Apple Watch owners were once able to easily switch between active watch faces by swiping left or Watch The Silencing Onlineright on the device's face. Apple removed this option in watchOS 10, making it a little harder to do so: you had to long press on the Watch's display, then swipe to change faces.
Presumably, the change was made to prevent accidental changes to the active watch face, and I have to admit that this did happen quite often. However, an option to choose whether you want the feature or not would've been nice.
SEE ALSO: The next Apple Watch will reportedly add 3 new health sensors for diabetes, blood pressure, and sleep apneaWell, in the latest watchOS beta, version 10.2 beta 3, Apple gave us exactly that (noticed first by Aaron on X). You can once again swipe left or right to change the active face on your Apple Watch.
Enabling the feature isn't exactly straightforward. You have to update the Watch to the latest beta, and you cannot switch this option on from your iPhone. You have to open Settings on the Watch itself, scroll down to Clock, and turn on "Swipe to Switch Watch Face."
If you've never used this feature, it can be a little tricky to get it right; I often mess it up and activate a complication on the Watch face instead. The best way to do it, I've found, is to gently press the very edge of your Watch's display, and then scroll left or right, all the way to the other edge.
If you're not brave (or foolish) enough to install the watchOS 10.2 beta, you can instead wait a little longer; the official, public version will likely become available in December.
Topics Apple Watch
Norway newspaper editor blasts Zuckerberg for censoring iconic Vietnam War photographJet Black iPhone 7 sells out within minutesWatch: Couple's completely empty flight is the stuff of travel dreamsNorway newspaper editor blasts Zuckerberg for censoring iconic Vietnam War photographAmazon Echo will soon speak up without voice commands, report saysLady Gaga just announced the duet of the century and fans cannot copeA bill passes allowing 9/11 victims' families to sue Saudi ArabiaForget cities. Volvo is testing autonomous trucks ... in a mine?This alarm clock wants to wake you up with an orgasmWells Fargo fined $185 million over phony accounts9 things Apple didn't tell you about iPhone 7, Apple Watch 2 and AirPods'Super Mario Run' is for players of any skill level, says MiyamotoFemale news anchor slammed for the terrible crime of wearing skinny jeansMatt Lauer becomes the symbol of frustration with the media9 things Apple didn't tell you about iPhone 7, Apple Watch 2 and AirPodsNFL players hint at a group protest inspired by Kaepernick for Sept. 11Before Carson Wentz was a hotshot NFL rookie, he made this delightfully dorky trickTwitter updates direct messages with read receipts, dreaded three dots and link previewsAmazon is reportedly seeking sports streaming rights from tennis to rugbyYou'll be able to buy individual replacement AirPod earbuds after all What Thom Gunn Thought of Oliver Sacks by Lawrence Weschler Cooking With Pearl Buck by Valerie Stivers The Soviet Children Who Survived World War II by Svetlana Alexievich The Creative Compulsions of OCD by Adam O’Fallon Price Redux: Another Joke Death Valley by Brandon Shimoda Rumple. Stilt. And Skin. by Sabrina Orah Mark Garp, Forty Years Later by Ilana Masad Fra Angelico’s Divine Emotion by Cody Delistraty The Many Lives of Lafcadio Hearn by Andrei Codrescu Summer is Made of the Memory of Summer by Nina MacLaughlin García Márquez’s Five Favorite Cocktail Stories by Santiago Mutis Durán Staff Picks: Free Verse, Farewells, and Fist City by The Paris Review How Stanley Kubrick Staged the Moon Landing by Rich Cohen George Plimpton’s Illegal Fireworks Display by The Paris Review Farewell to Manhattan’s Secret Bookstore by Molly Crabapple Lucky by Shannon Pufahl Crying in the Library by Shannon Reed Toni Morrison, 1931–2019 by The Paris Review Mistranslated Book Titles Contest by The Paris Review
2.7079s , 10131.6328125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Watch The Silencing Online】,Information Information Network