If
you’ve been following the tech news, you probably know that Apple’s
highly anticipated iWatch is
expected to make its debut Sept. 9, along
with Apple’s new iPhone.
Based on the amount of hype this
iWatch has generated, it could be the most important piece of consumer
technology since the original iPhone launched in 2007, or the iPad in
2010.
But
seriously: Why? What exactly will the iWatch be able to do? What will
it look like? And more to the point: Why would Apple want to get into
the wearables market, which, despite being loaded with a variety of
offerings, isn’t nearly as robust as the smartphone market?
Below
is a brief explainer about the iWatch, its raison d’être, and why Apple
would want to even enter a market that’s still largely unproven. School
is in session.
What’s an iWatch?In
short, the iWatch is Apple’s long-rumored smartwatch that analysts and
company watchers claim could put to bed all of those nagging rumors that
Apple’s well of innovation has run dry.

iWatch concept. (Belm Designs)
The watch itself is expected to
feature a touchscreen and connect to your iPhone or iPad via Bluetooth
and provide you with notifications from your favorite apps. So you’d be
able to view messages from your phone without removing it from your
pocket or walking across the room to retrieve it. It’s like having your
smartphone screen on your wrist at all times.
Both The New York Times and The Wall Street Journal
report that the iWatch will also have a near-field communication, or
NFC, chip, which could be used to make wireless payments with the watch.
To do so, you’d simply tap the iWatch on an NFC payment pad at a
store’s checkout counter. The watch would then automatically pay for
your items with money from the bank account you linked to the wearable.
As a bonus, the iWatch is also
expected to work as a kind of fitness and health tracker. You’ll also
reportedly be able to track your steps via the watch’s built-in
pedometer, see if you should slap on some sunblock via its UV monitor, and check out other fitness information through Apple’s upcoming HealthKit platform.
HealthKit?That’s right, HealthKit. Introduced at Apple’s Worldwide Developers Conference as part of iOS 8,
HealthKit takes all the data from your disparate health and fitness
apps and combines it into one convenient app on your iPhone’s home
screen.

That
means you’ll be able to see your heart rate, the number of calories you
burned in a day, how many hours you slept last night, your blood sugar,
your cholesterol, and more.
HealthKit
will also let your various fitness apps, like RunKeeper or
MyFitnessPal, talk to one another and share your data to ensure that you
get a clear picture of your overall health.
So why would Apple make an iWatch?The
so-called “wearables” market is still in its infancy, but many tech
analysts expect it to grow exponentially in the coming years. According
to market research firm IDC, shipments of wearables will increase from
6.2 million in 2013 to 19.2 million by the end of 2014.
As
IDC’s Ramon Llamas notes, Apple is keenly aware of the huge numbers of
apps downloaded from its App Store for the various fitness trackers and
other wearables on the market. So why wouldn’t Apple want to get in on
that itself?
iWatch concept. (Todd Hamilton)
There’s also the fact that
the iWatch will be perfect for collecting anonymous data about its
customers. That will give it, at the least, better information to sell
more highly targeted ads.
“Wearables are the most intimate of devices,” Llamas explained. “These are things that you have on you nearly 24/7.
“There is a lot of information that Apple could collect about a user if they wear a watch,” he added. “There is a lot of gold in there to be harvested.”
Will it really be called the “iWatch”?Not
necessarily! That’s just the name that tech watchers have given Apple’s
smartwatch device, as a kind of shorthand. It could be called something
else entirely.
OK, so what will the “iWatch” look like?Well,
that’s the thing. There isn’t much known about how exactly the iWatch
will look. Those renderings you see above are mere guesses, or
fantasies, of Web artists. Unlike the iPhone 6, of which a new alleged
prototype hits the Internet every day or so, no purported images of the
iWatch have surfaced.
Our best guesses about how the
iWatch will look come from Apple’s patent filings and reports citing
unnamed sources. In February 2013, AppleInsider came across a patent Apple filed for a wearable device with a full-length screen that wraps around your wrist like a slap bracelet.

In June, Reuters cited a source
saying that the iWatch will have a 2.5-inch rectangular display that
will be slightly raised above the watch’s band. Another report from
Taiwan’s Economic Daily News claims that the iWatch will instead come in two screen sizes, 1.6 inches and 1.8 inches.
All of that is to say, the iWatch is still a pretty big mystery.
We’ll find out on Sept. 9 though, right?That’s the word on the street, yes.
Multiple reports have indicated that Apple will unveil the iWatch along
side the new iPhone 6. Unfortunately, other reports, including one from
Re/code’s John Paczkowski, point to Apple holding off on sales of the iWatch until 2015.
What’s
interesting is that we’ve seen neither hide nor hair of the iWatch yet.
And in a world where new device designs, even those from Apple, are
regularly leaked online, that’s quite an anomaly.
That likely means that the watch hasn’t gone into production, where it could be surreptitiously photographed and shared across the Web. That also jibes with rumors of production issues with the watch.
So what happens if the iWatch doesn’t debut on Sept. 9?I’ll eat my own shoes.
So stay tuned for our coverage
of Apple’s big day, and get ready to see either the iWatch unveiled or a
grown man eating his sneakers. Either way, it’ll be a fun show.
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