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Product test

Why I like the Apple Watch Ultra and still don't need it

Samuel Buchmann
15/11/2022
Translation: machine translated

I tested Apple's titanium smartwatch while hiking and climbing. It often kissed the rock. After two months, I take stock.

Design: a mock-up

Hardness test: sapphire glass against gneiss

To put Apple's promotional videos to the test, I wore the Ultra during various indoor and rock climbing sessions. These are rough conditions for a watch: sometimes it scrapes along a wall, now and then the whole left arm lands in a crevice. The case and glass make countless acquaintances with the rock - including Ticino gneiss, which is particularly hard.

Climbing: Little added value

I see the last point as real added value. Everything else is nice, but rather a gimmick. The downside: the Ultra's size can sometimes be a nuisance when climbing - especially when the left hand has to go into a crevice. The bottom line is that the watch only gets a permanent place on my wrist on multi-pitch routes.

Hiking: Good navigation with additional apps

Instead, I want to see where I am and where I am going. I can do that on the Apple Maps app, which I only find useful in the city. Thank goodness for paid apps with topographic maps. I tried WorkOutDoors, which costs six francs one time. It provides good maps with terrain and paths marked on them. You can also import routes in GPX format. The accuracy of the Apple Watch Ultra's GPS is good.

Battery life: Twelve to one hundred hours

What does that mean in practice? The answer varies depending on the application. I'll outline three scenarios: normal everyday use, intensive use for sports and the most economical use possible.

When I'm using the Apple Series 8, I'll use it as a mobile phone.

Conclusion: good implementation, individual benefit

The Apple Watch Ultra wants to be a smartwatch and sports watch in one. For a certain target group, it achieves that. In everyday life, the Ultra is currently the best smartwatch on the market for owners of an iPhone - as long as the size doesn't bother you. It also offers a wealth of sports, wellness and navigation functions. These often only unfold their full effect with third-party apps. Fortunately, there are plenty of them in Apple's WatchOS universe.

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My fingerprint often changes so drastically that my MacBook doesn't recognise it anymore. The reason? If I'm not clinging to a monitor or camera, I'm probably clinging to a rockface by the tips of my fingers.


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