Music streaming on Apple Watch Series 3 is a surprisingly nice feature to have
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If you followed The Verge’s earlier coverage of Apple Watch Series 3 LTE, then you know that I encountered a connectivity bug during my initial tests of the watch (one that was later fixed in a software update), and that the watch launched without its promised music streaming feature.
Music streaming from a wrist watch is, both in concept
and in practice, a big thing. Almost every wrist wearable we’ve tried
and tested that offers “music” is really doing one of two things: it’s
playing music that was locally stored or cached on the watch in advance,
or it’s offering wrist-based controls for music that’s actually playing
on your phone. What Apple promised with the LTE-equipped Series 3 watch
was true, phone-free streaming from the wrist, directly into your
Bluetooth headphones.
I finally had the chance to use this over the past couple
weeks. I slapped on the same Apple Watch Series 3 I tested back in
September, and re-subscribed to Apple Music ($10 per month). Turns out
it’s a great little feature to have.
Streaming music does drain the watch’s battery life — a
lot — which isn’t a surprise, but still something to be aware of. And
the only way to search for brand-new stuff from the watch is to use your
voice, which can be awkward. But again, this is the first time I’ve put
on a smartwatch and been able to request almost any music on demand
from the watch itself, no phone required.
There are two separate apps for music listening on the
watch: the Music app, and a Radio app. On other Apple devices, Radio is a
tab within Apple Music; here it’s its own app. The Music app is where
you find your pre-synced playlists (just like you would on non-LTE Apple
Watches), and where, if you’re paying $10 per month, you can pull up
any other music. The Radio app is free to use, and it’s where you listen
to Beats 1, Apple’s free radio station, or three non-Apple streaming
radio stations: ESPN, CBS, and NPR.
Having two separate Apple-made music apps on the watch
seems nonsensical until you start using them. Even after that, it’s
still a little confusing. To the best of my knowledge, the apps are
split up on the watch simply because there are too many features and
tabs to cram into one smartwatch app.
When you use your voice to search for an artist or a
genre — like when I would say, “Hey Siri, play Prince” or “Hey Siri,
play workout music” into the watch — music will start streaming from the
Radio app. When you request a specific song, like “Hey Siri, play Going
Deaf,” it will play from the Music app. You might not even notice
unless you’re staring at the watch’s face, but there is a handoff that
happens between the two apps.
If part of your New Year’s resolution is to stare at your phone a little less (hey, we just made a video about that!),
then the ability to go for a walk or run without your phone and still
stream music might feel like it’s magically aligned with your goals.
Could you listen to music, sans phone, before smartwatches?
Yeah of course. Tiny iPods were popular for a good reason. But you
couldn’t look at your iPod and shout “HEY IPOD PLAY GEORGE MICHAEL”
because you suddenly felt like playing something that wasn’t stored on
your iPod. With the LTE Apple Watch you can.
That doesn’t mean music requests start playing
immediately every time. There is an occasional delay or pause while the
watch figures out what to do. And you have to have your Bluetooth
headphones connected, otherwise you’ll get a message on the watch face
that indicates there’s no device capable of playback connected to the
Watch.
Battery life suffers from music streaming, too. But it
varies. One morning I went for a 50-minute walk without my phone. I
tapped to pull up music playlist on the watch, made one voice request
about halfway through the walk, and watched battery life drop from 92
percent to 76 percent throughout the duration of the walk. But other
times, when I made multiple music queries on the watch and switched
between songs and genres, battery life would drop as much as 25 percent
in 20 minutes. Generally speaking, if I used the watch in any meaningful
way throughout the day for music streaming, I would almost certainly
have to plan on charging it before the evening.
Really the only thing I missed acutely during these
phone-free walks was access to podcasts on demand. For whatever reason,
Apple hasn’t created an Apple Watch version of its Podcasts app. So you
can’t just say to the LTE-connected watch, “Hey Siri, play the latest
episode of The Vergecast” and have it play. In the past you
could use a third-party app like Overcast, and pre-sync your podcasts to
the watch before you head out, but that appears to no longer work on
the latest version of the watch’s software.
And of course, there is that caveat that the only
streaming music service you can play from the watch right now is
Apple’s. So yes: this is one of those things where if you have an Apple
Watch Series 3 with LTE, and you have an iPhone to pair it with, and
you pay $10 per month for Apple Music, and maybe you also have AirPods
that connect to the smartwatch super quickly, then this is going to feel
like a value add. If, if, if you’re locked inside the Apple universe.
But hey: Apple has done true music streaming directly from a smartwatch. That alone is worth something.
Correction: A previous version
of this article said that you could use a third-party podcast app like
Overcast to send your podcasts to Apple Watch. As our readers pointed
out, and as the app developer himself said, limitations in the new watch software have eliminated the option for podcast playback.
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