The Watch Series 4’s bigger screen, thinner body, and class-leading health features make it a truly next-gen smartwatch
VERDICT
This is an irresistible new version of a smartwatch that was already way ahead of its peers. A more comfortable fit and bigger screen make it a tempting upgrade from any previous Apple Watch model, and the new health features make it something we think every iPhone user should look to get.
REASONS TO BUY
- +Big, bright screen
- +Good battery life
- +Impressive health features
- +Better fit in a thinner body
REASONS TO AVOID
- –Running data still behind Garmin
- –The new flush side button is harder to press
Announced alongside the iPhone XS Max at Apple’s September event, the Apple Watch Series 4 is the first time the design and size of the Watch has changed since it was first released. Along with that design, change comes a bigger size of the screen that reaches closer to the edges, a slightly thinner body, and a potentially huge new heart sensor. Do all of these changes make this the definitive Apple Watch – especially with the Series 3 now starting at a tempting £279, while the Series 4 starts at £399?
APPLE WATCH SERIES 4 REVIEW: DESIGN AND FEEL
Instead of 38mm and 42mm heights, you have 40mm and 44mm versions, with bigger screens that nearly reach the edges (it’s very iPhone XS, just without the notch). The Series 4 is also a tad thinner, meaning that the overall volume of the Watch has decreased. We have the 44mm version, which does feel a little different on the wrist compared to the 42mm Series 3. The extra width and height are noticeable on a device you’re used to looking at day after day. On thinner wrists, it can tip it over into feeling maybe even too chunky. Given that the screen on the smaller 40mm model is actually larger than the one on the old bigger 42mm model, we think some people who previously went for the extra readability of the bigger screen might prefer to stick to the smaller model this time.
The change in thinness is only a tiny amount (not even a millimetre), but the new Watch does feel less hefty when you bend your wrist. We think Apple may have changed the curve of the Watch’s rear at the same time as thinning it, giving your skin a little more room to manouevre before it hits the case. The difference is subtle but noticeable – this is good for sports. As part of the changes to the back, the entire underside is now ceramic, instead of just the heart-rate sensor. This is great in terms of making it as hypoallergenic as possible, and with the new extremely sci-fi-styled heart sensor, looks pretty badass. Not that you’ll ever really see it. It feels the same as before – very comfortable.
Even the Apple Watch’s buttons haven’t escaped the changes. The Digital Crown has been thinned a tad, and the grooves that help you grip the slippery case to turn it extends all the way across the side, meaning it’s no harder to rotate. Apple has added haptic feedback to the Digital Crown too, so when you’re scrolling through items on-screen, you feel a little click for each item, which makes it easy to navigate at speed if you know how far you should be going. It’s a really nice little quality-of-life addition. When you’re scrolling something that doesn’t divide so neatly, it makes rapid clicks, just to give you some feedback. One change we’re not so sure about is that the side button is now essentially flush with the case. It’s easy to press (it clicks in a tiny amount, but enough to comfortably feel), but is a little harder to find without looking, and to press rapidly or in motion, since your finger can’t use the edge for purchase anymore.
It’s not hard to find (it takes up most of the edge that isn’t Digital Crown, after all), but you’re just more likely to slip off it instead of pressing it if you’re doing it awkwardly. If you’re trying to quickly double-press for Apple Pay while carrying bags or something, it definitely doesn’t feel like an improvement, even if it looks nice. And, in a somewhat less common occurrence (hopefully), this is also the button you use to trigger Emergency SOS, so making it more difficult to press in any way for the sake of aesthetics isn’t ideal.
APPLE WATCH SERIES 4 REVIEW: SCREEN AND SPEAKERS
Even with all these aesthetic changes, the screen is the stand-out improvement, which isn’t surprising, since it’s the single most important part. The actual displays are around 30% larger than those in the older equivalent models. Apple referred to the old models as 38mm and 42mm, while the new models are 40mm and 44mm – however, these refer to the case size, not the screen size. So, the screen in a 40mm Watch is 30% larger than that in the 38mm Watch, despite the increase in body size being much less than that. In fact, the end result of this is that the new smallest screen size is now bigger than the old biggest screen size. Good news all around – the 38mm Watch was always important for being one of the few smartwatches that fit the average woman’s wrist, but it did feel limiting in how much it showed compared to the 42mm. Now there are no compromises.
In a lot of apps, the extra size currently mostly just means you can see a few more buttons on-screen at once. Developers could try to make more of it, but actually we don’t think they necessarily should – most Watch apps are best when they’re simple ways to access commands, so more commands that are a single tap away is already an advantage.
One small thing about the new screen is that Apple’s using a new technology to underpin the OLED display, called LTPO. The main effect of it is that the screen can now vary its framerate to save battery, so a static digital watch face can refresh at a slower rate than when you’re scrolling through a Messages conversation. Animations and swiping stay smooth, but energy is saved when it can. Clever. Apple says the speaker is 50% louder on the Series 4, and coupled with moving the microphone away from the speaker to the other side of the device (to avoid them interfering with each other), it makes this a pretty good calling device now. Voice are super clear from the new speaker in normal situations, and can be heard well enough even somewhere noisy like a kitchen mid-cooking.
One thing is that Siri’s responses are pretty loud at the default setting of full-volume, and it’s not obvious how to turn it down – it’s not in the Sounds & Haptics section like you might think, but Settings > General > Siri. You’re welcome.
APPLE WATCH SERIES 4 REVIEW: SMARTS AND WATCHOS
Speaking of Siri, let’s go into the smart features of the Watch Series 4. Anticipation is a big area of improvement for smart features in watches and phones (and tends to be touted as AI, even though it isn’t really), and feels especially useful on smartwatches, where you only really want to be tapping to accept or reject something, rather than diving into apps all the time. Apple has done a load of work in this area in watchOS 5, and this is mostly visible in the Siri watch face. It’s not really a looker or especially exciting on the face of it, but it does things like warn you that you need to leave early for your next appointment because the traffic is bad, or display when rain is due to start, so you’re not caught out. The travel stuff is actually just part of general work Apple does when you put an appointment into its calendar with a location, so it’s not unique to the Watch – but the point of the watch is to make it easy for you to be warned that you might need to leave early, and not miss the notification because you left your phone while in a meeting or something.
More importantly, the Siri face learns about other habits over time. If you have a driving playlist for your commute home, it will suggest that when you come to the end of work. It will suggest HomeKit scenes as you near home, so you can turn all the lights on before getting into the house.
This is basically a way for apps to tie into Siri, enabling expansion a little like the way Alexa’s Skills work, except more flexible, because you can set any phrase you like to trigger them. You can even automate it so that a series of these all trigger one after another based on a single phrase (so, you could say ‘Good morning Siri’ as a way of telling your lights to come on, your smart coffee machine to make a cup, and a pump-up playlist to start playing on the bedroom speaker, all at once).
A big part of the Apple Watch is notifications, which can be simple pings to tell you something or can be actionable. In the case of the latter, it can just a button press to snooze a reminder or lead to the ability to compose a message reply, or even to view a live feed of a security camera.
So far, the bigger screen of the Apple Watch Series 4 isn’t being used especially cleverly for this over previous models. There is scope for it to be used better: watchOS 5 allows for more flexibility in what kind of rich options notifications can include, but apps actually have to put this into practice, and we haven’t seen much of that yet (though it hasn’t been long since watchOS 5’s launch).
APPLE WATCH SERIES 4 REVIEW: HEALTH AND FITNESS
One new, very useful, smart feature in watchOS 5 is automatic detection of workouts. If you start jogging without remembering to start a Workout in the app, it will pop up with a message saying that it thinks you’re out for a run, and would you like to start a Workout? Say yes, and it will turn out to have been tracking you since the start, so you don’t lose the first few minutes.
It worked for us for lots of things that have a consistent movement element but didn’t spot when we were doing weights-based exercises, even though it obviously had spotted our elevated heart rate when we looked a the data later. So it can be very handy, but not universally smart just yet. There are lots more upgrades when it comes to health and fitness, though. For a start, there are better running features, which start to nibble at Garmin’s lead in this area. Pace alerts are great for those in distance training, helping you avoid drifting away from your target as you get tired and lose focus. Cadence (AKA steps per minute) is also a really useful metric since it helps you hit the most efficient levels for longer runs, and avoid over-exerting yourself (keeping injuries at bay).
They’re both great to have for people who are really getting into their running, but they’re still fairly basic as far as ‘advanced’ running data goes. A Garmin system can include ground contact time, stride length, vertical oscillation (i.e. ‘bounce’) and loads more the provide upgrades to your entire technique.
It’s nice that Watch models get closer to this, and for a lot of people it’s probably a good balance for the amount of data (enough to help them improve, but not enough to be confusing), but it’s still not at the front of the pack. Other new fitness features include specific workout tracking for yoga and hiking and more competition options with your contacts.
The thing is, you will be able to do all this… at some point in the future. Medical-grade equipment needs medical-grade approval, and Apple only has that in the US so far. The Watch Series 4 is with the appropriate EU regulatory body, but it meant we couldn’t even try out the feature. It still takes your heart rate the other way, though, and we found this to be a tiny bit more accurate than the Series 3. Using both together for the same workouts, we found that the Series 3 would sometimes record outlier high and low rates well beyond the overall range for the rest of the minute, while the Series 4 didn’t. Other than that, the recorded heart rate ranges were essentially identical, but the reduction in little errors is nice. It also seemed to be able to follow rapid increases in exertion more quickly, but this will only be of use if you look at the data in a more fine-grained way than Apple’s Health app offers by default.
APPLE WATCH SERIES 4 REVIEW: PERFORMANCE AND BATTERY
Apple says that the new processor in the Apple Watch Series 4 is around twice as powerful as that in the Series 3, which never exactly felt like a slouch to us, given how light most of the tasks you actually do on a smartwatch are. Predictably enough, then, the Series 4 is super-snappy in use. Switching between different watch faces with a swipe is instantaneous, and bringing up the app switcher or main menu of apps is equally quick.
Scrolling through giant Messages conversations is totally smooth all the way – no stuttering, no waiting. You can zoom in and out of photos with no judder at all. At no point does it feel like you’re on an underpowered computer, which the early models definitely could at times. Opening apps tends to show a little loading screen, but only for about half a second. It used to be a big problem with the Watch that, while the dream was that having apps on your wrist let you do things faster, actually it was quicker to just get your phone out of your pocket. Now, the only thing holding you back is the size of the screen (though even that’s been improved, of course).
Really, the only waiting you’ll do on the device is likely to be network related, but even that feels a little faster. The new ceramic back of the Watch is made to provide a better signal for its antennas, and the connection between our Series 4 and our iPhone XS Max does feel more seamless than ever. Calls come in instantly on both, and something you do on one reflects rapidly on the other.
Opening the Maps and telling it to load our current location took about four seconds for everything to appear, but then it was much quicker after that – zooming out, it took about half a second to load the county, then zooming back in and scrolling around, everywhere we looked took under a second to fill in points of interest and so on.
We fired up the Home app to look at a stream from our living room video camera, and it took less than a second to connect, giving us a really clear live video right away. When it comes to battery, we find that Apple takes a weird tack. It claims 18 hours for the Apple Watch Series 4’s battery life, which is the same as the Series 3. But we have regularly gone for three or four days without charging the Series 3 before it’s died (turning it off overnight, though).
Apple says that the 18-hour battery life is based on a particular user profile that it’s come up with, and assumes things like an hour of cellular-only use with no phone (which won’t apply to every owner anyway), some GPS usage, and generally a bunch of things that would actually make it a hardcore day of Watch use compared to the average person.
If you have a much more common day that includes, say, about an hour of active workout time (where it’s constantly measuring heart rate, instead of just periodically in the background), and then for the rest of the day it’s just sending notifications a few times an hour, and you’re using it for a bit of music remote control and, well, checking the time, you can expect to use about 30% of the battery in a day.
This is about the same as the Series 3 under watchOS 5 (which seems to be using a little more power than watchOS 4 in our experience but only by a few percent).
So, yes, in this kind of use, you can get a few days out of the Watch Series 4 before it needs charging. If you also go for a GPS-tracked run (and especially if you then also play music from it streaming to Bluetooth headphones), you’ll cruise to more like the 50% mark in a day, depending on how long your run is.
One thing Apple noted was that the Watch can now last for longer when tracking running data and GPS – it can now hit six hours, whereas as previous models were more like five. Apple specifically wanted to reach this target, because it means it can now last the distance for most marathon runners. Lots of marathoners will end up with times between five and six hours, and so some of them were finding the Watch didn’t quite make it to the end, whereas it should now for the majority. We haven’t run any marathons since getting the Watch and don’t have any plans to in the next two days, so we’ll have to trust Apple on this.
APPLE WATCH SERIES 4 REVIEW: VERDICT
When you first put on the Apple Watch Series 4, the changes from the previous version feel really subtle. The screen doesn’t necessarily jump out at you because of the way Apple uses dark backgrounds, the extra thinness is slight, the speed boost isn’t something you notice most of the time…
But then we went back to the Series 3 during our time reviewing the Series 4, and suddenly all the ways those small things add up was clear. The Series 3 is still a great product, but the Series 4 is more than the sum of its improvements and is comfortably the best smartwatch we’ve ever used. It’s better for more active users because of its more forgiving fit; it’s better for productivity fans because of its zippier apps and networking; it’s better for the small-wristed because you get a good-size screen in the smaller body, and it’s an amazing product for people vulnerable to falls or heart problems.
It’s better for everyone is what we’re saying. And with these kinds of health features, Apple has shifted our thinking from it being a product that’s nice to have but is by no means essential, to one that we hope as many people as possible can own just in case it saves their life. In fact, with health tech this potentially important, we find ourselves wondering if Apple shouldn’t break the Watch’s exclusive tie to iOS, and let everyone take advantage of what it can do.