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  • 36 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: October 25th, 2023

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  • how many iOS versions can I update on my phone till I can not connect the 2 devices?

    Theoretically, forever. Each watchOS version requires a minimum iOS version (e.g., watchOS 10 requires iOS 17 as a minimum), but it doesn’t work that way in the reverse - iOS 17 should be able to pair with any watch going back to the original Apple Watch, as will iOS 18.

    That said - people do occasionally have issues when pairing doesn’t happen. But it is supposed to work that way. Currently I use an Ultra but I have my backup Series 5 still on watchOS 9 but it remains paired with my 13 Pro running iOS 17.1.1 (I had to unpair both watches when I did a factory reset and restore of my phone last month and re-paired both watches just fine).


  • Anytime I have used a screen protector that had a lubricant spray (basically it is just water with a very small amount of soap/detergent) that was used to help place it correctly without bubbles I ALWAY sprayed on the screen protector (and my hand, to prevent sticking to my hand), NEVER NEVER NEVER on the device.

    This person who did this should not do it that way.


  • You probably can’t complete your challenge anymore. If you have, say, a challenge that says “Get 75 exercise minutes for 14 days this month”, and you have done do only 6 times so far this month, and it is the 24th, then you don’t have enough days left to complete the challenge and the challenge disappears from your watch and fitness app.


  • You can adjust the sensitivity of AutoSleep if you don’t feel it’s reporting sleep data right. Tap the Settings icon in the dock at the bottom (on the iPhone app) and then tap “Sleep/Wake calibration”. It shows you how the sleep time would change with each of 10 different settings.

    The stock sleep app says that I am asleep when I know that I am awake; AutoSleep seems to do a better job for me. There are times when it says that I was awake when I am pretty sure that I was not, but those times are pretty rare. I’ve been using the app for 6.5 years.




  • Yes. I spent three years with the Series 2 constantly frustrated during running workouts when I would glance at the watch and see nothing - my “wrist raise” apparently wasn’t strong enough. Sometimes even exaggerated wrist raise didn’t work and I’d have to tap the display. I’ve had AOD since getting the Series 5. It’s a must-have feature for me.


  • I never start a workout but it always gives me almost every minute as green ring.

    I think if Apple could offer heart attack as a warning to the watch, they would have done so long ago. I know that they warn you that Apple Watch cannot detect heart attack on two different screens when you start an ECG on a supported watch. Clearly Apple hasn’t been able to reliably detect heart attacks as an event with the watch.








  • “Or later” means that I should be able to use my Apple Watch on WatchOS 9 and simply not upgrade to WatchOS 10 even with the new iPhone. But I am not 100% sure if this is the case.

    This is 100% correct. I have a 13 Pro on iOS 17, not a 15 Pro, but the phone doesn’t matter. I have two Apple Watches - an Ultra on watchOS 10, and a Series 5, that I have deliberately kept on watchOS 9. The Series 5 works perfectly fine with iOS 17.

    The way it works is this: each watch has a minumum iOS version it will work with - the iOS version that corresponds to the watchOS version that shipped with the watch. So, the Series 8, which shipped with watchOS 9, will work with any phone running iOS 16 or later. The Series 9 will work with any phone running iOS 17 or later.

    Also, each watchOS version has a minimum iOS version it will work with. watchOS 9 requires iOS 16 or later - so it will work perfectly fine with a phone running iOS 17, but you wouldn’t be able to pair with a phone running iOS 15.

    So, your Series 4, if you never updated it, would work with any phone running iOS 13 or later. But, if you updated it to watchOS 9, that means it will work with any phone running iOS 16 or later, which means that it will work with a phone running iOS 17, even if watchOS has not been updated.

    (I have kept the Series 5 on watchOS 9 because I also always keep my last phone as a backup, and my last phone is an iPhone X, which is stuck on iOS 16. If for some reason my 13 Pro fails, is lost, etc., while I am waiting for a replacement I will use the iPhone X as my main phone and pair the Series 5 to it. I won’t be able to pair the Ultra, because I’ve already updated it to watchOS 10.)




  • It pauses because the watch starts recording heart rate almost constantly while you are in a workout, while it takes reading once every 4-5 minutes most of the time normally. It doesn’t use heart rate as a clue that you may have started a workout - it uses arm motion, and (probably) checks location services to see if you are moving in a way that suggests that you may be walking. But once you start the workout and it tries to read heart rate constantly and it thinks that you don’t have a heart rate, it pauses (probably assuming that you maybe you took the watch off of your wrist after forgetting to pause or end the workout.)

    That’s just the way it works. I know you think it should work otherwise… but it doesn’t. Apple isn’t likely to change it unless enough people suggest the change, so use the Feedback form to make a suggestion.

    Have you tried using the watch on your other wrist?


  • That’s strange - whenever I use the crown to change to a different page on my workouts, it stays on that page until I spin the crown (or swipe down). I have to say that I don’t do outdoor cycling workouts, so perhaps cycling is different for some reason, but it always stay where I put it when I do running or walking workouts.

    But if you press the edit icon top-right in “Outdoor Cycle Workout”, scroll down to and tap “Preferences”, tap “Outdoor Cycle Workout Views” at the top, scroll down to the bottom and tap “Reorder” and put the HR Zone page at the top, does that fox it?