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Iāve been thinking ahead to Appleās big event next Tuesday. Iāll be sitting in Appleās Steve Jobs theater, ready to live blog. Tim Cook will pop out for a brief moment to wave hello. Iāll probably nod to my colleagues in the theater with me ā weāve already sussed out the game plan. My ears will be perked for the Apple Watch announcements, because thatās my beat. Paradoxically, thatās where this visualization exercise leaves me stumped. After a decade of Apple Watches, Iām struggling to envision what would make the worldās most iconic smartwatch better.
You could argue that the Apple Watch doesnāt need to change much because people already love it. It is, after all, the most popular watch in the world. Except market research firm Counterpoint recently reported that in 2024 ā ironically, the 10th anniversary of the Apple Watch ā marked the first-ever decline in the global smartwatch market. It said Apple Watch shipments fell by 19 percent year over year, marking five straight quarters of declines due to decreased consumer demand, fewer models to choose from, and fewer substantial upgrades. In other words, most people didnāt think buying a new watch would improve their lives.
So, what would give the Apple Watch its momentum back? The obvious answer after Galaxy Unpacked and Made by Google would be to stuff AI into the watch. Wear OS has Gemini now, so a truly intelligent Siri would make things even. But that doesnāt feel quite right since, barring a miracle, a smarter Siri likely isnāt materializing this year. Gemini on the wrist has been interesting, as it allows you to make more complex, multistep queries, but itās also felt a tad unfocused. It makes sense as part of a larger, long-term strategy, but right now, Iād wager many people would have a hard time differentiating what sets it apart from Google Assistant. A juiced-up Siri on the wrist would likely face similar issues.
Rumors and reports suggest Apple will introduce satellite communications on the next-gen Apple Watch Ultra, along with a larger screen. No surprise there. Google and Garmin just introduced satellite communication with the Pixel Watch 4 and Fenix 8 Pro series, respectively. The budget Apple Watch SE may get an all-plastic design refresh ā though Bloombergās Mark Gurman recently noted Apple execs may have scrapped that plan. The Apple Watch Series 11 might get 5G connectivity and high blood pressure warnings. These arenāt updates to be scoffed at, but collectively, theyāre not the sort of blow-your-mind updates that immediately convince people to upgrade. (The one exception could be blood pressure, but that would heavily depend on the implementation.)
If weāre talking things that would really make the Apple Watch better, Apple ought to just give the people what they want. And almost all of it is possible.
Take third-party watchfaces, for example, Apple has argued that it puts significant effort into ensuring native watchfaces work āuniformly and simply.ā However, fans have wanted truly customizable watchfaces ā you know, like they do in Wear OS land ā for years. There are currently workarounds, but theyāre mostly separate apps that display a clock face versus a true watch face integrated into watchOS.
Also, just let people use their Apple Watch without an iPhone. You can do this via Family Setup, but I mean the real taboo thing: Let people use it with an Android phone. Thereās documented evidence that, while Apple toyed with this idea in the past, it ultimately decided against it, as it helps keep people locked to the iPhone. In almost a decade of reviewing wearables, Iāve come across dozens of diehard Android users who wouldāve loved to use the Apple Watch. My cousin only uses a Samsung smartwatch because they love foldable phones and Apple doesnāt have one. (Yet?) Given their druthers, theyād rather go back to an Apple Watch, even if theyād lose out on convenient interoperability features with iPhones and Macs.

Youāll find lots of requests from users on Reddit. Demands for better battery life are ubiquitous and, more ambitiously, noninvasive blood glucose tracking. (The latter is highly unlikely for some time.) Some are asking for better nap recognition within sleep tracking. Others want Touch ID via the digital crown instead of passcodes, to send messages within other apps like Instagram or WhatsApp, an always-on display for the SE, precision-start workout tracking for the regular Series watches, and better app organization. In the comments of my reviews, thereās always someone opining that theyād switch to the Apple Watch if Apple would admit that a round face is aesthetically superior to a rectangle. (While I agree, Apple doesnāt. Iāll eat my right shoe if this ever happens.) When I asked a friend of mine whoās a diehard Apple Watch user, their answer was simple and emphatic: āJust the freakinā full Health app on the Watch.ā
I donāt envy Apple. Its work on the Apple Watch paved the way for the current era of smartwatches. Itās a compliment that itās genuinely difficult to think of novel innovations that would substantially improve the device. Thereās a reason itās so iconic. Alas, heavy is the head that wears the crown. And while the easiest thing Apple could do is give the people what they want, Iād settle for a revitalized thesis.
The Pixel Watch 4ās updates are intriguing because of how opinionated they are. Alone, none were particularly splashy. Together, they paint a clear picture that Google believes the future of wearable technology lies in AI hardware. That more or less fits Googleās overall ambitions with ambient computing and Gemini.
Apple doesnāt need to go the AI hardware route (though Iām sure its investors are pushing for that). But barring a sparkly āone more thing,ā a renewed sense that this is all leading somewhere would go a long, long way. If the present is blah, then having faith that a better future is in the works makes the wait feel worthwhile. Otherwise, itās just enduring more of the same ā and who really gets hyped for the status quo?
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