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Report: Apple Watch 2 Coming Late 2016 With GPS, Faster Processor and Better Waterproofing (9to5mac.com) 159

An anonymous reader writes: Apple analyst KGI's Ming-Chi Kuo says the Apple Watch 2 is right around the corner. The analyst says the Watch will arrive in late 2016 and will likely be announced alongside the iPhone 7 in September. It will reportedly feature a GPS, barometer, better waterproofing, as well as a new internal SoC for faster performance. Those looking for a fresh new design may be disappointed as KGI does not expect the physical design of the watch to change at all. The Apple Watch 2 will essentially be an 'iPhone S' update, where it keeps the same physical design with improved internal specifications. In addition to the updated Apple Watch 2, Apple is expected to update the original Apple Watch with a new SoC to improve CPU and GPU performance. The price of the Apple Watch in general should be cut even further than it already has. The original Apple Watch could receive more than a $50 reduction in its pricing, possibly pushing it below the $200 mark. We should know more in early September when Apple unveils the iPhone 7.
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Report: Apple Watch 2 Coming Late 2016 With GPS, Faster Processor and Better Waterproofing

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  • by Camembert ( 2891457 ) on Tuesday August 09, 2016 @05:10AM (#52669887)
    It would be interesting if they could add a camera for a facetime on the wrist experience, something that seemed utterly SF not that long ago.
    But the true killer app for this kind of device will be the eventual addition of more health related sensors. Probably not in this release though.
    • maybe the killer applications will also be external sensors. think: a thermometer, 3d scanner, geiger counter, gas sensors,... @facetime camera: just hold your wrist at face-height for 1-2 minutes. bad idea.
      • by ledow ( 319597 ) on Tuesday August 09, 2016 @05:40AM (#52669951) Homepage

        Almost all of those sensors are useless.

        Temperature, sure. But is that going to change between the watch and the phone it's tethered to significantly enough for you to care? Likely not. Unless you want to measure something specifically and then you'll need a probe anyway.

        3D scanner? You're going to run your wrist around a 3D object? Then what are you going to do with that data? Oh, yeah, ask the phone to do something with it.

        Geiger counter? Come on. Cheap $20 sensors in every electronics store. Pointless even 20 years ago except in a "Cor, this is above average" kind of way.

        Gas sensors? Much better suited to life-saving equipment designed to life-saving standards... or not at all.

        Facetime camera has exactly the problem you suggest, and was my immediate first "Really?!" thought.

        I struggle to think of anything vaguely useful for a smartwatch while it's still tethered to the phone that's doing all the work anyway, and if you could miniaturise the phone down to the smartwatch size reliably enough, that's a product in itself and has nothing to do with the applications of watches.

        That said, I think I'd still find a watch more inconvenient than a phone. Sure, it's "on you", but it's difficult to have a private conversation without straining your arm, it has to be pulled back from under clothing to look at it for six months a year (my bugbear with watches entirely), and they are in the most inconvenient place to use for any length of time (the reason we put watches in breast-pockets for many years before wrist watches, and wrist watches are - as I've contended for several years - impractical as they are!).

        Sod all the fancy stuff.
        Shrink the phone down to your wrist first so that it's entirely self-contained and yet competitive with the most basic of smartphones.
        Then you'll find how practical the rest is.

        Hell, the BATTERY in my smartphone is larger than any watch I'd be comfortable wearing. We have a long way to go before smartwatches get anywhere close.

        What we have is not a smartwatch. It's a bluetooth dongle on your wrist. An incredibly expensive, and impractical, one.

        • 3d - scanner: not for scanning objects but for measuring distance and size. gas/geiger - o.k., ageiger counter is a bit over the top, but as they are cheap why not having something that warns you in case of danger on your wrist. you're not going to have that lifesaving equipment on you just in case, but the watch will probably be on your wrist. and yes, a smartwatch that's not as thethered to your phone as most of them are right now is still a smartwatch - it's mostly an I/O to your mobile carry around com
        • When I mentioned health sensors I was thing about non invasive blood glucose and blood oxygen sensors etc -Apple actually hired people with phds in these subjects. Once they get this right for mass production and past regulations, that kind of feature will truly be a killer app.
          • When I mentioned health sensors I was thing about non invasive blood glucose and blood oxygen sensors etc -Apple actually hired people with phds in these subjects. Once they get this right for mass production and past regulations, that kind of feature will truly be a killer app.

            A non-invasive glucometer that actually WORKS (there are a few, but they are wildly inaccurate and have a very small range of blood-glucose values for which they work even that well) would be a game-changer. Diabetics would buy a Smartwatch JUST for that feature alone.

        • I struggle to think of anything vaguely useful for a smartwatch while it's still tethered to the phone that's doing all the work anyway, and if you could miniaturise the phone down to the smartwatch size reliably enough, that's a product in itself and has nothing to do with the applications of watches.

          Cannot happen unless people are happy with strapping a Cesium cell to their wrist for long periods of time.

          • by NotAPK ( 4529127 )

            Well that's what the Geiger counter is for: knowing when the nuclear battery is running out!

        • My LG Smart watch can't even f'n keep time on it's own. If it sits on its base charging, but not bluetooth connected to the phone - within a day or two the time will go out of sync. Within 5 days, the time will be off by at least 30 minutes, and the date will be wrong.

          A watch that can't even keep time is NOT a freaking watch.

        • Interestingly enough I don't believe there is a solid state geiger counter.. they still depend on tubes. They have made some small ones but they are still too big for a watch.
          • by NotAPK ( 4529127 )

            There are, but they are specialist devices for measuring x-ray energies. We've had Lithium-Silicon Detectors (Si-Li [canberra.com]) for a long time now, but they were superseded about 10-15 years ago by the Silicon Drift Detectors (SDD [acceleratingscience.com]).

            Granted, they may not be portable, and certainly not wrist-sized, but they do exist. If you sacrificed the ability to measure energy (throw away the sensitive amp, negating the need for active cooling, and use a charge-collector circuit) and made the device much smaller then there is no fu

        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          The only things worth having on a watch are:

          - Time/date/stopwatch
          - Notifications
          - Accurate, always on heart rate sensor

          The heart rate sensor will give you a pretty good indications of calories burned. The notifications should include Google Now cards with useful info. Everything else is superfluous and just wastes battery power.

      • maybe the killer applications will also be external sensors

        A wrist watch really only has two things that it is valuable for. 1) portable notification of concise pieces of information (time, short messages, notifications, appointments, temperature readings, etc) and 2) a portable sensor suite and data logger (thermometer, barometer, altimeter, gps, accelerometer, compass, etc) . And these things are really only useful if they come in a package with substantial battery life (1 week minimum) and an interface that isn't absurd. The key word in all that is portable

        • On the other hand, if we waited for the first version of every product to be perfect before shipping, nothing would ever ship.

          Complex product design is an iterative process. The first cars didn't ship with airbags, 300 horsepower engines, antilock brakes, and power steering.

          Sometimes it's useful to release a product that is useful to a significant market segment, and then get usage statistics and product feedback in order to make it far more useful to a much larger market. And you get some revenue that yo

          • On the other hand, if we waited for the first version of every product to be perfect before shipping, nothing would ever ship.

            Doesn't have to be perfect. It does has to have the proper design intent. The iPhone got the fundamentals of a smartphone right. That's why pretty much every smartphone since has cribbed a lot of their original design. (which is a good thing) No Apple didn't get every detail correct right away but the framework was there. I don't think Apple has accomplished the same thing with the Apple Watch. Not yet anyway. I also think they are chasing what really is a pretty narrow set of use cases.

            Complex product design is an iterative process. The first cars didn't ship with airbags, 300 horsepower engines, antilock brakes, and power steering.

            No but they

            • by Sique ( 173459 )
              The T model is a quite late design, and it could built on nearly 150 years of car experience. The first car ever was Nicholas Cugnot's steam carriage of 1769. It was a trike. So was Étienne Lenoir's Hippomobile one century later, and Benz' Patent Motorwagen of 1886. It took some time for the Ackermann steering geometry to find wide use in cars, and only then the four wheeled cars took of. Even the introduction of the steering wheel took its time. Another important idea was to have the engine sitting on
            • My take on it is that the technology isn't quite there yet for a really useful smartwatch.

              Oh, the technology is there; but almost nobody wants a quarter-pound, 1/2-inch-thick ankle-monitoring bracelet strapped to their wrist, like the Gigantor LG Urbane.

          • On the other hand, if we waited for the first version of every product to be perfect before shipping, nothing would ever ship.

            Precisely!

        • My concern with the Apple watch is that they are trying to turn it into another smartphone rather than a device that makes sense by itself within its own design constraints. It's like they are trying to stuff 10 pounds of crap into a 5 pound bag.

          Actually, Apple seems to have sussed-out fairly well the dividing-line between what is possible in a Watch, and what still needs to be offloaded to that supercomputer in your pocket. Of course, that line will creep a bit as time goes on; but until there is a Star Trek-sized gain in battery performance (I want the battery that powers the hand-phasers!), then a SmartWatch will remain primarily a "terminal" and sensor-set for your nearby pocket-supercomputer (or other nearby Smart Device).

          And, within those c

    • So we can get a real time Stamina Bar and HP Indicators.
      I think the real killer feature would be so it can be used without being tethered to your phone. And you can take and make a call by putting your thumb in you ear and talking to your pinky.

      • And you can take and make a call by putting your thumb in you ear and talking to your pinky.

        I hear GCI is working on this very thing.

  • Unreliable heart rate detection, GPS and fitness tracking, voice recording on command, what else? In the future a smart watch will be able to project directions on the ground to somewhere or someone you're trying to find; to remind you in the grocery store that you wanted to pick up some milk; to answer arbitrary questions from the internet; to alert emergency services when you've suffered a stroke or car collision; an many other things.

    But for now the functionality is so low as to put them in the category
    • the location aware grocery-reminder is already, working, so is dictation, arbitrary questions are getting there. and why look at projected directions to friends, when you can be guided by taps on your wrist ? the aitomated emergency service call will come though, as well as the health alert ("your blood values are getting worse, eat mor celery today"), and the hazard warning (think unhealthy levels of radiation, gas, noise,...)
    • Unreliable heart rate detection, GPS and fitness tracking, voice recording on command, what else? In the future a smart watch will be able to project directions on the ground to somewhere or someone you're trying to find; to remind you in the grocery store that you wanted to pick up some milk; to answer arbitrary questions from the internet; to alert emergency services when you've suffered a stroke or car collision; an many other things. But for now the functionality is so low as to put them in the category of "ornament".

      Ironically, by the time a smartwatch finally meets your expectations, I will be able to label the wearer an "ornament". At that point, you will have divested the human of any need for critical thinking whatsoever.

      Gee, I can't wait to see how "smart" tech will forge The Dumb Generation.

    • by EzInKy ( 115248 )

      Let me know when I can call Dick Tracey on one without an iPhone in my pocket.

      • Let me know when I can call Dick Tracey on one without an iPhone in my pocket.

        You can (sorta) do that now, if you want battery life measured in single-digit hours along with a nearly quarter-pound, 1/2-inch-thick watch.

    • How many "Version 1" of other products had 0 problems?

      Remember what the original cell phone was.

      Cell phone cameras have come far enough that I've ditched my P&S. It's my cell phone camera for the low end and my SLR for the high. That's technology that wasn't even out there a decade ago. The iPhone isn't even 10 years old and now we have Nexus, Samsung, HTC, et al smart phones that are all pretty damn amazing when you consider that in 2001 I took a 833 mHz single core laptop to college.

      Yeah, smart watche

    • But for now the functionality is so low as to put them in the category of "ornament".

      Ya know, when compared with the functionality of a mainframe computer, a VT-100 Terminal is pretty damned "low", too; but I sure wouldn't want to have to wait in line at the datacenter to use the System Console.

      Think of SmartWatches primarily as a "Terminal" for your "mainframe-in-your-pocket" Smartphone.

      Linux Fandroids are always saying their Smartphones are just little computers (which is sorta, kinda, maybe a little true); so, doesn't it make sense that it would have a separate "Remote Access Termina

  • by Going_Digital ( 1485615 ) on Tuesday August 09, 2016 @05:27AM (#52669929)
    GPS, great way to halve the battery life.
    • I agree - what a weird choice. The Apple watch really needs access to its paired iPhone to be of almost any use and the iPhone has good location awareness already. As a fitness device, the current Apple Watch kinda sucks because is heart rate monitor does not work well. Hopefully that's getting a fix.
      • And they're working towards decoupling it from the phone. The new OS allows for native apps. AppleWatch3 will have an LTE chip built into it.
    • Makes no sense since it could just piggyback off of the phone.
    • GPS sensors have come a long way.

      http://www.mouser.com/ds/2/238... [mouser.com]

      A GPS/GALILEO/GLONASS sensor that draws 16 mA tracking. That's ~15 hours on the Apple Watch battery (excluding all other loads).

      Some intelligent power saving techniques to not monitor continuously and you could easily extend that.

      • A GPS/GALILEO/GLONASS sensor that draws 16 mA tracking.

        Wow, that really IS stellar (pun intended)!

        Too bad it's still vaporware...

  • Sigh (Score:5, Interesting)

    by ledow ( 319597 ) on Tuesday August 09, 2016 @05:32AM (#52669937) Homepage

    "Proof" is an absolute. It's either waterproof or its not.

    Otherwise it's water-resistant.

    It might be water-resistant at a greater depth, but if you're claiming water-resistance, it should at least be resistant to any reasonable depth the average (non-diver) might use to in anyway.

    "Better waterproofing" just means it wasn't waterproof before.

    • Re: (Score:2, Funny)

      by Anonymous Coward

      "Proof" is an absolute. It's either waterproof or its not.

      Otherwise it's water-resistant.

      It might be water-resistant at a greater depth, but if you're claiming water-resistance, it should at least be resistant to any reasonable depth the average (non-diver) might use to in anyway.

      "Better waterproofing" just means it wasn't waterproof before.

      Maybe it was only proofed against heavy water, and now they're expanding the proofing to tritiated water. I mean who uses the normal stuff these days anyway.

    • "Proof" is an absolute. It's either waterproof or its not.

      Nothing is absolutely waterproof. If you take any watch to the bottom of Europa's ocean (where the pressure is several times the pressure of the Marianas trench), it will leak. Watches are usually considered "waterproof" if they can be submerged at least 10 meters. If they can go even deeper, then they are "more waterproof".

    • "Proof" is an absolute. It's either waterproof or its not.

      Not true at all. A watch can be waterproof at 1m depth and not waterproof at 20m depth. That is true for any device, whether it be a submarine, a wristwatch or anything else. You can accurately describe something as waterproof as long as you also provide the conditions under which it is waterproof. Water resistant means that it will not immediately fail under a particular set of conditions but that prolonged exposure will probably result in damage or failure eventually. Water proof means it can withsta

      • by iCEBaLM ( 34905 )

        ledow makes an idiot-proof statement.

        Nature makes a better idiot in sjbe.

      • "Proof" is an absolute. It's either waterproof or its not.

        Not true at all. A watch can be waterproof at 1m depth and not waterproof at 20m depth. That is true for any device, whether it be a submarine, a wristwatch or anything else. You can accurately describe something as waterproof as long as you also provide the conditions under which it is waterproof. Water resistant means that it will not immediately fail under a particular set of conditions but that prolonged exposure will probably result in damage or failure eventually. Water proof means it can withstand those condition indefinitely without ill effect. See the difference?

        "Better waterproofing" just means it wasn't waterproof before.

        Incorrect. It means it is waterproof in conditions where it wasn't previously.

        The correct answer here is E) None of the above, because no model of Apple watch is actually waterproof. They are merely water resistant. And unless Apple is going to reference a waterproof standard, at the end of the day it still means they are stupid enough to sell a "sport" model that can barely withstand being caught in a heavy rain.

        Water proof means it can withstand those condition indefinitely without ill effect.

        By your own words, I hope you now understand the parents point when defining "proof" as an absolute. Yes, there are varying standards (depths) of being waterproof, but it

    • All that exists is various levels of water resistance.

      Or are you saying that a cheap "water-proof" Casio will still work after being submerged to a depth of 10,000 ft for a year?

      FWIW, the original Apple watch is rated IPX7 under IEC standard 60529, meaning that it can sustain being submerged under 1 meter of water for 30 min.

    • by Eloking ( 877834 )

      "Proof" is an absolute. It's either waterproof or its not.

      Otherwise it's water-resistant.

      It might be water-resistant at a greater depth, but if you're claiming water-resistance, it should at least be resistant to any reasonable depth the average (non-diver) might use to in anyway.

      "Better waterproofing" just means it wasn't waterproof before.

      I guess the article talk about better IP rating : https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ [wikipedia.org]... [wikipedia.org]

      The apple watch is rated IPX7. The first digit ‘X’ means that there's no certified protection rating for solid particle. But we can easily guess that's it's the equivalent of 6, which is "Dust tight" protection.

      The second digit '7' mean that it's certified for immersion up to 1m depth. So you can bring your watch in a small pool, but not if you like to dive.

      So, in this case, TFA is probably implies

    • It might be water-resistant at a greater depth, but if you're claiming water-resistance, it should at least be resistant to any reasonable depth the average (non-diver) might use to in anyway.

      Oh, you mean unlike all those not-so-water-resistant Samsung phones [consumerreports.org], right?

    • "Proof" is an absolute. It's either waterproof or its not.

      I assume you don't understand physics and don't realise that water exerts different pressures. There is no absolute water proofing. I'll take your fancy water proof smart watch and drop it in the mariana trench, and when we get it back lets see how well it worked.

      Waterproof is a big sliding scale where anything is better than nothing but things can always be improved. My smartphone is waterproof. I have no problem putting it under a tap for a quick rinse, but I wouldn't take it on a diving trip. My gopro is

  • by darthsilun ( 3993753 ) on Tuesday August 09, 2016 @05:41AM (#52669953)

    When I use the GPS on my iPhone5 it gets hot. (And it eats the battery.)

    The last thing I want is something hot on my wrist unless it's 0C. (Which is hardly ever.)

    And will /. ever enter the 21st Century and let me enter a fricken degree sign?

    • by 4im ( 181450 )

      When I use the GPS on my iPhone5 it gets hot. (And it eats the battery.)

      For sports activities, my wife acquired a TomTom GPS watch (including pulse measuring). I regularly wear it for running, and never noticed it getting hot. Same goes for my Samsung android phone, I never noticed it heating up more than usual when GPS is active. I'd guess that implementation on the iPhone is less than optimal, or there's another reason for it getting hot.

      • Thats the software using the GPS, not the GS itself. they use a surprisingly small amount of power these days.

        The processor loads (and therefore power/heat) come from the software to display the pretty maps that people now expect/demand.

        Having said that, unless the watch can operate independant of the phone, this is just stupid, because the phone already has a gps..
        so, it is kind of assumed that they will be giving the watch a little more independence.

      • For sports activities, my wife acquired a TomTom GPS watch (including pulse measuring). I regularly wear it for running, and never noticed it getting hot. Same goes for my Samsung android phone, I never noticed it heating up more than usual when GPS is active. I'd guess that implementation on the iPhone is less than optimal, or there's another reason for it getting hot.

        I run with an iPhone 6 (and RunKeeper) for about an hour and it doesn't get hot. Sounds like something is broken.

    • by starless ( 60879 )

      And will /. ever enter the 21st Century and let me enter a fricken degree sign?

      If you wrote the temperature in kelvin you wouldn't need a degree sign....

    • "When I use the GPS on my iPhone5 it gets hot. (And it eats the battery.)"

      This depends on the GPS app you're using. I hike with Motion-X, which autopauses the GPS readings when it senses that you are on a water break or have been eaten by a bear. This gives you enough battery life to hike all day.

  • by Viol8 ( 599362 )

    ...*yaaawn*

    Sorry Apple, but your watch is not the killer product you thought it was. Beyond the usual fanboys nobody is interested, not just in your smartwatch, but in any smartwatch. Phones do everything the watch can do much better except as a convenient way to tell the time, and if thats all you need the watch to do you can get a a Casio for the price of a takeaway that will do it equally well and have a 5 year battery life on top.

    • by frnic ( 98517 )

      "Sorry Apple, but your IPad is not the killer product you thought it was. Beyond the usual fanboys nobody is interested, not just in your iPad, but in any tablet. Laptops do everything the iPad can do much better except as a convenient way to surf the web and if thats all you need the iPad to do you can get a a Netbook for the price of a takeaway that will do it equally well and have a 5 year battery life on top."

      Didn't you post this same thing a few years ago!

      • "Sorry Apple, but your iPod is not the killer product you thought it was. Beyond the usual fanboys nobody is interested. No wireless. Less space than a nomad. Lame."

      • by Viol8 ( 599362 )

        "Didn't you post this same thing a few years ago!"

        No. But its hardly a unique opinion.

  • by edxwelch ( 600979 ) on Tuesday August 09, 2016 @07:28AM (#52670273)

    How does a Apple fanboy know when it's 12 o clock? He looks at his wrist and sees his Apple watch has run out of battery.

    • Or are you really so fucking stupid that you don't know how to spell "Cue"?

  • In addition to the updated Apple Watch 2, Apple is expected to update the original Apple Watch with a new SoC to improve CPU and GPU performance.

    I wish they'd do something similar for their computers, given the fact that most of their computers are non-upgradable and it's all soldered on the motherboards now (CPU, GPU and RAM).

  • So, how many of these "apple watch" advertisements will we be subjected to between now and the time the thing is actually released?
  • It baffle me that we now buy watch that fail at it's actual main purpose : being a watch.

    So far, most smart watches are inferior at their main job compared to "not smart" one. And the key feature (in my mind) are :

    - Give you the time efficiently
    - No need to recharge
    - It's look (will you wear it in a interview?)

    So far, the first apple watch fail at those three task (like most smart watch anyway). I wouldn't be wearing one if it wasn't for a girlfriend that bough me one as a Christmas present and I'm glad tha

  • Something is waterproof or it is not.

    • by Eloking ( 877834 )

      Something is waterproof or it is not.

      I guess the article talk about better IP rating : https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

      The apple watch is rated IPX7. The first digit ‘X’ means that there's no certified protection rating for solid particle. But we can easily guess that's it's the equivalent of 6, which is "Dust tight" protection.

      The second digit '7' mean that it's certified for immersion up to 1m depth. So you can bring your watch in a small pool, but not if you like to dive.

      So, in this case, TFA is probably implies that the Apple

  • I read the title as saying, "... Faster Processor and Better Waterboarding" and didn't blink an eye. I thought to myself, "Well, at least it's getting better."
  • "GPS, Faster Processor and Better Waterproofing" ...and it'll still be a flop.

As you will see, I told them, in no uncertain terms, to see Figure one. -- Dave "First Strike" Pare

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