Do you have an ‘iCrap’ folder? Well prepare for it to get even bigger.
Following the release of iOS 8.2 earlier this week and the unpleasant surprise that the Apple AAPL -0.72% Watchapp is a mandatory install, it has now been revealed that this is just one of two apps Apple will be imposing on all users.
Developer Hamza Sood has discovered iOS
8.2 also installs ‘Activity’ – another app designed to work with the
Apple Watch and track movement and exercise activity. Why has no-one
spotted this before? Because Apple hides the Activity app from view
until you pair an Apple Watch. At that point it magically appears on
your homescreen.
If you plan on owning an Apple Watch the Activity app looks useful. It’s
UI matches the style of the Watch and it breaks user activity into ‘Move ’,
‘Stand’ and ‘Exercise’ rings. It also has ‘Achievements’ which mimic
similar gamification elements of rival exercise trackers. Note: it
cannot be used with any other wearable than the Apple Watch.
The Controversy
As useful as Activity appears to be for Apple Watch owners, why it needs to be installed on every iOS device (let alone in secret) is the main talking point.
Users have already been freaking out (not
my terminology) over the pre-requisite installation of the Apple Watch
app, so adding a second mandatory app in secret stretches credibility.
Especially when there is nothing stopping both apps downloading (even
automatically) only once an Apple Watch is paired.
What reactions can we expect? Well those prone to ‘freaking out’ no
doubt will do so again, while others won’t see the issue. That said
there is a point to be made over hypocrisy here.
What reactions can we expect? Well those prone to ‘freaking out’ no
doubt will do so again, while others won’t see the issue. That said
there is a point to be made over hypocrisy here.
Apple has taken pot shots at Android handset makers (fairly) for filling
their phones with bloatware that damages performance and wastes storage
space. Whether Apple’s bloatware impacts performance is currently
unknown but it certainly wastes an increasing amount of storage,
particularly for owners of the 8GB iPhone 5C and 16GB iPhones. Remember
1-2GB of their capacity is already taken by the iOS installation
footprint.
Whether Apple will now face pressure to make one or both of these Apple
Watch apps uninstallable remains to be seen, but if Apple were to comply
it would open up a hornets nest over which other iOS apps should be
removable (I’m looking at you Stocks app).