For Apple Watch to be useful, it has to give you enough notifications
without becoming a nuisance. And that requires setup. Here’s how to
control which notifications you receive on your Apple Watch and how to
work with them.
Notification overload
By default, Apple Watch sends you lots of notifications; every app on
the watch, and many from your iPhone, send notifications. The first
thing you need to do is start turning off the ones you really don’t need
to get on your wrist.
Go to the Apple Watch app on your iPhone, tap Notifications, and scroll
down a bit. The first section of apps you see includes Apple’s own apps:
Activity, Calendar, Mail, Messages, etc. For most of these apps, you
have two choices: Mirror My iPhone and Custom. If you choose the former,
you’ll only get notified if you have that app’s notifications turned on
on the iPhone. If you have lots of notifications for a specific app on
the iPhone, you’ll get the same notifications on Apple Watch.
Customize any Apple apps you use regularly; you may not want the same
types of notifications on the watch as on your iPhone. For other apps,
the only choices you have are to mirror the notification settings on
your iPhone or not. Think carefully whether you need all those
notifications on your wrist.
One thing to note: if you’re using your iPhone—if it’s not locked or
asleep—you’ll get notifications there, and not on Apple Watch.
Dismissing notifications on one device also dismisses them on the other.
Mirroring your iPhone also tells Apple Watch how to notify you. You can
get notifications as alerts that show up on the Apple Watch’s display,
you can hear a ding, and you can have haptic notifications; little taps
that silently alert you. If your iPhone has the sound turned off for a
given app’s notifications, you won’t get either sounds or
haptic taps on Apple Watch. And if you silence Apple Watch, you’ll still
get taps on your wrist, whether or not sound is on for the iPhone. (If
the iPhone is set to vibrate, you’ll get sounds or taps on the watch.)
Another setting to note is the Notification Privacy setting in the
Notifications settings on the Apple Watch app. If you turn this on, only
alerts will display on your watch; you won’t see any information—such
as the sender of an email, the text of a text message—until you tap the
alert.
Reading and replying to notifications
When you get notifications on Apple Watch, you’ll either hear sounds,
get tapped, or simply see an alert, according to the settings
But if you get neither sounds nor
taps, how will you know you have any pending notifications? When you
glance at your watch, you’ll see a little red dot at the top of the
display if you have any notifications you haven’t yet checked. (This is
on by default; you can turn it off in the Apple Watch app’s
Notifications settings by toggling Notifications Indicator.)
So before you get overwhelmed by notifications, check out the Apple Watch’s settings, and also check those on your iPhone. You may find that having a bit more calm is a good thing.
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