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Apple last week previewed watchOS 10, its next major software update for compatible Apple Watch models. Among a handful of new features, one of the most impactful is the introduction of widgets. Let's take a closer look at how they work and what you can do with them.

widgets-in-watchos10.jpg

What's Up With Widgets?

Widgets offer a new way to quickly bring up app-related information from any watch face on your Apple Watch, without having to open the corresponding app or rely exclusively on complications. In other words, if you choose simple faces without complications, you can still access the information you want, and if you like complication-rich faces, now you can get even more info at a glance.

In watchOS 10, an upward turn of the Digital Crown or a swipe up from the bottom of the watch face using your finger (Control Center is now accessed via the Side button) reveals a dynamic Smart Stack of widgets below the time and date that takes up half of the screen. You can scroll through these widgets with the Digital Crown or your finger, and tap a widget to open its corresponding app.

widgets-watchos.jpg

By using machine learning, the order of widgets can change based on your needs at any given time of day.

For example, if you have upcoming events in your calendar, a boarding pass for an upcoming flight, or tasks you need to complete, these will be displayed in order of priority. Or if you start a timer, it will appear at the top of the widget stack so you can easily see how long is left.

In addition to relevance-based ordering, Smart Stack also includes the ability to manually organize widgets, so the Smart Stack can be as dynamic or as fixed as you want.

There are actually two types of widget in watchOS 10: Dedicated app widgets that provide information from a single app, and a user-configurable complications widget that shows up to three watch face-style complications.

watch-widgets-complications.jpg

At the very bottom of the widget stack is a button that takes you to the traditional app menu to access all your Apple Watch apps.

Choosing the Widgets You Want to See

Like iPhone Home Screen widgets in iOS 16, Apple Watch widgets in watchOS 10 can work as a Smart Stack that changes based on the context or time of day, or you can manually choose the ones you want to include and also pin widgets to the top of the stack. The following steps show you how to edit widgets from any watch face.
  1. On an Apple Watch running watchOS 10, scroll up using the Digital Crown, or swipe up from the bottom of the screen using your finger.
  2. Long press any widget to enter the stack's jiggle mode. (Note that you can't edit the date and time display at the top of the stack.)
  3. Tap the red minus button on a widget to remove it from the stack, or tap the large plus button above the stack to add one.
  4. To pin a widget so that it remains at the top of the stack, tap its yellow pin icon.
  5. To edit the complications widget, scroll to the bottom and tap the minus icon next to a complication, then tap the plus symbol to replace it with another available complication. (Note: You can also pin the complications widget.)
editing-widgets-watch.jpg


Summing Up

Apple is pitching widgets as a way of enjoying simple watch faces like Portrait, without being far from the sort of onscreen information that complications typically provide. By using the Digital Crown, real-time data from your favorite apps is just a dial turn away. What do you think of widgets? Let us know in the comments.

watchOS 10 will be released to the public this fall and is compatible with the Apple Watch Series 4 and later. In addition, you'll also need an iPhone capable of running iOS 17. This includes the iPhone XS or later and iPhone XR or later. For a full list of iPhones compatible with iOS 17, check out our quick guide.

Article Link: Here's How Apple Watch Widgets Work in watchOS 10
 
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I've always felt like I had to have multiple faces just to get easy access to all the data I want to see quickly on my watch so this feels like a big upgrade. No more scheduling faces for particular times of day to prioritize on the limited amount of data I could easily see onscreen, and probably a lot less squinting as a compromise for having a data rich face with tiny tiny data, all crammed in.
 
I've always felt like I had to have multiple faces just to get easy access to all the data I want to see quickly on my watch so this feels like a big upgrade. No more scheduling faces for particular times of day to prioritize on the limited amount of data I could easily see onscreen, and probably a lot less squinting as a compromise for having a data rich face with tiny tiny data, all crammed in.
You have to rotate the crown though. That’s already one more action you have to do.
 
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What I really don't like in watchOS 10 is that Apple removed the ability to swipe between watch faces. Now you have to long press on the watch face to enter edit mode and then swipe :(
Not only did they remove the ability to swipe between Watch Faces, but they also added redundant ways of bringing up these new Widgets while removing the Favorite Apps option completely. You used to swipe up on the Watch Face to bring up the Control Center (Which is Great!), but they now moved that to the Side Button in lieu of the Favorite Apps. So now the only way to navigate to a commonly used app, like Settings, is to press the Digital Crown and then scroooollllllllll all the way to the end of your list of apps. I'm not sure how long things will stay this way, or if maybe we'll see options to choose what the Side button does? Doesn't seem like there needs to be two ways to do the same thing while removing something else.
 
The thing that was a little jarring at first for me was the new Home Screen layout. I use the honeycomb grid on my app layout, and before it just expanded out like a spider web but now it doesn’t scroll horizontally at all. It’s just vertical! So I have to learn where all my apps are now.
 
Not only did they remove the ability to swipe between Watch Faces, but they also added redundant ways of bringing up these new Widgets while removing the Favorite Apps option completely. You used to swipe up on the Watch Face to bring up the Control Center (Which is Great!), but they now moved that to the Side Button in lieu of the Favorite Apps. So now the only way to navigate to a commonly used app, like Settings, is to press the Digital Crown and then scroooollllllllll all the way to the end of your list of apps. I'm not sure how long things will stay this way, or if maybe we'll see options to choose what the Side button does? Doesn't seem like there needs to be two ways to do the same thing while removing something else.
I think you’ll be able to double click the crown to bring that up but now you lose getting back to the previous used app.
 
Not only did they remove the ability to swipe between Watch Faces, but they also added redundant ways of bringing up these new Widgets while removing the Favorite Apps option completely. You used to swipe up on the Watch Face to bring up the Control Center (Which is Great!), but they now moved that to the Side Button in lieu of the Favorite Apps. So now the only way to navigate to a commonly used app, like Settings, is to press the Digital Crown and then scroooollllllllll all the way to the end of your list of apps. I'm not sure how long things will stay this way, or if maybe we'll see options to choose what the Side button does? Doesn't seem like there needs to be two ways to do the same thing while removing something else.
Oof. I use Favorites a lot.
 
This is a terrific update -- I don't currently use simple watch faces because of lack of complications.

I've always felt like I had to have multiple faces just to get easy access to all the data I want to see quickly on my watch so this feels like a big upgrade. No more scheduling faces for particular times of day to prioritize on the limited amount of data I could easily see onscreen, and probably a lot less squinting as a compromise for having a data rich face with tiny tiny data, all crammed in.

In watchOS 9 and earlier, you can simply press the side button to access the Dock with your favorites. Not much different from watchOS 10.
 
I assume you can choose to leave the digital crown for use switching between day/night modes if using the Wayfinder watch face on an Ultra?
 
How do you know when, for example, a meeting is coming up, and you have a simple watch face (no complications)?

Are you alerted to check the Smart Stack, in some way?

I think the alert should slide up automatically at the set time, without needing to flick or scroll up.
 
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What I really don't like in watchOS 10 is that Apple removed the ability to swipe between watch faces. Now you have to long press on the watch face to enter edit mode and then swipe :(
This is the only thing I really don't like about the update, but it is the first beta and can change before the final version.
 
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