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Apple

Apple Watch Hack Adds a Browser For Your Wrist 93

TechCrunch reports that the Apple Watch now evidently has an tantalizing, but unofficial, feature: a browser, created by the jailbreak developer known as Comex. "Not great" is their headline-level assessment of what it looks like to use, which can't be too surprising: even a large watch face is still a small screen, by comparison to a laptop, a tablet, or even a phone. Venture Beat's assessment is similar: "As you’d expect, it’s an awkward mess." Making hardware do things it wasn't intended to is still a worthy pursuit, though, and TechCrunch notes: Out of the box, running arbitrary code like this shouldn’t be possible — while a native SDK is inbound, only stuff built with Apple’s somewhat limited WatchKit framework is supposed to run on the device for now. Is this a subtle demonstration of the world’s first jailbroken Apple Watch?
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Apple Watch Hack Adds a Browser For Your Wrist

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  • "As you’d expect, it’s an awkward mess."

  • Lynx? (Score:4, Interesting)

    by aNonnyMouseCowered ( 2693969 ) on Monday May 11, 2015 @12:17AM (#49661825)

    Maybe someone can port a text mode browser like Lynx, Elinks or W3M or something really hardcore, a command-line browser like edbrowse (http://edbrowse.org/). Then we don't have to worry about all the panning and dragging around the small screen.

  • WAP (Score:5, Insightful)

    by mwvdlee ( 775178 ) on Monday May 11, 2015 @12:57AM (#49661949) Homepage

    The return of WAP sites.
    Are any of them still around?

  • I hacked my browser to be an Apple Watch.

  • I wish there is a poll "Do you have or plan to buy this year the Apple Watch v 1.0?" to show a Yes being < 5%.
    • by jfengel ( 409917 )

      Probably less than 1%. But that doesn't mean it's not News for Nerds. Apple has a history of introducing whole new ways of looking at hardware: the iPod, the iPhone, the iPad. Each had predecessors, of course, but when Apple introduced one the product sector took off, not just for Apple but for its competitors. Apple has a knack for finding new ways for people to interact with devices that people find appealing. The technical respects may be weaker than other competing devices, but the aesthetics drive a lo

  • i know lots of companies are trying to merge their technologies until everything ends up being...well, everything! but ive started changing my mindset about all this crap. i was gonna purchase an apple watch - but then realised it was 'good' at the stuff it done, but not great at the specifics? i got a microsoft band ( 3 day battery life on normal use, great health tracking and simple notifications from the phone ) . i got rid of my 16GB Macbook pro ( which i was only using for watching films and browsing t
    • I agree. I get much better results from my handheld GPS than I do from trying to use my phone for the purpose of a GPS. I don't wear a watch. But if I did, I'd probably want it to just be a watch. A Microsoft Band or FitBit, is a lot more appealing than an iWatch if I actually waned to track that kind of stuff. With the iWatch you have to plug it in every night, so it loses the ability to track your sleep. With the other options, you only have to plug it in once every few days, so you could presumably ch

  • That's right .. After a sale and a return of a pay as you go android smart phone my total cost was $65.00 And it's real easy to run a browser on a Moto 360.
  • by Culture20 ( 968837 ) on Monday May 11, 2015 @08:11AM (#49663063)
  • I use the browser on my Android Wear watch regularly to show transit arrival predictions from my website, TransSee [homeip.net]. I added a setting to push the header information to be bottom to get it to be easier to read.

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