“iOS 8 adds several important enhancements to the iPhone and iPad, such as improved notifications, health-tracking, and a more advanced camera application, but the new operating system’s most significant feature may be the groundwork technologies for a future Apple wearable device that integrates deeply with the iPhone,” Mark Gurman reports for 9to5Mac.
“No matter if it is called the ‘iWatch,’ ‘iBand,’ ‘iPod,’ or something else entirely, a wrist-worn Apple wearable device will likely be announced in October, and the software it will run will set the scope of its capabilities,” Gurman reports. “Besides the new functionality for the iPhone and iPad, iOS 8 includes many new wireless protocols, applications, and features that open the door to several capabilities for a wearable device.”
Gurman reports, “Let’s take a look at how each major iOS 8 feature plays directly into Apple’s ambitions for a wearable computer…”
Read more in the full article here.
[Thanks to MacDailyNews Reader “Dan K.” for the heads up.]
Related articles:
Why Apple’s Health app signals the reality of an iWatch – June 12, 2014
8 ways you’ll use Apple’s iOS 8 HealthKit every day – June 11, 2014
Apple’s new health focus comes at propitious time – June 11, 2014
U.S. FDA details high-level meeting with Apple: ‘Moral obligation to do more’ with health, innovative sensors – June 9, 2014
How Apple is leading the healthcare wearables revolution – June 8, 2014
yeah, that iWatch has created a veritable tsunami of rabid anticipation.
Once again, it appears that Apple has carefully developed its ecosystem so that it fully embraces a new platform/device prior to releasing it. Samsung and other would-be innovators just spew garbage out.
Seems that the expectation for the iWhatever is little different to what happened before the iPad. How quickly people forget. Its what makes Apple different to the rather dull, run of the mill critics.
“No matter if it is called the ‘iWatch,’ ‘iBand,’ ‘iPod,’”
I think iPod is already taken.
But the iPod as we know it is dead in the water. An idea that I’ve had was for Apple to rebrand “iPod” as the lineup of wearables starting with the watch. Officially kill off the music players, including the iPod touch. Then make a WiFi-only version of the iPhone Plus (5.5 inch model) and call it the iPad nano.
IMHO – I think the iWatch will do for watches what the iPod did for pods.
I’ll stick with my Tag heuer.