Google isn’t taking news of the Apple Watch lying down. Perhaps spurred in part by yesterday’s wearable announcements, a source with knowledge of Android Wear’s road map leaked information to the the Verge about forthcoming updates.
The first of several planned software releases will enable Wi-Fi connectivity, allowing Android Wear devices with the requisite hardware to make Google Now queries and receive notifications without a Bluetooth connection. Subsequent smaller updates will add wrist-flicking gestures for one-handed scrolling through notification cards, and a simpler UI for accessing contacts and apps.
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Google’s maintained a steady stream of improvements to Android Wear since the platform launched last July. An October refresher brought offline music playback and Bluetooth pairing, while a more recent update introduced an API for third-party watch faces and added backlighting presets.
The upcoming improvements are welcome, but hardware-dependent updates raise a concern. So far, Google’s managed to avoid fragmenting Android Wear devices to an extent. While most all
That’s not to say Google should halt the maturation of Android Wear for the benefit of first-generation watch owners — The tech industry is, after all, a rapidly iterating one. However, it certainly suggests, if it hasn’t been hinted at already, an unfortunate truth for Moto 360 and G Watch and Galaxy Gear owners: