Apple Admits To Apple Watch LTE Problems Just Before It Ships (theverge.com) 80
Lauren Goode, reporting for The Verge: Apple's new Series 3 smartwatch starts shipping this Friday, and the biggest feature change between last year's model and this new Watch is that it has built-in cellular capabilities. Except, that cell service isn't entirely reliable. While writing my review of the Apple Watch Series 3 with LTE capabilities, I experienced notable connectivity issues. The new Watch appeared to try to connect to unknown WiFi networks instead of connecting to cellular, when I was out and about without my phone. Within the first couple days of experiencing this, Apple replaced my first review unit with a second one, but that one proved to be problematic, too. Eventually, the company issued an official statement, acknowledging the issue. "We have discovered that when Apple Watch Series 3 joins unauthenticated Wi-Fi networks without connectivity, it may at times prevent the watch from using cellular," an Apple spokesperson said in an emailed statement. "We are investigating a fix for a future software release."
Apple Watch LTE (Score:5, Funny)
Apple Watch Less Than Excellent
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You're wearing it wrong.
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You're watching it wrong.
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Apple Watch Less Than Excellent
I'm sure the watch is fine. The people experiencing problems are probably just wearing it wrong [wired.com].
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You joke, but that could be the problem, actually.
The watch is worn right against the skin, and the SAR calculations (whether you believe in it or not) are influenced heavily by distance. For a cellphone, it's easy enough to get even a centimeter or two between the skin and antenna, which means you can put in a more powerful RF amp and better antenna. With the watch sitting so close to the skin, the actual power output of the LTE modem will
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The problem is real. What is happening is that the watch is connecting to one of those "capture" networks that have an interstertial page at connect time, such as one might find at a Starbucks or McDonald's. The watch should be avoiding those networks, but because of this bug the "connected" Wifi network is used instead of the cellular.
This is a real and likely embarrassing problem that I am sure Apple is working very hard to fix right now.
Re: Apple Watch LTE (Score:1)
Re: Apple Watch LTE (Score:2)
I recently learned that the device has issues with the heart-monitoring aspect if you have wrist tattoos. It can't see through a tattoo. They acknowledge this, but make no mention of this on any of the sales/about literature that I have found.
It'd be pretty simple to add something like, "Heart-health monitoring may not be effective when watch is worn over a tattoo."
Given the popularity of tattoos, I'd say that would be important information for an honest company to impart. They don't even have to put it in
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Oh, just adding to the list of dishonest marketing. Nothing more than that.
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Do fitbit or any of the other device makers mention wrist tattoos? Does anyone? Have you posted about that somewhere?
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I see what you did, there.
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That video of Steve Jobs should be required viewing at least once per year. Tim Cook has completely lost track of this fact.
Re: Apple Watch LTE (Score:2)
Required viewing for whom? Because there are loads of people who just don't give a shit. I'm not sure they should be required to watch it. I'm not even convinced that Apple fanatics should be required to watch it, or anything else for that matter.
I dunno, that seems rather authoritarian. Mandatory repeated video watching about Apple seems like a horrible idea. If we're going to mandate repeated video watching, it should probably be a better choice than that.
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Required watching for those who make decisions at Apple. Tim Cook and all the regulars we always see in Keynotes.
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Oh, good. I was really hoping you didn't mean required watching for me. Hell, make it required viewing for all Apple employees. Just not me... No, not me...
Good grief (Score:3)
The watch is only purchased by fanboys.. (Score:5, Insightful)
... and they'd buy a turd on a stick if it came with an Apple logo, so you think they care if there's some minor connectivity issue?
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Actually they're allowing us to animate ourselves as turds and send the resultant product to our friends. And people want that.
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It does seem odd to put cellular and wifi on a watch... Cellular in particular uses a lot of energy, relative to Bluetooth. That battery isn't going to last very long, or will have to be extremely large. LTE is improving things a little, but it's still nowhere near as good as Bluetooth or even just wifi.
What benefit does LTE bring over just pairing to your phone? The only sane reason to even have a smart watch is as a secondary phone screen, unless they have invented some truly marvellous use for it.
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What benefit does LTE bring over just pairing to your phone?
The ability to *not* bringing your phone, for one.
That being said, I'm not surprised to hear about this, and would hope for some "trickle-down" in the fix. I run with a Series 1 Apple watch, and every time a misconfigured automobile searching for a bluetooth buddy drives by, I get glitches in music playback. It would be nice if the watch would reject all unsolicited connections.
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Cellular in particular uses a lot of energy, relative to Bluetooth. ... What benefit does LTE bring over just pairing to your phone?
They're using LTE so your phone can be *really* far away from the watch. Bluetooth just doesn't have the range. :-)
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Presumably for people with shoe pockets.
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Actually, people contend with that situation all the time, particularly with new houses. That's why punch lists exist. In those situations the process generally concludes prior to final sales place timing doesn't always allow for it and certain issues get remedied after the fact.
Anybody who is dissatisfied in this situation has the right to walk away from the deal by returning the product to Apple.
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I go buy a new car, or a house, or something else.
Oh! Sorry, the horn won't work, the doors on your house won't shut or some other thing.
But, not to worry, we'll fix it at a later date.
Tell me people would put up with that?
Yeah, all the fucken time, it's called reality.
You go buy a house and tell me everything's perfect with it, e.g. sticking door.
iPhones do this also (Score:3)
Re:iPhones do this also (Score:4, Insightful)
I've never once, in 8 years of using iPhones across 6 carriers in multiple countries, ever seen this behavior. You may want to try to reset your network settings or try a factory reset of your iPhone if this is happening to you personally.
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Wasn't the entire point of "wifi assist" to deal with this very issue, phones connected to bad access points that couldn't really pass data?
Now if I could just get it to stop connecting to ATT wifi access points despite telling it to not automatically connect to them...
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In theory, yes. In practice, it seems to be frequently broken. I routinely connect to a computer-to-computer network used for controlling some hardware that has no Internet connection. Frequently, either:
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Probably because of (Score:1)
Not News (Score:3)
How in the world is this news? This happens with your phone as well. If your smartphone "connects to an unauthenticated Wi-Fi network without connectivity" you get, no surprise, no connectivity. Because it uses the wi-fi device as the default route if it has one available.
Unless they shit the bed in the design and don't give you a way to turn off wi-fi separately, this isn't any more of a flaw than all of our phones.
The same reviewer also complains that after putting their paired phone into airplane mode and then walking around with the watch that they couldn't get connectivity. Well, that's how the darn thing works -- it automatically goes into airplane mode when you put your phone in airplane mode. Because it thinks you are on a plane...
This seems like a blogger looking for clicks.
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This sounds like favoring wifi, not a bad connection. Favoring wifi makes economic sense given that most plans are metered, even the "unlimited" ones. But not all wifi connections are equal: some are blocked, some are really weak. It's not always what you as the user will want. Apple thinks they can fix that too, I'm curious about the result.
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If your smartphone "connects
You hit the important point without realising it. Sane devices don't magically try and connect to open wifi points just because they are there.
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"...a fix for a future software release." (Score:2)
And if it turns out to be a hardware issue?
So a product has a software bug (Score:2)
It's not just the watch.... (Score:1)
My I-Phone and I-Pad both with LTE built in have issues when connecting to WiFi networks that have no internet connection. I'm sure the watch has a similar issue.
The problem I have is that it keeps trying to connect to something with an internet connection, even when I tell it to not use the LTE connection for data. Maybe what I'm doing is just weird but I really DON'T want the device searching for a data connection by disconnecting from the current WiFi access point at times. Most of the time this behavi
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You can absolutely set your phone to not connect to unknown wifi.
As for why they put LTE on the watch- I'm pretty sure that they are simply adding a backup capability. They certainly sell a series 3 watch without LTE. The current versions of the watch already use a mix of bluetooth and wifi to communicate with the phone, so I'm pretty sure the LTE capability is for when you don't have your phone around. Whether it will last all day without a phone, I don't know. The watches in general are already pretty
And they are (Score:1)
An easy solution (Score:1)
So, have they changed the ship date? (Score:2)
1. Delay the shipping date until the product is fixed, or;
2. Ship the broken product as originally planned anyway?
If the company values its customers, then 1. If the company thinks "fuck the customers" then 2.
I wonder what Apple will do...