Three Tips for watchOS 3
Look at the time — watchOS 3 has arrived! You can install the 561 MB update by opening the Watch app on your iPhone and navigating to My Watch > General > Software Update. To install the update, the Apple Watch must be near the iPhone, the iPhone must be connected to Wi-Fi, and the Apple Watch must be connected to its charger and have at least a 50 percent charge. You also must have iOS 10 installed to perform the update. Note that in our testing, the update took a very long time — perhaps start it before bed. We’ve also heard that you may need to unlock the watch manually to complete the update.
We covered the new features of watchOS in “Why watchOS 3 Will Be Nimble and Nifty” (13 June 2016), but here are the high points for the update:
- Glances are gone. Swiping up from the bottom of the screen now reveals Control Center.
- The Friends view has been replaced by an app Dock. Apps placed in the Dock load almost instantly.
-
You can switch between faces by swiping from the left or right edge of the watch screen.
-
The new Breathe app reminds you to take a short meditation break during the day.
-
The Messages app offers some new features; most notably, the new Scribble option, which lets you enter a message manually by drawing one letter a time.
-
You can press and hold the side button to initiate an emergency call — 911 in the United States.
-
Beyond Breathe, watchOS 3 comes with a few new built-in apps: Reminders, Home, and Heart Rate. The Heart Rate app replaces the equivalent glance in watchOS 2.
-
Watch faces can display new complications, such as Weather Conditions, Home, and Remote.
Overall, we’ve appreciated Apple’s changes in watchOS 3, which significantly refine what was previously a rather rough experience. Annoyances remain — for instance, the app cloud is nearly impenetrable for those who don’t interpret icons well or whose vision isn’t perfect. Here are three quick tips for using watchOS 3 effectively:
Set Up Faces — In watchOS 3, you can easily switch between watch faces, each with its own set of complications. With a bit of thought, you can set up a few favorite faces for different uses. Here’s what Josh Centers is experimenting with:
- One face for business, with the Modular face and date, Calendar, Mail, Reminders, and Messages complications.
-
A Mickey Mouse face for chilling on the couch, with Home, Remote, and battery life complications. In Apple’s ongoing quest for diversity, watchOS also now features a Minnie Mouse face!
(A tip: Once you’ve added the Mickey or Minnie face via the iPhone Watch app’s Face Gallery, tap the face in My Watch > My Faces, scroll down and enable Tap to Speak Time. Then, as long as your Apple Watch isn’t in silent mode, tapping Mickey’s or Minnie’s nose will cause them to speak the time out loud.)
-
An Activity Digital face, with Heart Rate, Workout, and Apple Music complications.
-
A Utility outdoor face, with complications for moon phase and weather.
-
A Simple watch face for nights out on the town, with complications for weather conditions, weather, Messages, and Maps.
Don’t worry about removing faces that you don’t use, since you can add any of them back from the Face Gallery in the iPhone’s Watch app.
Tweak Your Dock — The new Dock that replaces the circle of friends formerly available from the side button is great, as it holds up to ten of your most commonly used apps, ready to run. You should see less lag when loading apps in watchOS 3 generally, and even fewer delays when you load them from the Dock.
To use a Dock app, press the side button, swipe left or right to the app of your choice, and then tap the app thumbnail. Any app you launch that isn’t already in the Dock gets added to the end… as long as you haven’t reached the maximum of ten docked apps. To remove an app from the Dock, swipe to it, and then swipe up to reveal a remove button.
If you want to make wholesale changes to your watch’s Dock, you can do so more easily in the Watch app: My Watch > Dock takes you to an editing screen where you can quickly choose, rearrange, and delete apps from the Dock. Just tap Edit and fiddle to your heart’s content!
Get Fit Without Extra Complications — Among the additions to the new faces provided by watchOS 3 are a set of Activity faces. If you’ve felt limited by having to devote a precious complication slot on a watch face to your Activity rings, one of these faces may be for you. The complete gallery includes both Analog and Digital face versions that include the Activity rings as part of the faces. For example, you can have an analog face with three separate rings included, along with slots for three complications.
Or, if you want a large, easily readable digital face, you might want to try the large print digital version. This face also has three complication slots in addition to the rings that are incorporated into the face.
For added exercise efficiency, you can add a Workout complication to the face so that, with a single tap, you can launch the Workout app. And, as an added bonus, the Workout app lets you specify one of your workouts as a “Quick Start” workout so you can get moving quickly.
Talk to the Wrist — It’s telling that Apple dumped glances and the friend circle unceremoniously, presumably in response to research showing that they were either little used or simply not helpful in the wearable context. We’ve never seen Apple change interface gears so radically before.
With the new approaches in watchOS 3, Apple has significantly improved the response time and usability of the Apple Watch. We’ll see if these changes stick, or if watchOS 4 brings yet another new paradigm.
Regardless, whether you have an original Apple Watch or plan to purchase one of the new Apple Watch Series 2 models (see “Apple Watch Series 2 Offers GPS, Water Resistance, and More Power,” 7 September 2016), watchOS 3 is welcome.
OK, I give up: What happens when you tap Mickey's nose? I've tapped it about 40 times and nothing has happened.
Open the Watch app on your iPhone. Under My Watch > My Faces tap the Mickey Mouse face. Scroll down to Sound and turn on Tap to Speak Time.
This also works for the Minnie Mouse face.
Thanks, Michael.
It also would have helped if I'd had the sound turned on...
I much prefer Glances to the Dock. Wish they had kept it.
Just checked at 4:30 P.M. PDT, 15 Sep 16 and was told that I am up-to-date with watchOS 2.2.2! I have an Watch 1 that I bought 11 months ago. Will watchOS 3 be released for the earlier models or is it just for Watch 2?
I have an Apple Watch 1 and it is running watchOS 3.0 just fine. Are you running iOS 10 on your iPhone? It may not be available to install from the iOS Watch app unless you are, since iOS and watchOS have certain dependencies.
No, because nothing said iOS 10 was required. That should have been made clear in the keynote. However, that is just the START:
To install iOS 10 via iTunes you need iTunes 12.5.1;
To install iTunes 12.5.1, you need Mac OS 10.9.5.
I just spent 7 hours downloading Mac OS 10.11.6 so tomorrow I'll install it. Next I'll update iTunes to 12.5.1, then I'll download iOS 10 to iTunes. Once that is done, I'll have to install iOS 10 and pray that it doesn't brick my iPhone (even though iTunes installs of 10 have not been the ones bricking iDevices). Last, I'll install WatchOS 3 on Friday or Saturday.
Yes, iOS 10 is required for watchOS 3, but you can install iOS 10 directly on a device without going through iTunes, thus sidestepping the entire Mac end of things.
The bricking with OTA updates was solved within hours on the first day and isn't an issue anymore.
And how can you get circle of friends back? I call people with it a lot.
You can't, sorry. Siri is probably the fastest way to call people from your watch.
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=liNG2--GczI
(Sorry—this still makes me laugh.)
Siri sometimes does not work. Apple quality nowadays.
Siri needs a good connection to your iPhone, and your iPhone needs a good Internet connection. Lacking those, Siri won't work.
In the span of five seconds while sitting still, it works and not works. Nothing to do with connectivity.
At home on wifi.
I've found that it's much more reliable for me with watchOS 3, but I've always had trouble with Siri on the Apple Watch.