Skip to main content

Google's new Android Wear developer preview introduces an on-watch app store

android wear 20 developer preview 3 news image02
Image used with permission by copyright holder
Tuesday brought an equitable mix of good news and bad news for fans of Google’s Android Wear operating system. The bad news? The Mountain View company is delaying the launch of Android 2.0, the software’s forthcoming revamp, from the fall of this year to sometime in early 2017. The good news? Google released a consolatory new preview: Android Wear 2.0 Developer Preview 3.

In many ways, Android Wear 2.0 Developer Preview 3 represents, as its long-winded name might suggest, a milestone for the work-in-progress operating system. But an addition that stands above the rest is the Play Store for Android Wear, an app store optimized for smartwatches. It’s replete with a list of recommended apps and games, the ability to switch between different accounts, buttons for enrolling in alpha or beta programs, and a “My apps” screen from which you can update or remove installed apps.

Recommended Videos

And on the distribution side of things, it allows developers to publish apps exclusively to Android Wear — they won’t appear appear visible in the Play Store on Android phones.

The addition of the Play Store to Android Wear was the result of “studies” on user behavior, Google said. Most smartwatch wearers, the search giant found, expected to find apps right on their wearable. “[They] told us [they] wanted to make it easier … to discover apps,” Google said. A miniaturized Play Store presented the perfect solution. “The Play Store on the watch helps users find apps right where they need them.”

Please enable Javascript to view this content

You’d be forgiven for assuming a wrist-bound app store obviates the need for phone-based management. That’s largely the case — the Play Store is accessible when the watch is connected to Wi-Fi or, on devices with cellular capabilities, a carrier network. But you can’t quite leave your phone at home: purchases for paid apps must be authenticated on a paired handset. (Google said it plans to eliminate that requirement down the line.)

An app store isn’t the only big improvement in tow with Android Wear 2.0. Another major enhancement is Smart Replies, a feature of Google’s artificially intelligent Google Assistant platform that supplies canned responses to messages and emails. Uniquely, the Android Wear incarnation generates replies using an “entirely on-watch” machine-learning model, Google said. “No data is uploaded to the cloud to generate the responses.”

image01
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Meanwhile, Complications, the information-rich animated icons that dot custom watch faces, default to developer-specified settings in Developer Preview 3. And two new development tools, WearableRecyclerView and Inline Action for Notifications, help make it easier for developers to create vertical lists and let users take action on notifications “right from the stream.”

Android Wear 2.0 Developer Preview 3 is available now, but only for a select few watches: the Huawei Watch and LG Watch Urbane 2nd Edition. If you’re the lucky owner of either of those, you can nab the appropriate build from the Android Developer website.

A word of warning, though — installation isn’t a cakewalk. The steps require a familiarity with Android’s developer suite, and Developer Preview 3 contains a few bugs that some might consider deal-breaking. Google’s fitness platform, Google Fit, isn’t available with Preview 3; “OK Google” voice detection doesn’t work reliably; and Smart Reply is only available if your watch’s system language is English.

Alternatively, you can test Developer Preview 3 on an emulator.

image03
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Android Wear devices, some might say, are stuck between a rock and a hard place. They’re by nature pitted against Apple’s juggernaut wearable, the Apple Watch, which commanded a 33.5 percent share of the U.S. smartwatch market in the three-month period that ended with July (see: Kantar Worldpanel). And they compete with smartwatch offerings from the likes of Samsung and Tencent, which run proprietary operating systems with incompatible app stores. Analysts say that has generated hesitancy on the part of Google’s partners: though Asus, Fossil, Michael Kors, Polar, and Nixon announced Android Wear smartwatches this year, Motorola, Huawei, and LG did not. (Huawei, in fact, may be considering a move to Samsung’s Tizen operating system.)

Google may be poised to take matters into its own hands. In July, rumors emerged of two Google-made Nexus smartwatches, code-named Angelfish and Swordfish. The former, Angelfish, reportedly features “smooth housing shape that curves where the watch band meets the body,” three physical buttons, and myriad sensors including a heart-rate monitor, GPS, and LTE connectivity. The latter, which sports a “gentle and rounded” shape, by contrast, is said to resemble the Apple Watch.

Kyle Wiggers
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Kyle Wiggers is a writer, Web designer, and podcaster with an acute interest in all things tech. When not reviewing gadgets…
The OnePlus 13 is coming on January 7 — along with a surprise
The OnePlus logo on the back of the OnePlus Open Apex Edition.

It's official: the OnePlus 13 will launch on January 7, 2025. Preempting the anticipated event by several weeks, OnePlus has officially confirmed the date we’ll see its next major smartphone release outside of China. Additionally, it has revealed some key features and news of a surprise new launch to go along with the phone.

OnePlus will release the OnePlus 13 in three different colors — Black Eclipse, Arctic Dawn, and Midnight Ocean. It’s the latter that is likely to be the model to have, as it is wrapped in a material called micro-fiber vegan leather, which is apparently corrosion and scratch-resistant but still luxurious to the touch. For the Arctic Dawn phone, the glass will have a special coating to give it a silky-smooth finish. It’s likely these are the same colors offered in China, where the phone has already been announced, just with different names.

Read more
I’m really worried about the future of smart glasses
The front of the Ray-Ban Meta smart glasses.

The Ray-Ban Meta smart glasses are among the most interesting, unexpectedly fun, and surprisingly useful wearables I’ve used in 2024. However, as we go into 2025, I’m getting worried about the smart glasses situation.

This isn’t the first time I’ve felt like we’re on the cusp of a new wave of cool smart eyewear products, only to be very disappointed by what came next.
Why the Ray-Ban Meta are so good

Read more
We need to talk about this fantastic, industry-leading Motorola collab
A person holding the Motorola Edge 50 Neo.

We are accustomed to tech brands partnering with adjacent brands, whether it’s OnePlus with Hasselblad or Honor and Huawei with Porsche Design, and often — such as with Xiaomi and Leica — singing the praises of the resulting collaborations. But not enough has been said about Motorola’s now established partnership with color experts Pantone.

It was when the recently released Motorola Edge 50 Neo arrived for me to try out that I finally understood how impactful the collaboration has become. Why? It manages to make even ordinary colors look fantastic.
Boring gray?

Read more