The Apple Watch Won’t Be as Cool as Announced: Your Top Headlines for Wednesday
1) Apple has dropped all health-monitoring features from the Apple Watch, the Wall Street Journal reports. Either because it didn’t work, was too complex or was too regulated (but mostly because it didn’t work), the technology was simply scrapped from the watch’s first generation, due out in April, Daisuke Wakabayashiwrites. The device will still track steps, but not monitor blood pressure or stress levels through the skin. That sound you’re hearing is a collective sigh of relief from the offices of Jawbone, Fitbit and Withings, whose tech isn’t yet entirely obsolete. If Apple sticks by its usual schedule, they have another year to catch up before the dreaded competitor integrates the features in a second-generation device.
And so remains the question perfectly encapsulated in the WSJ’s headline: What exactly is an Apple watch for? “One of the biggest surprises people are going to have when they start using it is the breadth of what it will do,” CEO Tim Cook has said. A generalist tech then, a Pebble watch on steroids, which like the iPhone before it, will rely on a vibrant app ecosystem to allow each user to make the device their own. Apple Pay is also quite promising for the runner who has banned the fanny pack.
Apple is still planning a first production run of 5 or 6 million devices and is unlikely to have any issues selling them all: “The Apple Watch doesn’t have to do anything special at all for Apple to sell millions and millions of them,” notes, realistic, Wired’sMarcus Wohlsen. But I’ll say it again: with Apple, if you buy the first gen, you’re essentially a $349-poorer beta tester.
5) Nestlé is removing artificial colorings and ingredients from its chocolate candy in the US. The company says it’s looking after the health of its customers – let’s be frank: customers started looking after their health, and the company adapted. And we’re still a long way from being able to call a Butterfinger “healthy.”
7) Of the $11.83 trillion of US household debt outstanding in the last quarter, the 1-and-change trillion in student loans is the most worrisome. While delinquency rates have been dropping on virtually all sorts of debt after the worst of the financial crisis, student debt is the one glaring exception, says a report by the NY Fed. The accompanying graphic tells all: 11.3% of student debt is delinquent 90 days or more.