Become a MacRumors Supporter for $50/year with no ads, ability to filter front page stories, and private forums.

MacRumors

macrumors bot
Original poster
Apr 12, 2001
65,220
33,489


The iOS 17 update that Apple plans to show off in June will include several new health-related features, according to Bloomberg's Mark Gurman. There will be a feature for tracking mood, plus Apple plans to bring the Health app to the iPad for the first time.

iOS-17-Mock-Health-Feature-Pink.jpg

Apple has long had a Health app, but it has been exclusively available on the iPhone, something that could change with the launch of iOS 17. The Health app on iPad would give users more screen real estate for viewing health metrics, electrocardiogram results, prescriptions, lab tests from doctors, and more. Apple's aim is to improve the popularity of the Health app in healthcare settings, where tablets are widely used.

In addition to bringing the Health app to the iPad, Apple plans to introduce a new emotion tracker, which will let users keep track of their mood, answer questions about their day, and view the results over time. In the future, algorithms could be used to determine a user's mood through their speech patterns, what they've typed, and other data, but Apple will start with mood tracking.

The mood tracking function that Apple has in mind for the Health app in iOS 17 will be separate from the journaling app that was rumored last week. According to Gurman, the journaling app will not be a health feature, but will instead serve as an extension of the Find My service and other location features, as Apple wants to expand the social networking capabilities of Find My.

The Health app is also set to gain new features for managing vision conditions like nearsightedness. As previously rumored, the AR/VR headset Apple has in the works will include health-centric features, such as a meditation app that will walk users through calming meditations.

Next year, Apple will expand its health offerings with a new health coaching service. Codenamed Quartz, the AI-based service will help encourage users to exercise, improve their eating habits, and take steps to improve their sleep. The service will use data from the Apple Watch to make personalized suggestions and create tailored coaching programs, with Apple planning to charge a monthly fee. While the service is planned for 2024, Gurman cautions that it could be "canceled or postponed."

Other major future health plans include blood pressure monitoring for the Apple Watch and noninvasive glucose monitoring, both functions that Apple has been working on for many years.

Article Link: iOS 17 to Include Mood Tracker and Health App for iPad, AI-Based Health Coaching Service Coming in 2024
 
Last edited:
  • Like
Reactions: Justin Cymbal

BobSc

Suspended
Mar 29, 2020
616
1,143
I can't trust Apple's AI to reliably set a 3 minute countdown timer on a HomePod. Apple wants me to trust AI to reach my health goals?

Come on Apple, if you are serious about AI, you need to be able to walk before you can run.
What are you talking about? I just told my Homepod to set a 3 minute countdown timer and it did. Couldn't have been more simple. Are the Apple haters just making stuff up? I think so.
 

ProfessionalFan

macrumors 603
Sep 29, 2016
5,829
14,795
What are you talking about? I just told my Homepod to set a 3 minute countdown timer and it did. Couldn't have been more simple. Are the Apple haters just making stuff up? I think so.
It is hit and miss if you ask it to do simple things like that. Sure, it does sometimes work flawlessly but I have witnessed it mess up a simple request like that before.
 

coffeemilktea

macrumors 65816
Nov 25, 2022
1,278
5,670
Apple plans to introduce a new emotion tracker, which will let users keep track of their mood
Codenamed Quartz, the AI-based service will help encourage users to exercise, improve their eating habits

So when I'm in the mood for Taco Bell, only for Quartz to tell me to go eat a salad instead, will the new emotion tracker register my sadness and disappointment at not getting my hands on a Crunchwrap Supreme? 🌮😞
 

daanodinot

macrumors 6502
Mar 26, 2015
385
930
Why not also port the health app to macOS? This discrepancy of software features between ios and mac devices has always been weird to me. With M1 Macs and catalyst, it has never been easier to close that gap
Just goes to show how low our expectations have fallen for Mac software. Apple used to be the best desktop app developer. Period. Now we're content to let them port iOS apps. :rolleyes:
 

ProfessionalFan

macrumors 603
Sep 29, 2016
5,829
14,795
The health app is one of my most used apps. Very excited for updates. Definitely recommend others use it too. What you track is what you improve.
Agreed. I just wish I had a friend who was interested in viewing my health data. I need some extra motivation as weird as that may sound. If I knew someone was seeing my numbers, I'd work harder to improve them.
 

ipedro

macrumors 603
Nov 30, 2004
6,309
8,722
Toronto, ON
I can't trust Apple's AI to reliably set a 3 minute countdown timer on a HomePod. Apple wants me to trust AI to reach my health goals?

Come on Apple, if you are serious about AI, you need to be able to walk before you can run.

You're confusing AI with Siri. Apple has a series of AI features that perform so well, you don't think of them as AI. Lifting an object from an image just as good or better than Adobe Sensei (done on-device, no cloud computing), word recognition in photos and across the user's entire ecosystem of content. Computational photography. That's all artificial intelligence and machine learning. A fitness coach would work very much like that – nothing to do with Siri listening to commands and interpreting them.
 

ipedro

macrumors 603
Nov 30, 2004
6,309
8,722
Toronto, ON
How do you “manage” nearsightedness other than putting on a pair of glasses/contacts or possibly getting corrective surgery?

You can offset an image or text to make up for a blurry appearance, blurring it in the other direction to produce a sharp image, if you know precisely how far the viewer's eye is from the image or text. Brilliant use of the TrueDepth camera array if they can pull this off.
 
Register on MacRumors! This sidebar will go away, and you'll see fewer ads.