I’ve been turned off smartwatches for a while now. Whether it was their poor battery life and uninteresting design, I’ve found I much prefer the simplicity and elegance ofmy analogue timepieces. Since the pandemic though, things have changed.
In order to get out the house and avoid screens, I now walk about 10km a day, time I use to catch up on audiobooks and podcasts. Thing is, I’d like to do this while leaving my phone at home. I’ve finally found my reason to get a smartwatch — and Google has just made this decision easier.
The company isworking on a major update to its Wear OS platformto make the offline audio experience for wearables far slicker and more useful later this year.
You’ll basically be able to download music and podcasts on apps like Spotify and YouTube Music to your watch, so you don’t need to carry your phone along for your morning stroll. As someone who hates strapping on a 6.7-inch phone to their arm in a sweaty holder thing twice a day, this will be a godsend.
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Here’s Bjorn Kilburn, the director of Product Management for Wear, talking about YouTube Music on smartwatches (starts at 2:38):
For those wondering if this sounds familiar, let me clear the air: asThe Verge noted, a few pricey Garmin and Samsung wearables supported offline Spotify music storage and playback, and LTE-equipped Apple Watch models can stream tunes too.
This development changes things. It opens up the possibility of listening to your audio on a wider (and hopefully cheaper) range of smartwatches, as well as consuming less power since they won’t need an LTE connection to stream content from the cloud.
I imagine this major update will eventually see more services get on board, and I hope Amazon gets in on the action with Audible too. I’d like nothing more than to ditch my phone and carryThe Three-Body Problemwith me on my next jog — and I’ll happily switch from my trusty self-winding Orient to a smartwatch for this.
Story byAbhimanyu Ghoshal
Abhimanyu is TNW’s Managing Editor, and is all about personal devices, Asia’s tech ecosystem, as well as the intersection of technology and(show all)Abhimanyu is TNW’s Managing Editor, and is all about personal devices, Asia’s tech ecosystem, as well as the intersection of technology and culture. Hit him up onTwitter, or write in:abhimanyu@thenextweb.com.
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