-rate measurements, a communications device that will send and
receive messages, calls and audio recordings, and a handheld portal to
other apps, too. It also makes payments via Apple Pay. It can also control your Apple TV and act as a remote for connected smart home devices.
The
Apple Watch seems intent to be a synthesis of many other smartwatches,
trying to knit together all of these features into a coherent whole. In
some ways, the Apple Watch's notifications, voice-activated controls,
and swipe-to-glance features feel like elements of Google's Android Wear
watches. And the focus on apps and built-in features like voice calling
seem like what the Samsung's Tizen OS-based Gear watches have tried to
aim for in the past.
James Martin/CNET
But
if you want the basic breakdown in case you haven't used a smartwatch
before: it keeps you connected to your phone, acts like a mini iPod,
works as a fitness tracker, and could even replace your wallet. And it
could do a lot more, too. Apple was showing how the device could not
just make mobile payments, but also act as a digital key to open a smart
lock on a front door at home. Apps will also allow you to access other
home-automation features, such as smart thermostats, using your iPhone's
wireless connection as a conduit.
The Apple Watch has a heavy investment in fitness, too: four sapphire
lenses on the back promise to deliver more accurate heart-rate
measurements than other optical heart-rate monitors on smartwatches such
as those on Samsung's Gear 2 or the Motorola Moto 360,
thanks to a combination of infrared and LED technology. And Apple's
customized fitness apps seem intelligently designed: one tracks
calories, moderate activity, and time spent standing, while another is a
dedicated workout app meant for a range of activities including
cycling. The Apple Watch works with other fitness apps: it's Nike
Plus-supported, and there are bound to be more apps by the time it
launches.
And hey, it also tells the time; Apple actually claims
high-precision accuracy within 50 milliseconds, and a variety of
high-design customizable watch faces will do everything from show lunar
cycles and weather to give quick-glance messages and calendar
appointments. The
Watch comes in three "collections" and the faces are customizable.
Apple
Which phone do you need?
An
iPhone 5, 5C, 5C, 6, or a 6 Plus. Sadly, earlier iPhones are excluded.
So are other phone platforms like Android. This is an iPhone-owner's
product, much like Samsung's Gear watches only run on certain Samsung
phones, or Android Wear watches require Android phones.
How does it work?
Like
most smartwatches, the Apple Watch is designed to be an adjunct to your
iPhone. It's meant to stay paired and connected while you wear it for
most features, but it also does some things while disconnected, too.
The
Apple Watch has a small, bright color touch display plus a scroll-wheel
digital crown and button on the side for extra features. You can touch
and swipe to interact, or speak to its microphone.
The watch runs
on a brand-new S1 processor, is equipped with a gyro and accelerometer,
and can piggyback off the Wi-Fi and GPS on your phone. You press down on
the crown to get to the home screen. The watch will take dictation, and
offers very precise synchronized time to plus or minus 50 milliseconds.
It also has a "Taptic" haptic processor that offers a subtle
vibrational feedback for notifications, alarms and other messages.
Like
the iPhone 6, the Apple Watch has NFC. This will enable those Apple Pay
payments, and help it act as a door-opening key at hotels.
How does it charge? Via a clever combination of magnets and inductive charging: the charger just snaps on the back.
How many styles does it come in?
A lot, but they're all based
on the same curved-edge rectangular-screen design. There are three
different construction styles, two different sizes, and six different
watch bands, leading to a surprising number of combinations. The first
variant, Apple Watch, has a stainless steel case, ceramic back, and a
sapphire crystal. The Apple Watch Sport has an aluminum body, composite
back, and Ion-X glass screen. The Apple Watch Edition has a ceramic
back and sapphire crystal, but also adds 18-karat gold to its body.
There
are larger and smaller sizes, called "42mm" and "38mm," which amount to
men's and women's sizes -- or, adult and kid. The bands span a variety
of designs: a Milanese loop of metal mesh with magnets, a leather band
that auto-attaches, a segmented metal band, a classic leather watch
band, and a more plasticized sport band in bright colors. They span the
gamut, and you can bet there will be tons more from other manufacturers.
They detach easily, too, for band-swapping. Built-in
infrared and LED sensors accurately record your pulse rate.
Apple
Apple's
watch is the first mainstream wearable to support mobile payments:
Apple Pay will be enabled, meaning you can swipe to pay at stores, and
possibly pay for things online, too.
The heart-rate tracking
technology works optically, much like recent heart-rate wrist monitors.
The four-sapphire-lens array underneath the Apple Watch seems a lot more
robust, at least in external design, than other heart-tracking watches,
and could be more accurate. We don't know how it performs yet.
Also,
Apple's watch aims to have an edge on other smartwatches in terms of
apps. Android Wear already has a fair amount of app support, but apps
are a secondary part of Google's watches. The Apple Watch puts its apps
in the spotlight on the main display, and via a WatchKit API plus an
extended timeframe before the watch is available next year, Apple is
counting on courting developers to make the watch do lots of things by
the time it goes on sale. That, alone, is a big difference from the
soft-launch style of Android Wear, Samsung's Gear watches, and even
watches like the Pebble.
Apple also added a different type of
input: a little Digital Crown on the side is a clever idea, merging a
home button and scroll wheel in one. It aims to help make pinch-to-zoom
and scroll functions easier to pull off, while IR and photo sensors give
it extra sensitivity. That, and a button below that brings up favorite
friends and contacts, offer a set of buttons that don't require the
screen at all. You still can swipe and tap, too.
Scott Stein/CNET
Using
a direct-communication suite of apps called Digital Touch, the Apple
Watch will also act as a personal communicator to other Apple Watch
owners: you can scribble little emoji, send vibration-enhanced love
taps, or send audio messages like a walkie-talkie. High-school
classrooms, look out.
What did it feel like on my wrist?
Good,
and comfortable. While the Apple Watch may seem a lot like other
square-screened smartwatches, its fit and finish are refined. Its design
is a bit like a mini-iPhone, but also reminiscent of the 2011 iPod
Nano, but curved. I tried on a stainless steel Apple Watch with metal
link band, Apple Watch Sport with a rubbery sport band, and a smaller
Apple Watch with a leather band. They all had a great wrist feel, the
best I've felt next to the very stylish Meta M1 and Pebble Steel, and
honestly, Apple's is a cut above in terms of polish. I kept a Pebble
Steel and Moto 360 on for comparison, and the difference was clear.
The
Apple Watch lacks the immediate show-off design of the round-screened
Moto 360, which I've been wearing for a week, but it feels better made,
and has a sharper-looking screen.
The screen on the 42mm model is
about the size of a Pebble Steel or Meta M1, and felt more discreet than
some larger Android Wear and Samsung Gear watches. The smaller 38mm
watch felt too small for me, but that's intended more for women -- it
looked pretty good on smaller wrists showing it off.
Scott Stein/CNET
The
watch I actually tried on just ran a set demo loop, much like early
Android Wear watches at Google I/O. For deeper features, you had to see
one on an Apple employee's wrist. But even on the loop, you could feel
Apple's "Taptic" engine. It's much like vibrations on other watches like
those from Android Wear and Pebble, but this one feels capable of a
more subtle range of vibration styles.
The watch isn't surprising
in design, but it's elegantly made. The bands in particular feel well
thought out: a steel mesh one has magnets that wrap and attach, and so
does a cool segmented leather one. And the snap-on magnetic inductive
charger is great: it avoids weird snap-on dongles, but also means the
watch won't detach from the charger when in a bag or an airline seat
pocket.
James Martin/CNET
What can it do when it isn't connected to a phone?
The
Apple Watch is meant to be connected to an iPhone, but it also does
some things stand-alone based on what we know so far: track activity and
fitness, make payments using Apple Pay, and play music that's been
downloaded to the watch. Yes, the Apple Watch will sync playlists,
although how much dedicated storage it'll have isn't known.
Can left-handed people use it?
Sure,
the digital crown is on the right side of the Apple Watch, but don't
worry: you'll be able to put it on either wrist. The Apple Watch design
is reversible, and and you can set which way the screen flips, so the
crown can be on the other side: the only change would be that the bottom
button for contacts would end up on the top.
What's its battery life like?
No
idea. sounds like the Apple Watch will need to be charged daily, or
close to it, much like other recent high-end smartwatches from Samsung
and Google's Android Wear line. Ideally, it should last more: at least
several days would be my wish. The watch won't be available for months,
so this could all change.
James Martin/CNET
Who needs it?
Good
question. When the iPad first debuted, many demeaned it as either a
"big iPhone" or a keyboardless laptop, but it managed to stake out its
own ground. The Apple Watch will enter the same skeptical marketplace,
with an even harder case to make: If it's essentially a dedicated
smartphone accessory, is it just a redundant gadget? A lot of people
might wonder why they need it.
For fitness-lovers who want a smart
connected workout device that plays music, the Apple Watch could be a
slam dunk. For others, Apple will need to prove how good its watch can
be at what it does, much like what the iPad had to do. If it's great,
and its design appeals to enough people, the Apple Watch could catch on.
But those services, and the app infrastructure to make them work, will
take time. And we will still don't know how good it is as a fitness
device. If Apple nails these all, then it could be the best smartwatch
by far. We'll see next year. Right now, all we've really gotten to see
is a polished design, a brief interface demo, and a lot of optimism.
Stay tuned till 2015.
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