Posted on 09/20/2017 2:48:18 PM PDT by Swordmaker
Apples new Series 3 smartwatch starts shipping this Friday, and the biggest feature change between last years model and this new Watch is that it has built-in cellular capabilities.
Except, that cell service isnt entirely reliable.
While writing my review of the Apple Watch Series 3 with LTE capabilities, I experienced notable connectivity issues. The new Watch appeared to try to connect to unknown WiFi networks instead of connecting to cellular, when I was out and about without my phone. (The issues are laid out in much more detail in the review.)
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Apple Watch Series 3 with LTE review: missed connections
Within the first couple days of experiencing this, Apple replaced my first review unit with a second one, but that one proved to be problematic, too.
Eventually, the company issued an official statement, acknowledging the issue. We have discovered that when Apple Watch Series 3 joins unauthenticated Wi-Fi networks without connectivity, it may at times prevent the watch from using cellular, an Apple spokesperson said in an emailed statement. We are investigating a fix for a future software release.
Unfortunately, we still dont know when that software release is expected, or exactly how it will fix the issue of the Watch connecting to cellular networks when its supposed to.
But as far as Apple Watch releases go, this marks the first time that Apple has acknowledged a known problem with the smartwatch just after pre-orders, and right before it officially ships.
Oh MY,..... better go find some illegals to fix it!
Well, there goes my Christmas present......................
It doesn’t matter. The Apple fanatics will buy anything in any condition. Then they’ll look you in the eye and tell you it’s flawless.
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I'm surprised their beta testers did not run into this in the wild. That tells me it was probably a last minute change that somehow get added that didn't quite get cleaned up in the Gold Master. . . Probably a commented command that did not get deleted and re-instated on final after testing in a laboratory setting where there was no handoff taking place.
I expect Apple will send out a fix next week if not sooner. This is the kind of handoff that is handled routinely with the iPhone and LTE iPads multiple times a day, so the code is boilerplate. It just needs to be bolted in place in the watchOS.
I ordered one for my wife (late - I didnt wake up at 3am as I planned) on the first day but expected delivery date isnt until 10/10 - 10/17. This minor software problem will likely be fixed before we get the watch.
Unless you need to be for your job, why does anyone want to be ‘connected’ all the time? I guess the world is just passing me by.
I discovered this bug months ago with the previous version of iOS when my phone always seemed to want to connect to the WiFi OBD2 scan tool dongle I have connected to my cars on-board diagnostics port. The dongle communicates via WiFi (not Bluetooth) but doesnt serve as an internet connected hotspot.
Whenever Im in my car, the iPhone automatically connects to the WiFi OBD2 scan gizmo and prevents LTE wireless internet from working unless I tell my iPhone to forget the scan tool as a network. I suppose that the iWatch3 is unable to tell itself to forget the non-internet enabled WiFi network?
Apple stock got smacked around today for this seemingly minor issue. I bet Apple has it resolved via update before the watches are even delivered.
Was this designed by Goodwill Industries engineers? Sounds like a dumb ass screw up.
My guess is that this slipped by QA because it is intentional behavior and therefore not regarded as a defect. To test whether a WiFi network is truly active or not, the connecting device is going to have to transmit a packet.
What is the threshold for a keep alive polling interval? People in dense public WiFi areas walk through a kaleidoscope of overlapping signals. Is everyones WiFi device supposed to send a packet storm of TCP ack/responses in an attempt to connect to a newer stronger signal every 100ms?
I have a notebook with a netstumbler module running sometimes when Im on the road which collects found networks into a database without discrimination. I see everyones devices broadcasting a network, from phones with enabled hotspots to distant laser printers in homes and businesses, RF guns at Petco, and even vehicles themselves are mobile hotspots straight off the showroom floor, like every Chevy Silverado even if the old coot driving it doesnt even know hes doing it. A typical cop car might be broadcasting four networks alone including the personal phone on a policemans duty belt.
You cant just have a flurry of zillions of competing connectivity requests from overly talkative devices saying Yoo-Hoo?! ten times a second.
Good! Sounds like a software fix. If it was a hardware problem they would be in trouble.
Yeah, it is too bad too. Because it would be nice to leave that dongle connected and monitor things.
A better question is why do you care if they do?
“A better question is why do you care if they do?”
I wasn’t being critical. It was an honest question. I have to be ‘tethered’ because of what I do for a living, and I guess I just would like to be unreachable and ‘free’ sometimes.
Poorly constructed or No testing.
Code testing has been a discipline
for over a half a century.
Or just poor management.
I’m really shocked this wasn’t found sooner. Did Apple not have field testing of this Apple Watch for a significant time - and would appear to be a significant fumble, uncharacteristic for Apple.
I’m glad I’m not in the market for, nor placed a preorder for an LTE Apple Watch - a week out from “shipping” is not a good place to be with a major flaw in the software. If Steve were still running things, there would be proverbial heads rolling...
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