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New renders of the upcoming Apple Watch Pro have given us the best look yet at what's expected to become the newest high-end Apple Watch, featuring an all-new design, a larger and flat display, and a new physical button.

ian-watch-pro-1.jpeg

The new renders, created by concept designer Ian Zelbo in collaboration with Parker Ortolani, are based on CAD renders of the Apple Watch Pro shared yesterday. Until yesterday, little was known about the Apple Watch Pro's expected design other than to say it would be more rugged and durable for athletes, hikers, runners, and more.

The Apple Watch Pro will feature the first significant redesign of the Apple Watch since the Series 4, rethinking the case design to become less curved with an entirely flat display. The display on the Apple Watch Pro is expected to be considerably bigger than the Series 7 and the upcoming Series 8, thanks to the flatter top design.

ian-watch-pro-2.jpeg

Fitting with its more rugged look and feel, the Apple Watch Pro features all-new protruding housing for the Digital Crown and the Side Button. Both are housed in a mold on the right side of the watch that protrudes outwards, which could make them more easily accessible. The Digital Crown itself is also being redesigned to feature more prominent indents.

ian-watch-pro-3.jpeg

On the left side of the watch, the Apple Watch Pro is expected to feature an all-new physical button similar to the Side Button. The button is rumored to be configurable to a user's liking. It could be customized to open watchOS apps, begin specific workouts, or even quickly run shortcuts without navigating the watch itself.

With the larger display on the Apple Watch Series 7, Apple updated visual elements across watchOS to take better advantage of the added real estate. The same is expected with the Apple Watch Pro and its larger display. Compared to the Series 7's display size of 1.691-inches and 1.901-inches on the 41mm and 45mm sizes, the Apple Watch Pro screen could measure around 1.99-inches in a 49mm case.

ian-watch-pro-4.jpeg

On the Apple Watch Pro, customers can expect new watch faces that take advantage of the larger display, according to Bloomberg's Mark Gurman. Also, according to Gurman, expect Apple to release a new line of watch bands designed specifically for the Apple Watch Pro. Existing watch bands are expected to be somewhat compatible with the Apple Watch Pro but may not be an exact fit.

watchos-9-workout-app.jpg

Changes coming to watchOS 9 that show additional on screen

The new watch faces could have room to display metrics from workouts and health data gathered by the watch. The new watch faces come in addition to improvements made in watchOS 9 that seem tailored towards a larger Apple Watch, such as refinements during Workouts that show additional metrics all in one screen.

Beyond a new design and a larger display, the Apple Watch Pro will likely benefit from all the improvements coming to the Apple Watch Series 8, including a new body temperature sensor. The body temperature sensor, unlike typical thermometers, is unlikely to provide wearers a direct reading of their body temperature in its early iteration.

The Apple Watch Pro, with its all-new design, larger display, and more durable materials, is expected to cost somewhere between $900 and $1,000. The new watch will be the most expensive Apple Watch yet, likely replacing the Apple Watch Edition at the top of the lineup. The Apple Watch Pro, the Apple Watch Series 8, a new Apple Watch SE, new iPhones, and more are all rumored to be on the agenda for Apple's "Far out" event tomorrow.

Article Link: New Renders Offer Best Look Yet at Alleged Apple Watch 'Pro' Ahead of Tomorrow's Event
Like having Big Ben on your wrist with heart rate functionality, ugly
 
this trope of pre-event article makes me laugh every time...

whats the point? it's just some dude aping an apple marketing piece to show off their L33t gfx skillz
 
For future reference, you go to the Watch app on your phone, then general and choose "Watch orientation". there you can set it to left or right wrist.
And you can also choose which side you want the crown on. I have my watch on the right wrist, crown on the side opposite my wrist, so I don't activate Siri when doing floor work like HIIT or yoga.
 
  • Like
Reactions: GregoriusM
Safari on a watch o_O
Most of us use omicron browser for a year: useful when you need a browser but watchOS make troubles. So Safari simple doesn’t work. By the way this enormous screens with the same crap sw is something yet seen on iPhone, iPad, Mac: its only a mktg rule to sell the same **** a bigger price. -Air, Pro, Plus, Max, Pro Max, Ultra, its for price, nothing else. This is the best Cinese Apple I know from 1984.
 
  • Disagree
Reactions: GregoriusM
I bet the protrusion isn’t just an added button, but rather space for more battery. And if it’s not, then Apple is adding a lot of material for no good reason because an extra button could have been flush mounted to the case, as it is on the other side.

And this extra button is going to be specifically for one-button activation of power-save mode, to make it easier to get more than 24 hours of battery life out of the device.
 
No it won’t… not by a long way.

I remember Apple’s first gen Apple Watch. They produced a high-end Apple Watch Edition 38mm 18-karat yellow gold case for $17,000. It was aimed at celebrities and ultra rich…

I might be wrong but I think it was the first and last time Apple tried that as they quickly retired the product by series 2.
Yes - I was working Apple retail when those were released. We had multiple armed guards present when they were shipped to the store and watching us while we installed them in the display cases.
 
The way I type and sometimes bend my hand/wrist upwards, this notch thing is going to get in the way and I think be painful - its unfortunate. Why did they have to add this thing, it seems very unnecessary.
 
ouruniverse06131986 said:

BREAKING NEWS:
——————————-
anyone noticed that it LITERALLY says “apps like hiking and safari”

Safari is coming to the Apple Watch. Finally. Do an article on this.

This is the real story here! 😂😂😂

LOL!

As written, it tells us that neither hiking nor Safari will be coming to the watch. “Like” = similar to. “Such as“ would = examples of.

So, “apps like hiking and Safari” means ones similar to them, but not those. Perhaps beach-combing and Internet Explorer! 🏝 🏄‍♂️

Chrome on a titanium Watch, anyone?!

🙈

When I first read that wording, it seemed that the mocked-up ad copy was suggesting apps had gained sentience — that AIs enjoy hiking and Safari! The end of sedentary apps. They like to hike and surf!

In any case, it would be interesting to see what web surfin' is like on a 2” board! 🏄‍♀️
 
  • Haha
Reactions: AppleDumplings
Thank you for the reply only reason why I’ve been following this thread for the past few hours.

I ask cause I’ve been using only battery minimal watch faces lately.
I don’t pay much attention to battery as I just throw it on the charger every night. It’s purely an appearance thing for me and I’ve gotten too used to all that info at a glance.
 
The easiest way to protect the digital crown and side button from accidental bumps is just to turn it around and reorient the face. It took me all of 72 hours to figure this out after buying my first watch. It certainly doesn't require an absurdly large protrusion.

Apple is clearly committed to continuing its awful tradition of making everything you need to be functional much too small and everything you'd like small and light unnecessarily large.
 
I have a stupid question for anyone who owns an Apple Watch. Is it bi-directional. Meaning I can wear it on either wrist and have it orient properly.

Cause I notice that the crown is on the right hand side of the watch. If I wear it on my right wrist so that the crown is on the left will the watch be upside down....or orient itself correctly for me being left handed?


Thanks for anyone's info. I can live in a right handed world, Just prefer not to. :)

Tom
There's an orientation setting to keep the display right side up.
Wearing it on my left wrist, I had to setup my watch with the crown toward my elbow, or the back of my hand would activate the crown while riding my mountain bike. It works as you'd want it.
 
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