I got my s6 replaced a few weeks ago because it had under 80 percent capacity... Still using the new s6 and couldn't think why I should upgrade - to be frank I mostly use it as a regular watch Answer from e-coder on reddit.com
There's no need to entirely rehash ... says is 20 percent faster than the prior generation, a brighter display, three new color choices, a new blood oxygenation measurement, an always-on altimeter, faster charging, and the U1 chip...
I was an Apple Watch user from series 1 up until series 7 or so when I switched to Garmin.
Since late summer I feel like I have lost much of my will to be active and I’m just tired.
In my search for motivation I’ve been thinking about the Apple Watch rings and if trying to focus on filling them each day might help.
I’ve been looking at just picking up a new SE (to also get one of the nice looking Nike bands). But I just checked out the used market and saw that a used series 6 for example was about half the price of a new SE.
Is the series 6 still usable today? Would I be able to take advantage of the new watch os features for sleep and training load for example?
how bad would a 75% battery capacity be? The seller states that it still lasts for a day but I suspect that’s not if I do any workouts?
Edit: I picked up a series 7 with 83% battery for about the same price. Good to be back 😎
Apple Watch Series 6 and SE Review: Watch Out for the Upsell
Apple Watch Series 6 and SE Review: Watch Out for the Upsell *Apple’s latest watches do very few new things—but if you’re a first-time buyer or upgrading from a much older model, there’s a lot to consider * By | Photography by Kenny Wassus/The Wall Street Journal Sept. 24, 2020 9:00 am ET /r/ What is most important to you in a smartwatch? Sure, the top-of-the-line Apple Watch Series 6 can do that stuff but so can models that cost far less. If you have already got a two- or three-year-old Apple Watch, the gains with this new model aren’t substantial. Same screen, same battery life, same core functionality. And I found this year’s standout health feature—a blood-oxygen sensor—not ready for prime time, not to mention not useful. Plus, if you’re a first timer, or in need of an upgrade, Apple now has two other lower-cost options: the Apple Watch SE and Series 3. Actually, make that three: The best deal going right now might be a refurbished Series 5. It is OK to be confused. I’m here for you. After testing all the models last week—along with the $330 Fitbit FIT 0.23% Sense—I have arrived at a new theory of Watch-Nomics: You should upgrade your Apple Watch every three to five years. Any sooner, and spending more on a watch doesn’t mean proportionally more features. So make the call on your needed features, then make a purchase. The Choices Remember your SAT multiple-choice tactics? Eliminate two choices and you suddenly have a 50/50 shot at a correct pick. Buying an Apple Watch is like that: Do not collect them all! The Apple Watch Series 3, SE and Series 6, all on one wrist, from left to right. A) Apple Watch Series 6 ($399): This one has the larger screen introduced in 2018, with an always-on display showing the time. It now has a slightly faster processor, slightly faster charging and the full health package, including an ECG electrical heart-rate sensor and new blood-oxygen sensor. B) Refurbished Apple Watch Series 5 ($329): It’s basically a Series 6 without the blood-oxygen sensor. Apple stopped marketing it, but at time of publication, you could still find some variations in its refurbished store. C) Apple Watch Series SE ($279): This resembles a Series 5 or 6, but without the always-on display, ECG or blood-oxygen sensor. It still has heart-rate tracking and notifications for high, low and irregular heart rate, as well as fall detection. D) Apple Watch Series 3 ($199): OK, almost there. This one has an older design with a smaller screen, slightly shorter battery life and slower performance. It also has heart-rate tracking and heart-rate notifications, but no fall detection. The Features I anticipate most will choose A or C, especially if Apple runs out of refurbished Series 5s. So the real question is this: Are a blood-oxygen sensor, an ECG and an always-on display worth $120? When I got the blood-oxygen sensor to work, most of my readings were in the healthy high-90% range. During a visit to my doctor, the watch even compared point for point with a medical-grade vital-signs monitor. However, often when I would manually initiate the 15-second test, I would get an “Unsuccessful Measurement,” indicating that the test didn’t work. Sometimes I would get a lower reading, like 94%—even when my trusty $45 Walgreen’s pulse oximeter said 99%. The little disco ball of green and red lights on the back of the watch needs to be steady, flush and tight against the skin to get a reading. The new, wonderfully comfortable Solo Loop straps help with that, but apparently mine was a bit too loose. Sliding the watch up my wrist a bit more has improved this. Still, using this is far too unreliable and inaccurate—even if Apple doesn’t suggest this for medical use. The Series 6 measures blood-oxygen levels, though not as reliably as a dedicated pulse oximeter. Often after the 15-second blood-oxygen test, this "Unsuccessful Measurement" notification would appear. Sliding the watch up the wrist tended to fix the issue. An Apple spokesman provided this statement: “The Blood Oxygen feature has been rigorously tested across a wide spectrum of users and across all skin tones. For a small percentage of users, various factors may make it difficult to get a blood oxygen measurement including motion, watch placement on the wrist, skin temperature and skin perfusion.” But even if this all worked, there isn’t a clear enough reason for me to need this on my wrist all the time. Why shouldn’t I just pull out a pulse oximeter if I’m worried? While a low blood-oxygen level can be a gauge for the severity of Covid-19 and other conditions, there is no Apple Watch alert if yours drops below a certain threshold. Apple says this is a wellness and fitness feature, not a health one, and it is beneficial to those who travel to places with higher altitudes or who are involved in performance training. Also, much like the heart-rate sensor, which is proving to be central to Covid-19 wearable studies, the blood-oxygen sensor can now be used to collect data to build detection algorithms and further medical research. As for the always-on display, while I do appreciate being able to glance down and see the time without tapping on my wrist, I have had it disabled on my Series 5 for most of the year to eke out a bit more battery life. I’m even more interested in saving battery now that sleep tracking arrived with WatchOS 7. No matter which model you pick, you have to recharge every day or so. If you sleep with your watch, you have to charge it when you wake up. Compare that to the $330 Fitbit Sense, which I charge every five days or so. It keeps tabs on your temperature, blood oxygen and heart rate. That said, it lacks a lot of the non-health functionality of the Apple Watch, and Fitbit’s software can be slow and buggy. The ECG is really the only feature I would consider for the extra money. You have to follow your heart on that one (sorry, had to.) It’s a shame Apple pulled a vital health feature from the former Series 4 or 5 model it’s now calling SE. The Future Rewind the clock to 5½ years ago to when the Apple Watch first shipped, and the technical leaps are massive—waterproofing, bigger screens, better battery life, advanced sensors. Alongside those leaps, the product found its central purpose: fitness and health. But it was mostly there with the Series 4. So why has development slowed to a snail’s pace since then? There could be two reasons: Apple engineers haven’t quite gotten the next major improvements right (multiday battery life in a thinner package), and Apple realized no one wants to buy a watch every two years like a smartphone. It makes you wonder why we need yearly updates on these at all? The new Solo Loop bands don't have any clasps or buckles. You just slide your wrist into the stretch band. Big leaps are still coming. I had a vision of it when I was hooked up to that monitor at my doctor’s office. The Series 6 already does two of the four readings: pulse and blood-oxygen levels. Temperature and blood pressure? Not yet. By combining more advanced health sensors and software that detects fluctuations, the Apple Watch and other wearables are going to become our ever-present health care minders. In the here and now, though, the answer isn’t to buy a new one whenever a sensor gets added—especially when it doesn’t necessarily work. If you have an older model, grab a pulse oximeter from your drugstore and the super comfy $49 Solo Loop band from an Apple Store and call it a day. If it ain’t broke, don’t Series 6 it. More on reddit.com
r/AppleWatch
20
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September 24, 2020
Everything in Apple Watch Series 6
Oof, kinda underwhelmed :(
Told myself I would wait a year when series 5 came out, guessing I will probably wait another to upgrade my series 4
See apple.com/batteries and apple.com/watch/battery.html for more information. Apple Watch Series 6 require an iPhone 6s or later with iOS 14 or later.
Options from $169.99 – $179.99Restored Apple Watch Series 6 (GPS + Cellular, 40 mm) Blue Aluminum Case with Deep Navy Sport Band Bundle 5 Bonus Bands, Charging Stand, Screen Protector, & 2 amp charger (Refurbished)
With an Apple watch on your wrist you can track your workouts, sleep, and steps. Available in 40mm and 44mm sizes, Apple Watch Series 6 has a large always-on Retina display that’s 2.5 times brighter outdoors.
PRODUCT OVERVIEW:Apple Watch Series 6 lets you measure your blood oxygen level with a revolutionary new sensor and app. Take an ECG from your wrist. See your fitness metrics on the enhanced Always-On Retina display, now 2.5x brighter outdoors when your wrist is down.
The Apple Watch Series 6 is the 6th generation of smartwatches of the Apple Watch lineup that was announced by Apple in a special event on September 15, 2020 and released on September 18, succeeding the Apple Watch Series 5.[1] The Series 6 ...
Answer: Hello. there are two variants and two sizes available for the apple watch, the one with GPS alone and the other one with GPS+SIM support. and two sizes 38mm and 42mm. Coming back to your question now. Its totally upto you to buy the apple watch or not, it has a blood oxygen monitor syste...
The Apple Watch Series 6 was Apple’s flagship smartwatch from October 2020 to September 2021. Available in aluminum, stainless steel, and titanium, it featured for the first time a blood-oxygen sensor and a brighter always-on display.
I'm also a yoga instructor, and have been actively teaching group and private classes for nearly a decade. ... OUR EXPERT A longtime tech journalist and yoga teacher, Angela guides PCMag's coverage of fitness, smart home, cameras, and home entertainment. ... https://www.pcmag.com/reviews/apple-watch-series-6 ... A smarter choice than ever
September 25, 2020 - It has a 2mm bigger display (but bigger isn't necessarily a positive, and there are two sizes of each anyway) yet a smaller battery. Featurewise, it adds the ambient noise detection and fall detection and... that's it? No, the SE exists for one reason only - for people who absolutely want something that looks like the newest watch yet costs less than the Series 6.
Apple Watch Series 6 (GPS, 40mm) - Space Gray Aluminum Case with Black Sport Band (Renewed) · Apple Watch Series 6 (GPS, 44mm) - Space Gray Aluminum Case with Black Sport Band (Renewed) · Apple Watch Series 6 (GPS + Cellular, 44mm) - Space Gray Aluminum Case with Black Sport Band (Renewed)
2 days ago - Starting with the Series 4, Apple added electrical sensors to the Digital Crown and back, allowing the Apple Watch to take electrocardiogram (ECG) readings; the device won FDA clearance in October 2018, becoming the first consumer device capable of taking an ECG. A blood oxygen monitor was added with the Series 6 in 2020, albeit as a "wellness" device not capable of diagnosing a medical condition.
Depth to 6m / 20 ft. Depth to 40m / 130 ft. Depth to 40m / 130 ft. ... Hypertension notifications are not intended for use by people under 22 years old, those who have been previously diagnosed with hypertension, or pregnant persons. ... The ECG app is available on Apple Watch Series 4 and later (excluding Apple Watch SE models) and can generate an ECG similar to a single-lead electrocardiogram.
Apple Watch Series 6 watch. Announced Sep 2020. Features 1.78″ display, Apple S6 chipset, 304 mAh battery, 32 GB storage, 1000 MB RAM, Sapphire crystal glass.