“Even before having used an Apple Watch, Daniel Breslan is pretty sure how people will use his app, Departure Board, on one,” Charles Arthur writes for The Guardian. “‘When you’re waiting in a station cafe, pub, lounge, you have you own personal departure board and you do not have to move to keep checking the screens on the [train] platform,”’ he explains. His new app, which is in the final stages of testing, is a simple concept: it finds the nearest rail station to you, and tells you the destination and time of the next 20 trains – though on a watchface, you’ll probably only see three or four without scrolling.”
“Breslan is one of the many iPhone app developers who are hoping for a new bonanza when the Apple Watch hits the stores, and shortly afterwards the streets, in April,” Arthur writes. “It’s effective on an iPhone (I’ve been testing it since January) but Breslan sees its potential being even greater on a smartwatch, because you wouldn’t have to unlock your phone and navigate to the app to get the information.”
Arthur writes, “David Smith, another iPhone developer based in Herndon, Virginia who has written recipe and audiobook apps, reckons that by shifting interactions from your phone to your wrist, the Apple Watch will ‘create a much more fluid daily experience, with dozens of micro-interactions rather than the longer ones we have today.'”
Read more in the full article here.
MacDailyNews Take: As we wrote in January:
All phones are cumbersome to the same degree. They have to be pulled out, woken up, and poked at… Apple created… a world of iPhone/iPhone knockoff addicts. Apple will change the world again with Apple Watch, replacing iPhone zombies and iPhones on and under dining tables and everywhere else (you know, the stuff the older set complain about: “People nowadays, always looking at their gizmos, nobody can even have a conversation”) with quick glances of the wrist – like in the days of yore….
With iPhone, Apple changed the fabric of our everyday lives: All around the world today, you see people constantly pulling phones from pockets and staring at them. With Apple Watch, Apple will change behavior worldwide once again. A quick glance at your Watch and you’re off. No more smartphone zombies. Watch and see.
[Thanks to MacDailyNews Reader “Dan K.” for the heads up.]
This is like the week before Christmas….You see the presents under the tree and want to open them, but can’t. I always hated waiting…..
Developers should flock to AppleWatch to make some easy money. I’m curious to see what type of games are going to be designed for a watch display. I doubt flashlight apps will be very popular on the AppleWatch. It could be nice as a music player controller since that wouldn’t be prone to running the battery down.
Heck the latest gold rush concerning Apple is happening right now. Takes a jouranalist to miss the obvious consistent stock raise ever since jouranalist have been peeing themselves over the Apple car. Just before the release of the watch too.
Coincidence? I think not.
Every aspect of Apple Watch is extremely well thought-off and seamlessly integrated – right from Software development tools, to AppStore, to the Design of the Apple Watch itself. Google Android Wear seems quite disconnected and haphazard in implementation.
Any Questions?