It’s rumored that the Product Red watch actually draws blood to both measure your blood color and become sentient. It costs $9.99 per month, and though a new Apple Watch purchase comes with three months free, that ain’t cheap.īeyond health and activity features, the Apple Watch Series 6 comes in four colors: gold and graphite, along with a navy blue and Product Red red. It’ll sync your Apple Watch with an Apple device that has a watchable screen (your iPhone, your Apple TV) to play a trainer’s workout and also display realtime statistics about your performance as tracked by the watch. Apple also gave a rundown on Apple Fitness+, a new subscription service for the Apple Watch that goes the way of Peloton, Mirror, and Fight Camp. Generally speaking, blood oxygen level indicates good or bad breathing and circulation for the heart and lungs. It’ll feature a sleep tracker (in case you actually wear a watch when you sleep), a hand-washing timer (very timely for 2020), and blood oxygen tracking (the watch quite literally tracks the color of your blood). Understandably, as even outside of the pandemic wellness is all anyone can talk about. The Apple Watch Series 6 goes hard with health. What follows is everything worth knowing that Apple actually revealed. Still, that leaves a slew of other Apple products about due for upgrades: the Apple Watch, the iPad, and the AirPods in particular.įor this 2020 Keynote, the tech blogs were aflame with rumors about an Apple Watch 6 that tracks blood oxygen levels, a new iPad Air, over-the-ear AirPods, even a new HomePod. The pandemic slowed production down in many factories, including those that make iPhone parts, so Apple confirmed that the new generation of iPhone (presumably the iPhone 12 and iPhone 12 Pro) will be delayed beyond the traditional September release date and announced at a future Keynote. Unsurprisingly, this September Apple Keynote won't be like those of the past. Apple really did train the world to have a Pavlovian response to the word "keynote." Still, old habits die hard on the day of a September Apple Keynote. There's a lot going on, 99.9 percent of it bad, leaving scant hours to pick through blogs for fresh meat like the rabid tech vulture you were a blissful year ago. You'd be forgiven for not giving as many as two shits about new technology this year.
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