Apple Watch Series 7 sizes could be bigger this year

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Apple Watch Series 7 sizes could be bigger this year

The Apple Watch had changed little or no since its debut quite half a decade ago. While the planning refreshed the Apple Watch Series 4, it retained an equivalent core aesthetic because of the first-gen smartwatch. However, with the Apple Watch Series 7, the corporate seems to be prepared to offer its popular wearable a much bigger facelift, not just in design but also in size. Unfortunately, that would be the extent of the large changes to expect later this year.

Apple is unsurprisingly sticking its square guns, refusing to adopt a circular watch face, in any case, these years. the most important changes, however, are going to be on and around the edges of the Apple Watch Series 7. Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman reiterates what we’ve heard before, with Apple adopting a flat display and flat edges, resembling the aesthetic it’s adopted for the iPhone 12 and most iPads.

Gurman, however, also offers a replacement tidbit about the Apple Watch 7. The smartwatches are expected to urge bigger displays but not by pushing out bezels. Apple will reportedly are available in 41mm and 45mm sizes, whereas the previous generation was available in 40mm and 44mm bodies.

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While the Apple Watch Series 7 will be getting a replacement processor, that’s unfortunately where the upgrades are expected to finish. There’ll be no new health sensors this year, consistent with Gurman, though there could be upgrades to the performance and features of existing biometrics. This may sound disappointing to Apple Watch owners hoping to upgrade this year, but the new design might be a strong pull for first-time buyers.

That could mean that next year will be the large jump that Apple Watch fans are waiting to ascertain. The highest of the list may be a body-temperature sensor, though the foremost expected new sensor could revolve around blood sugar measuring. Unfortunately, insiders and experts think that technology remains too new to be reliable, and Apple is wary of including basic features before their time.

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