The eroticism in speak, memoryApple Watch Series 3 will finally allow its wearers to stream music directly from the device, a long-promised functionality that was conspicuously absent at release of the LTE-powered smartwatch.
SEE ALSO: Yes, you can buy an Apple Watch for $25—but you'll have to work out a lotApple's latest software update, watchOS 4.1, just dropped, giving LTE-enabled Series 3 watches the ability to stream tunes using the subscription-based Apple Music service or the free new Radio app. You won't be able to use other content services like Spotify or Pandora for now — this is strictly an Apple affair.
The Radio app offers Beats One and three live radio stations (CBS Radio, ESPN, and NPR), along with other Apple Radio music stations from the Music app.
The new software release also includes some updates to the GymKit feature to sync watch data with exercise machines and the ability to disconnect from Wi-Fi networks, another step to solve the glitchy LTE-Wi-Fi handoff problems that plagued some users immediately after the watch's release.
Apple also released some new battery life estimates for the streaming functionality. The company claims you'll be able to wring up to seven hours of streaming playlists over LTE, and five hours of radio time. If you take your watch outdoors and leave your phone behind, Apple says you'll get up to three hours of juice with streaming audio, GPS, LTE.
Apple's new LTE service hasn't exactly rolled out smoothly. The streaming functionality's addition comes over a month after the Series 3 was released in September, following another OS update that patched up the LTE-Wi-Fi issue. Now that Apple Watch owners can actually use their device to stream music, they're finally getting the device they paid for.
Topics Apple Apple Watch
Best AirTag deal: Save 14% on the Apple AirTagBest camping deal: Save $75 on the Yeti Tundra 65 hard coolerShop the iPad Pro for $150 off at Amazon120 court cases have been caught with AI hallucinations, according to new databaseNYT mini crossword answers for May 29, 2025Best Sony deal: Save $51.99 on the Sony ULT WEAR headphones at AmazonKnicks vs. Pacers 2025 livestream: Watch Game 5 of NBA playoffs for freeBest fitness deal: Snag the Hydro Pro Rower for $450 off at AmazonNYT mini crossword answers for May 28, 2025GoPro Hero11 Black Mini deal: Get $110 off at Best BuyMoutet vs. Djokovic 2025 livestream: Watch French Open for freeNYT Connections hints and answers for May 27: Tips to solve 'Connections' #716.Best JBL deal: Save $30 on the JBL Clip 5 at AmazonThunder vs. Timberwolves 2025 livestream: Watch Game 5 of NBA playoffs for freeHow AI is locating an endangered bird species missing for over a decadeSave over $100 on Sony WHKeys vs. Boulter 2025 livestream: Watch French Open for freeWordle today: The answer and hints for May 28, 2025Apple launches a selfNYT Strands hints, answers for May 29 Two Hundred Years Ago Today, Lord Byron Got Soused The Invention of Page Numbers: Medieval Bookbinding “The Dog Wants His Dinner,” a Poem by James Schuyler Pairing Artists with Corporations: Los Angeles in the Sixties The Perils of the Early Riser William Seabrook’s “The Magic Island” Brought Zombies to America Need a Story for Your Commute? Look to the Vending Machine Ragnar Kjartansson Uses Clichés to Destroy Western Culture On Robert Aickman’s “Ringing the Changes” Richard Howard and George Plimpton on Translating Proust Rediscovered Avant Bringing Alexievich’s “Voices from Chernonyl” to America Young Artists: No Social Media Following? Just Buy One. Staff Picks: Wood on the Fire, Wood on the Flume by The Paris Review The Captain’s Doll Women in Crime: An Interview with Sarah Weinman On Daphne du Maurier’s “Monte Verità” The Rise and Fall of Magnetic Poetry You Could Own Edith Wharton’s Sterling Silver Baby Rattle Elliot Paul’s “The Last Time I Saw Paris” (1942)
3.3084s , 10170.015625 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【eroticism in speak, memory】,Prosperous Times Information Network