Handwashing with an Apple Watch
One of the two standout features in WatchOS 7 for me was handwashing. Today, it has been just over a week since I turned on handwashing notifications.
Some background on the new feature:
- Apple Watch can now detect when hands are being washed and encourages you with gentle taps on your wrist to continue for atleast 20 seconds.
- When your return home, it can now remind you to wash your hands.
My observations so far:
- When I said “Hand washing countdowns are cute and I love that they exist ☺️,” 3 months ago, I under-estimated it.
- Handwashing is detected only when actually washing hands, typically about 5 seconds after I start scrubbing my hands.
- It appears to be relying on accelerometer movements to determine when hands are being scrubbed, not microphone to determine flow of water.
- I haven’t experienced a single false positive yet on notifications to continue washing my hand.
- No false positives when rinsing hands or doing the dishes.
- The first time I returned home after turning this on, I was reminded to wash my hands just after I had removed my shoes as I was about to change my clothes. Pretty darn incredible feeling, that.
- That same day, a permission dialog popped up asking how frequently I wanted ‘Handwashing’ to have access to my location. Cute.
- It does not detect movement within my apartment complex (mailbox, parking) as leaving the home and returning.
- It can, however, get reminders for returning home wrong. I was once asked to wash my hands just as I was driving out of the parking garage.
- It doesn’t appear to be using barometer readings to determine the height, so the parking level is treated the same as my home (a couple levels over).
- I was out camping over the last weekend, and washed my hands with water that was a few degrees over freezing. Those were some pretty rough 20-seconds, but the Watch’s motivation made it a game that I had to win.
- I didn’t realize just how many times I had a tendency to not scrub my hands for a full 20-seconds; it seems I was often in the 15-second range. (No, I do not have a handwashing song.)
- I appreciate the gentle nudges whether I am anticipating them or not. It leaves me with a smile on my face everytime I wash my hands :).
Definitely one of those Apple-y things that surprise and delight. Truly.
Takeaways from the WWDC 2020 Keynote
I am an Apple enthusiast, and I just watched the WWDC 2020 keynote. Here’s what I thought (in no specific order):
iOS 14
- Reaching for the top row apps on my iPhone 7 Plus is not easy. I can rarely, if ever, use my phone with a single hand anymore. So, I appreciate the new home screen layout. It definitely appears useful at first glance.
- I can see myself adding Dark Sky (wait, will it still be updated?!) and Fantastical widgets, but I don’t think I’ll add much else. We’ll see.
- Pinned conversations, inline replies, mentions… Love it all. Also, mask Memoji 😷!
- As someone that obsessively downloads (and keeps) apps from cafes, stores, and parking apps I only need about once every year, and refuses to delete them for the one time time I might need them again, I love the idea of App Clips. I can (hopefully) get rid of all those unused apps.
- I am nitpicky about my home screen layout, so I’m conflicted about the new dynamic App Library. I can imagine it being useful, but it might also play against my muscle memory.
- No more full-screen popovers for phone calls or Siri! YES!
- Rarely use iPhone to watch video, so couldn’t care less about picture-in-picture.
- Lot of appreciation for the new privacy features. I have desired approximate location for so many apps that I don’t trust, but still have to provide location information to.
- Camera and microphone usage indicators are godsend. I have often wondered how many apps exploit those permissions because they have them.
- Overall not a lot is changing, which is a good thing.
Apple Maps
- Biking directions with elevation! I have wished for this to have existed for months as I struggled with mapping my bike rides. This alone will make me update to iOS 14 on day 1.
iPadOS 14
- Neat improvements to handwriting recognition and scribble.
AirPods
- Seamless switching: Why did it take so long?!
- Spatial Audio: Tempting me to buy a set of AirPods Pro.
watchOS 7
- Hand washing countdowns are cute and I love that they exist ☺️.
- Sleep tracking appears cool, but I also don’t like wearing my Apple Watch while I’m asleep.
Safari
- Amazing new privacy controls. I use Safari all day, everyday. It is already very fast, secure and neatly integrated. The privacy improvements take what is great and make it even better.
- I’m going to obsess for a while over the Privacy Reports of some of my most visited websites.
- The new hover-on-tab feature that displays a tiny thumbnail is also really nice. It is one of the things I miss the most from my days of Firefox.
macOS Big Sur (11.0!)
- I like the new design aesthetic in the apps, but hate the new icons. The iOS-ified icons feel out of place. Maybe they’ll grown on me over time.
- Control Center is neat, and so is the new notification pane.
- Messages and Apple Maps are Catalyst ports, but get feature parity with iOS. Cool!
- Overall: A slate of nice updates for a mature desktop OS. Lots of polish, I hope.
App Store
- Simple, easy to understand privacy policies for every app before you download it? Yes, please!
Mac’s Transition to Apple SoC
- This might actually go through in a seamless way than I had thought.
- A12Z running Final Cut Pro and 3 streams of 4K, and driving the 6K Pro Display XDR? Damn, that’s powerful.
- Emulation also appears to be fast.
- Not a fan of iOS and iPadOS apps running on macOS. That sounds like a recipe for lazy developers to not make good, native macOS apps, while allowing Apple to boast ‘millions of apps on day 1’.
- I can’t wait to learn more about the upcoming Mac line-up. Such an exciting time!
Miscellaneous
- The production quality of this year’s presentation was exemplary.
- It was uncanny (and weird) to look at close-ups of Tim Cook and Craig Federighi as they talked to the camera. It was too close and too in-my-face.