Monday, December 9, 2024
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WWDC 2018: watchOS 5 adds more features for communicating, tracking activities

watchOS 5 will be making it even easier for Apple Watch owners to communicate with others and keep on track with exercising through a host of new features announced today during the Apple Worldwide Developers Conference keynote.

Apple announced that Apple Watch sales grew 60% during 2017, which explains why the device is showing up on wrists everywhere! The emphasis in watchOS 5 will be to make it easier for Watch owners to do the two things that are the primary focus of the device: communicating with others and tracking activities.

watchOS 5 will have competitions built-in where you can challenge a friend during a one week period to reach a specific level. During that week you can see how you and your competitor are both doing and offer encouragement (and taunts) designed to get them moving more. Apple has added a number of new activities to the Activity app as well. It’s now possible to track yoga workouts and hikes. Hiking will give a much more accurate reading of calories burned by combining information on heart rate, elevation gain and loss, and more. 

The running activity now shows a “rolling mile pace” with the time of the last mile updated constantly. There’s also a custom pace alert and a way to track cadence.

One issue that many Apple Watch fans face is starting and stopping their workouts in the Activity app. watchOS 5 brings automatic workout detection; if it sees that your heart rate and motion have suddenly increased, it will start tracking activity and do it retroactively to the beginning of the workout. It also “sees” when activity has slowed down and can automatically end workouts.

One feature that many Apple Watch users are going to love is the new Walkie-Talkie press-to-talk function. With a tap on the name of a person you wish to talk to, you just hold down the Talk button and say what you want. No dialing or typing is involved;  you simply get a voice message to your recipient immediately. 

The Siri watch face is getting an update as well, with the newly announced Siri shortcuts (kind of a mixture of Siri suggestions and automation) coming to watchOS 5 as well. For the first time, you’ll be able to add third-party apps to the Siri Watch face as well. It’s no longer going to be necessary to say “Hey, Siri” to get Siri’s attention with the Watch — the Watch will listen for commands just by raising your wrist and talking. 

One great new feature is the ability to interact in notifications. For example, if a person has made a restaurant reservation in Yelp and gets a confirmation notification, they can not only confirm the reservation, but also add or subtract people from the reservation — all in the notification.

Web content can now be viewed on Apple Watch with watchOS 5. If someone sends you a link in a message, the web page is viewable through WebKit in watchOS. If a reader-compatible page is available, that’s what WebKit uses to format the information for the Watch.

The Podcasts app is coming to Apple Watch. You can ask to have podcasts automatically synced to your Watch or ask Siri to send the latest episode to your Watch. 

As you can see from the photo above, there are other things you’ll be able to do with watchOS 5. Using the Watch as a Student ID card will be great for college students who need to identify themselves or pay for fees with Apple Pay, there will be a way to answer FaceTime calls in audio, Memories will appear on the Photo watch face, and software updates can be installed at night.

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Steve Sande
the authorSteve Sande
Steve is the founder and former publisher of Apple World Today and has authored a number of books about Apple products. He's an avid photographer, an FAA-licensed drone pilot, and a really bad guitarist. Steve and his wife Barb love to travel everywhere!