
Apple watchOS 12 rumoured system requirements: will it run on your Apple Watch?
Apple is working on its next major software update for the Apple Watch – watchOS 12. As you'd expect, watchOS 12 will work best with the latest Apple Watches, and it'll come pre-installed on the upcoming Series 11. But a whole bunch of older Apple Watches will also get the free software update – stretching back a few years.
But will your current Apple Watch get the update? Here's our guide to the rumoured watchOS 12 system requirements.
Read more: I think iOS 19 will be the biggest free iPhone upgrade yet
Will my Apple Watch get watchOS 12?
Right now, we don't have any rumours as to the compatibility for watchOS 12. Last year, watchOS 11 ditched support for the Apple Watch Series 5, making the Series 6 the oldest smartwatch that supported the update. That watch is five years old now, after releasing in 2020. However, there might be bad news for Series 6 owners this time around.
For the past few years, Apple has been axing new software support after five years due to older chip limitations. That puts the Apple Watch Series 6 on the chopping block for watchOS 12. Of course, we won't actually know if this is the case until it officially launches.
As I mentioned, last year's watchOS 11 update ran on all of the same devices as the previous version except the Series 5. watchOS 10 ditched support for the Series 4, and before that watchOS 9 finally dropped support for the Series 3.
Here's a full list of the devices expected to be compatible with watchOS 12:
Apple Watch Series 11
Apple Watch Ultra 3
Apple Watch Series 10
Apple Watch Ultra 2
Apple Watch Series 9
Apple Watch Ultra
Apple Watch Series 8
Apple Watch Series 7
Apple Watch SE (all versions)
Expect the new software to debut at Apple's WWDC 2025 developers conference in June, before it rolls out to everyone in September.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Stuff.tv
5 hours ago
- Stuff.tv
The Glastonbury 2025 app includes this one gamechanging new feature
It's nearly time for Glastonbury 2025 and mobile network Vodafone has revealed its updated Glastonbury phone app (available for iOS and Android) which is obviously a must-have if you're going to the festival. The app includes a few new features, but crucially there's one that's going to be a bit of a gamechanger for groups split across the vast 900 acre site. You're now able to live share your location with your friends, which is a huge improvement. OK, so apps like Apple's FindMy can do that already of course, but speaking from experience this is going to be very useful to be able to do this across friend groups when you split off to see different bands and other acts. And in particular it's going to be handy to work out where people are within a crowd in a situation where 'we're by the bar at the left of the stage' won't quite cut it. Another new feature is step count tracking which will be part of the 'My Highlights' post-Festival wrap, so you'll be able to compare to see who covered the most ground around the site. Vodafone is also making donations to its campaign depending on how many steps festival goers do. As before the app includes a customisable festival lineup so you can create your own schedule of acts to see and you'll get reminders before the various sets begin if you add an artist. There's also an interactive map so you can get to all the stages over the vast site that straddles Worthy Farm. This is now fully searchable, so you can find everything from water and the nearest toilets to different types of food on site. Naturally, you can also search for artists to find out when they're playing as well as browse an A-Z of them, too. And you can toggle between a timeline as well as a list view. Features including Spotify integration, shareable Line-Ups, and map pinning also return to help you make the most of the festival and find your tent/car. In an update, Shared Line-ups will now automatically update, so your friends will see the latest version. You can also get directions to Vodafone's Connect and Charge tent so you can keep your device juiced up. Speaking of power, Vodafone also has a plan there, too – you can pay £20 (plus £10 deposit) for a battery pack that you can exchange daily for a new one at three locations – the Connect and Charge tent in the Leftfield market as well as opposite San Remo and in the Worthy View Campsite. Vodafone says last year's version of the app saw 226,215 total downloads. 88.9% of downloads were from festival-goers attending Worthy Farm, while 11.1% were from people viewing at home. Data consumption at the festival hit over 225 terabytes last year.


Stuff.tv
5 days ago
- Stuff.tv
What I think the Apple Games app needs to work – and why it won't
The rumour mill is frothing about a dedicated Apple games app. Which, given Cupertino's dearth of app-naming imagination, will presumably be called Apple Games. After hastily rebuilding an office wall I blew down due to sighing so heavily on hearing this news, I figured I should at least consider how Apple could make this work. And why it won't. Because Apple. Clearly, Apple Games would be intended as a statement, to convince gamers, developers and even Apple itself that the company is a market leader in this space and serious about games. Despite years of evidence to the contrary. It would also be a combination of launcher, games discovery engine, friends hub and leaderboards. Which sounds a lot like Game Centre, a once standalone app Apple forgot about and left broken for six months, before taping it back together and burying it so deep inside its operating systems that it now only appears when you sacrifice a ZX Spectrum on the night of a blood moon. But, hey, Apple rakes in huge sums of cash from App Store games and services like Apple Arcade. So if Apple wants to make Apple Games work, here's the minimum that it needs to do. 1. Nail the basics Achievements. Leaderboards. Social features. These aren't bold innovations in gaming. They're the bare minimum. If Apple execs rock up on stage and even remotely infer Apple invented any of these things, we should riot. 2. Highlight controller support It's 2025. If a fancy new Apple Games app can't say whether Lara Croft: Guardian of Light will work with my Gamesir G8 or Backbone, it's already failed. Just like the App Store, which will, bizarrely, instead denote the game's position on the UK App Store Action chart, as if I or anyone else cares. Great until you stick your iPhone in one and realise the Home Screen is still in portrait orientation. 3. Add landscape support Any iPhone in a controller means landscape orientation. That grinds against Apple's portrait-mode iPhone app obsession, but I don't want to crane my neck 90 degrees to launch a game, like I currently have to when using the iOS Home Screen. 4. Embrace openness (LOL) Someone may have to break it to Apple execs that Apple Arcade isn't all of gaming. Gamers should be able to pin and rapidly access third-party games – and ideally even tap into Steam, Xbox Cloud Gaming and Antstream Arcade. Otherwise Apple Games will be little more than an Apple Arcade app wearing comedy spectacles and a fake moustache. 5. Recommend good games Apple editorial too often highlights IAP nightmares over legitimately good games, for some reason. No, hang on, for this reason: money. But gamers hate all that even more than 20-minute unskippable cutscenes. So: surface genuinely and objectively great games. Get smart game journos to help if need be. Easy. 6. Not get bored after 11 seconds The big one. Apple has a bad track record with its own apps. Many launch in a blaze of glory, only to be caked in cobwebs a year later. If that's Apple Games (as it was for Game Centre) , I'd sooner Apple would permanently leave its gaming ambitions in another castle. Why Apple Games will fail Even if Apple ticks a few boxes, it probably won't tick enough. Because there's no sense of gaming spirit, drive and commitment at Apple's highest levels. Games are seen as cash generators, not culture. They're benchmarking tools, rather than experiences – a way to show off the power of a new iPhone or Mac before quietly forgetting games exist for another year. I'd love to be wrong. But when I yet again hear Apple is getting excited about games, I get a pang of hope that's instantly, mercilessly crushed under a 20-tonne weight of reality and history. So I want Apple Games to thrive and for this to be the year Apple finally cracks gaming. But I think there's more chance that 2025 will be the year of Linux on the desktop.


Stuff.tv
6 days ago
- Stuff.tv
Here's why I'm more excited for Apple's in-home tech than iPhone updates this summer
As Apple's WWDC 2025 developer conference approaches, all eyes are on iOS, macOS, and Apple's other software releases. While a redesign in the next major iPhone update is exciting, I'm more excited for Apple's in-home tech. Namely, we're expecting massive updates to the Apple TV and Apple's first foray into smart home hubs to finally arrive. Read more: I think iOS 19 will be the biggest free iPhone upgrade yet The Apple TV is apparently in for its biggest glow-up in years. The rumour mill says that the latest version of tvOS 19 will come with a major redesign. This will bring it in line with the rest of Apple's platforms, and will likely be inspired by visionOS. We've seen updates trickling in over the years, but this could be the first meaningful shift in years. And while there's no official whisper about new hardware just yet, it's hardly out of the question. The existing Apple TV 4K still runs on the A15 Bionic, which is a few years old now. If the brand wants to push its Apple Intelligence ambitions in the living room, it'll need more power under the hood. A new Apple TV box would likely also support Wi-Fi 6E or 7, potentially with better streaming stability and upgraded internals. Apple's long-awaited home hub is also due to finally arrive. While we've heard rumours about multiple different versions of this, it seems the firm has settled on one with a screen. Picture a HomePod and an iPad having a slightly awkward child – a HomePad, if you will. While the screen and Home control centre would be helpful additions, the software is set to be the main selling point. This new device will apparently run on something called homeOS. Derived from tvOS and iPadOS, it's rumoured to pull in Apple Intelligence and push Siri front and centre. Hopefully not the half-asleep Siri we know, but a more responsive, useful version. Also expect built-in video calling, app support, and features borrowed from the iPhone's StandBy mode. Since both of these new developments are software focused, I expect we'll hear about them at WWDC 2025 if they are coming later this year. And given how often I use my TV and HomePod speakers every day, I'm more excited for this in-home tech than iOS 19.