nothing to see here!
Description
With iOS 16 you can view and even control your Apple Watch from inside the Settings app on your iPhone. You can interact with it in real time and use it just like you would do on your wrist, but through your iPhone screen. This is an awesome accessibility tool that has hugely useful benefits to everyone. For example, you can now do a Screen Recording of your Apple Watch while in this new mirroring mode!
Transcript
There’s a brilliant new feature in iOS 16 that will let you not only mirror your Apple Watch on your iPhone, but also control it from your phone as well.
Here’s how it works:
To get started I’m going to go into my Settings app on my iPhone and I’m going to scroll down to where it says Accessibility.
Now from here you’ll find a new option called Apple Watch Mirroring.
As long as your iPhone and your Apple Watch are both up-to-date (so that means on iOS 16 and watchOS 9) you can then turn on Watch Mirroring.
Just like this it takes a moment or two to connect (particularly on the first go) but then you’ll see your Watch on your iPhone just like this.
What’s really good here is that as I use my Apple Watch, so perhaps to jump into the Memoji app, you’ll see it happening on the phone in almost real time.
Anything I do on my watch will show up on my iPhone straight away.
But even cooler than that is, if I stopped touching my watch and go back to my iPhone, I can now control my Watch on my wrist from my phone!
So that means simply by tapping on my iPhone I can navigate the home screen of the Apple Watch.
I can find an app like perhaps the Heart Rate app, and I can measure my heart rate by using my phone display instead of my watch.
It even means I can then long press, I can use the side buttons of the Apple Watch simulator on my iPhone, and I can even change the Apple Watch screen itself as well!
This is a really neat new feature, and one that I’m sure I’m going to use a lot to help me make my videos on YouTube.
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iPhone, iPad and iPadOS are trademarks of Apple Inc., registered in the U.S. and other countries and regions. iOS is a registered trademark of Cisco Systems Inc. Whilst I have done my best to list all applicable trademarks for this video, in the (hopefully unlikely) event that I have missed any you can find a full list of trademarks registered to Apple Inc. here.
Finally, please note that whilst every effort has been made to ensure the information contained within this video was correct at time of publication, please be aware that as future updates and software changes occur some or all elements of this video may become outdated. I will endeavour to remove videos which are completely obsolete so as not to cause confusion!