Apple Watch Series 7: Larger display sizes means several new faces
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The upcoming Apple Watch Series 7 will have bigger displays, according to several reports that have landed in the past week. But in a Bloomberg report on Thursday, Mark Gurman provided additional details on the display and how Apple will take advantage of the increased sizes.
As has been reported before, Gurman reports that the Apple Watch Series 7 will be available in 41mm and 45mm case sizes, a small change from the current 40mm and 44mm offerings. Gurman does provide a few more details. The display on the 45mm watch will be about 1.9 inches and have a resolution of 396×484, up from 1.78 inches and 368×448 on the 44mm watch. Gurman said that the new smaller model with have a “similar jump” in display size and screen resolution. Both of the new watches will have a thinner bezel surrounding the edge of the display.
To show the advantages of the enlarged screens, Apple will have several new watch faces. These are the faces reported, though Gurman notes they might not all be released with the watch:
- Modular Max: Displays the time, a small complication, and then a stacked set of large complications.
- Continuum: Gurman says this face will “change based on the flow of time and the current hour.”
- Atlas and World Timer: A face that displays all 24 time zones with times able to be set in analog or digital modes.
- A Nike face with moving numbers. The movement is influenced by the wearer’s movement
- A Hermes face with numbers that change every hour.
Thursday’s report follows a report made on Tuesday that the Apple Watch Series 7 could be delayed because of production issues. The Wall Street Journal reported on Wednesday that Apple is working on several health features for the Apple Watch, possibly for next year, including blood pressure sensor, a wrist thermometer, irregular heartbeat monitoring, and upgrades to sleep monitoring. Learn more about the new watch in our Apple Watch Series 7 rumor hub.
Roman has covered technology since the early 1990s. His career started at MacUser, and he’s worked for MacAddict, Mac|Life, and TechTV.
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