alt.hn

5/2/2026 at 9:14:29 PM

Six years perfecting maps on watchOS

https://www.david-smith.org/blog/2026/04/29/maps-on-watchos/

by valzevul

5/2/2026 at 10:51:46 PM

Great evolution story. Also love seeing what can be achieved by stepping outside design lines, re. centred, symmetrical UIs. Makes me want an apple watch ;)

As an aside there's a screenshot in the article showing the Hidden Valley at Glen Coe, which happens to be one of my favourite short walks in Scotland.

A less happy aside of that aside is the house at the base of the valley. I used to look at it dreamily as we drove past, always closed up, nestled by itself in a remote nook between the mountains. What an extraordinary place it would be to live. The park for the hike was only a couple of hundred metres up the road. A few years later I recognised the house in a Louis Theroux doco, when he travelled there with its owner - TV personality Jimmy Saville. Wow. And then a few years later again, after I'd returned to Australia, it came out, posthumous, that Saville was one of the UK's most prolific child and sexual predators. Horrific stuff. The name and outline of the cottage structure can actually be seen at the top of the map in the screenshot.

by som

5/4/2026 at 7:48:45 AM

Funny coincidence - I visited that valley for the first time just last week, on my way to the Isle of Skye.

And as a further coincidence, I met Jimmy Saville about 25 years ago. I was in Leeds hospital after a heart operation, and this old and somewhat scruffy track suited guy just walks in to the ward and starts talking to me. I had no idea who he was. After he left, a nurse asked “did you speak to Jimmy?”. It was creepy and unnerving seeing first hand how he just got to roam around.

I can confirm, the graffiti-covered Saville residence has almost completely been demolished.

by ColinEberhardt

5/2/2026 at 9:51:19 PM

As a pedometer++ user, it is amazing the attention to detail David has maintained over the years. The evolution is crazy.

by SpyCoder77

5/2/2026 at 10:08:58 PM

He really is such a committed and dedicated developer. This here is of course a perfect example—"So… I commissioned a custom map" aka hiring a cartographer—but it was really cool how he blew up with Widgetsmith because he put in the effort with Watchsmith before, and was basically the world's expert on widgets? Couldn't happen to a better guy.

by Amorymeltzer

5/3/2026 at 9:10:55 AM

I have been using the app for years but literally just because I like the step counter widget. I had no idea it did all this! Will try it for sure. Cool read.

by tomduncalf

5/3/2026 at 12:08:14 AM

I’m interested since it’s clear this is a passionate and talented developer, but it seems the primary feature is step tracking, which iPhone already does by default. Is Pedometer++’s step counting somehow more accurate?

by monk_grilla

5/3/2026 at 12:42:36 AM

Yes, the primary feature that is being marketed is step tracking, but the app in general is much more than that. It's like how flighty just is a wrapper for the flights API that you could access through Google, yet flighty is the best app for flight tracking nonetheless and is a really cool app.

by SpyCoder77

5/3/2026 at 11:48:02 AM

I think it is long overdue for rebrand, as right now the marketing is "it's a simple utility to show the daily step counts Apple is already collecting anyway, oh and by the way it has awesome offline maps almost no other apps offer", which is a bit of a weird sell.

by tomaskafka

5/2/2026 at 11:12:14 PM

[flagged]

by brcmthrowaway

5/2/2026 at 11:55:32 PM

?? what does claude have to do with this?

by dmd

5/2/2026 at 10:09:23 PM

For others curious like I was, it seems he hired a cartographer to render essentially a set of huge, nice-looking, custom map images with details like hiking trails that Apple Maps doesn't have.

So unlike Apple Maps, which is dynamically rendered, it basically shows image tiles. It allows for a nicer-looking, more detailed map, but affects things like needing separate downloads for different zoom levels, rotation, updatability.

by apt-apt-apt-apt

5/2/2026 at 11:55:31 PM

The use of the cartographer to generate separate designs and the technology used to render/deliver those designs are two entirely separate concerns.

His original map provider offers both vector and raster tile services: https://www.thunderforest.com/maps/outdoors/

A common pattern is to use a vector tile service + style definition directly or to generate raster tiles if those are desired.

by n8cpdx

5/3/2026 at 12:36:50 AM

Good point, I assumed he was using images because his screenshots show text perfectly following the curves of rivers, which seems hard to do with dynamic rendering.

by apt-apt-apt-apt

5/3/2026 at 10:11:55 AM

That’s the point of a vector (not raster) tiles. Wh do you say it is hard to do with dynamic rendering? With Maplibre or any modern map SDK this this is standard…

by agilek

5/3/2026 at 11:54:14 AM

> With Maplibre or any modern map SDK this this is standard…

In practise, this doesn’t work out as visually pleasing as you’d like; labels repeat, or render partially or not at all, or become interfered with by other labels, or only work well at one given zoom. It’s easy to end up in a visually dissatisfying place that’s taking an unfathomable number of magic rules to get to.

The secret sauce to fixing this is creating separate label layers of perfect point locations or lines for labels to follow in advance. Added bonus is faster render and interaction times due to fewer rules.

by mootothemax

5/3/2026 at 7:49:46 PM

I'm afraid you're mistaken. He hired a cartographer to iterate over the design, but from the images, he likely used that feedback to create a map style.

For example https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Map_style

However, you're also kind of correct in that the rendered tiles are typically cached server-side (presumably also for Apple Maps).

by simsla

5/2/2026 at 10:35:17 PM

I think this may not even be possible because Apple does not give access to the Metal graphics API on Apple Watch to third-party developers.

by dzogchen

5/3/2026 at 3:54:01 AM

I appreciate this comes from an outside perspective as I've not heard of this before, but "Pedometer++ 8" sounds like "Dissertation_final_final_v8.docx" to me.

by bcraven

5/3/2026 at 9:47:09 PM

Yeah, I'd rather have pedometer pro max ++ or something like that. Make it more apple like.

by aucisson_masque

5/3/2026 at 4:51:54 AM

It is just Pedometer++

The 8 is the version number that launched yesterday with this feature

by AbuAssar

5/3/2026 at 6:54:09 AM

I don't know if anybody else is so petty like me regarding installing new apps but while I can't say anything about the app itself, I just wanted to know how much it would cost, if it is an subscription and so on.

But it was not possible from the app store page itself. Have a look, how confusing it is:

https://mastodon.gamedev.place/@ndr/116483475865871622

It shows a lot of price points from 1€ all up to 45€ without saying if its a subscription or a one-time payment.

Maybe the author should include the pricing clearly somewhere else on the app store page as apple is not able to do so.

edit: spelling

by ndr42

5/3/2026 at 11:43:58 AM

This is Apple's work - they show all enabled purchases/subscriptions author have enabled for price testing. And once you add one, removing it would mean the user's subscriptions auto-renew would get canceled, so they stay and accumulate.

And there is no way for the app to mark "this is the current pricing".

by tomaskafka

5/3/2026 at 3:28:34 PM

Does that mean if I subscribed for 22.99€ it would stay that way year after year?

What could be the reason that Apple designed it this way? The only reason I can think of is customer protection (say 1€ a month changes to 100€ a month and you user does not pay attention).

by ndr42

5/3/2026 at 3:46:34 PM

Your question implies someone "designs" things and given the state of the apple app store I'm not sure any form of conscious life is in charge of it

by toasty228

5/3/2026 at 7:46:39 PM

Generally it means that yes, the price will stay as-is. When the developer increases the price (versus introducing a different payment tier), they have two options: either keep all existing subscribers at the current price, or offer them to agree with the price bump (users can decline though). Reducing the price affects all existing users automatically.

by valzevul

5/3/2026 at 11:45:07 AM

The Pedometer functionality is free, and I’ve been using it for many years just because its display is pleasant.

The map tracking features cost $29.95 a year.

by raylad

5/3/2026 at 3:01:11 PM

When I look at the in app purchase prices on the App Store page, it tells me what they’re for? (1 month vs 1 year). You can usually assume that if you see a different price for the same name item, that it’s a sale price.

by MattRix

5/3/2026 at 3:23:47 PM

Good to know: My screenshot was from the web version of the app store page (see link in my first post), the iOS-version shows month or year as you said.

The premium yearly subscription has 3 price points shown (22.99, 34.99 and 44.99€) - I feel really bad for the developer as their customers are reminded that they have to pay more than others have paid before. I don't get why Apple is showing the old prices.

by ndr42

5/3/2026 at 6:09:16 AM

What I find curious is that the entire article seems to be framed in responding to the needs of a single user of the app — the author themselves.

Yet the app is published and has a great App Store review score of 4.8 with 170k+ reviews, and same score with 35k+ reviews for the Watch.

How does the author get feedback and respond to other customers? Or is this simply scratching one's own itch demonstrating its usefulness for others once again?

by necovek

5/3/2026 at 8:28:44 AM

Most likely both :)

by bwb

5/2/2026 at 9:55:53 PM

The fact that there is no 1st party Apple made hiking and topography map on the Apple Watch is such a failure, not even on the most expensive “made for explorers” Watch Ultra. And things like gpx import is just a mere dream

It’s a lifestyle device after all but still

by thrownawaysz

5/3/2026 at 3:05:55 AM

> there is no 1st party Apple made hiking and topography map on the Apple Watch is such a failure

I remember a time when Apple was chided for integrating functionalities of popular apps into its OS.

Apple created an incredibly awesome device, and its up to the market to make full use of its potential. Why would it be a failure for Apple to not make such an app?

by kumarvvr

5/3/2026 at 3:10:32 AM

Because they don't allow deeper integrations maybe? I still don't have a watch face layout I like.

by interstice

5/3/2026 at 11:53:56 AM

But in this case at least, the third-party developer has produced exactly the wonderful result they're looking for. The screen shot at the end showing the difference between Apple's map and theirs is so stark and compelling. If I were hiking I'd pay $20+ for their version.

Edit to add: throwing out a price like that made me go check to see what they actually charge, and either Apple's presentation of in-app purchases or their use of it is sad: it gives the same "premium" item like eight times, with different prices. Maybe that's per month and then longer periods with bulk discounts? Maybe they have a lifetime option for $40? If I were a regular hiker, I'd go for that.

by gcanyon

5/3/2026 at 11:37:42 AM

When Apple uses private APIs that are forbidden to developers on the App Store to compete with them it's not exactly fair.

So I wouldn't say it's a failure that they don't do that even more often.

by yreg

5/3/2026 at 1:17:16 PM

APIs are hard to get right the first time. I could see why they wouldn't want to release one until they've dogfooded and refined it.

That said, I'd love to see them take an approach unstable API release that requires the app to show a warning like "This app relies on unfinished features that may change or stop working entirely in the future, requiring the seller to release an apo update." and require them to launch it as a free preview, make it refundable during this period, etc.

by ascertain_john

5/3/2026 at 6:00:34 PM

Apple Maps has been able to display full-size navigation on the lockscreen since iOS 7 or 8 (?). Apple Maps also has access to a special style of notification that no other navigation app has.

iOS 7 was released in 2013. 13 years ago, aeons in tech land.

So "APIs are hard to get right the first time. I could see why they wouldn't want to release one until they've dogfooded and refined it." is crap. They're hoarding private API access purely for competitive advantage in services.

by jorvi

5/3/2026 at 4:38:53 PM

1) Apple has had a lot of functionality gated for many years. I’d buy the “they need to refine it” if they had a track record of actually opening things up without the hammer of regulation forcing them to.

2) This is a solved problem. You throw a “this is an experimental API, it’s interface may change”

by redserk

5/3/2026 at 3:28:53 PM

I feel like we could expect a bit more from the billion dollar company to support new apis. They have a solid mechanism to deprecate apis and force developers to rebuild their apps already, just shorten that window for the cutting edge apis released in preview.

by gumby271

5/3/2026 at 6:06:11 PM

As a developer, that’s a good way to get unused APIs and fewer apps.

by NetMageSCW

5/3/2026 at 3:16:38 AM

Oh and while I'm here the single layer non editable menu / weird grid is also the worst. I grew up texting under the desk on a nine key and only checking after I'd selected the contact to send to. Give me that level of muscle memory again someone, anyone, please.

by interstice

5/3/2026 at 6:34:47 AM

I made Type Nine for iPhone, and have waited a long time for Apple to open up for doing it on the watch.

https://typenineapp.com

PS. I typed this under my desk!

by porsager

5/3/2026 at 3:08:33 PM

Oh neat! Bookmarked

by interstice

5/3/2026 at 3:28:36 AM

Pebble watches are operated with physical buttons and you can definitely take advantage of muscle memory.

by modeless

5/3/2026 at 6:43:32 AM

Also Garmin watches. E.g. the Fenix line has 5 buttons and you can do pretty much everything with the buttons. So much handier than fooling around on small touch screens when you are e.g. on a bike or hiking (it does have a touch screen too). Also, the battery lasts up to several weeks (depending on the model), so you don't have to worry about it. Plus great support for using maps during a workout.

I also have an Apple Watch Ultra. My feeling has always been that Apple Watch Ultra is a smartwatch first, sports watch second. Garmin watches are sports watches first, smartwatch second.

I was an early adopter of smartwatches with first the Moto 360 and then Apple Watch Series 1 and I have found that I use the smartwatch part less and less. In the end I only used it for notifications for two apps (Signal and WhatsApp), sometimes for calling my wife when I'm on a bike, and contactless payments. These I can do with a Garmin as well, but it far less clumsy as a sports watch than Apple Watch.

Plus Garmin Watches generally work with GadgetBridge, so they are much easier to use in a privacy-preserving way.

by microtonal

5/3/2026 at 4:30:59 AM

That is quite literally how every part of Cocoa was polished. Things such as sidebars, notifications, came from third party libraries, Growl, etc. were all design patterns from the community. Isn't that also how iTunes came to be? Apple trying to acquire the best music players to integrate into its ecosystem? It's somewhat sad to observe what become of apple.

by rjzzleep

5/3/2026 at 12:21:05 PM

And jailbreaking was a creative source as well until jailbreaking (full, surviving reboots) went away. Yes there is still a sideloading community but nothing like what we were doing with Summer/Winterboard or the hundreds of random tweaks I applied to my phone back then. So many hours spent scrolling through new packages on Cydia.

I wish Apple would see that opening up their platforms actually leads to a better core OS as Apple borrows/steals from the community.

by joshstrange

5/3/2026 at 4:23:46 AM

maybe the culture should be for them to contract with popular app makers to be "The" default app for x amount of years or such, vs sherlocking.

by caycep

5/3/2026 at 3:57:16 AM

That’s a somewhat obvious flattening of perspective. While it’s clever we can make both positions sound silly, it illuminates nothing while throwing shade.

by refulgentis

5/3/2026 at 1:24:00 AM

I trust people like David Smith and companies like onX more than Apple when it comes to creating and supporting a top tier outdoor mapping app.

by Centigonal

5/3/2026 at 4:42:48 AM

Maybe some people are too young to remember Apple's Maps v1. Even Tim Apple recently mentioned that debacle in what was essentially an exit interview.

by dylan604

5/3/2026 at 5:04:48 AM

I recently switched back to Google Maps after Apple announced ads were coming to Apple Maps, since if the default Maps app is going to be saddled with ads on my thousands of dollars worth of Apple hardware anyway, I may as well use the best. And yeah, let’s be honest, Apple Maps is good enough for most use cases, but Google Maps blows it out of the fucking water.

In that light, I may be hard pressed to call it a debacle, but it’s still third-rate.

by SllX

5/3/2026 at 6:51:42 AM

For sports OpenStreetMap is much better anyway, in most countries it has many more hiking/cycling/MTB trails. More details on relevant POIs (water points, bathrooms, etc.). Plus there are many specialized versions like Open Fiets Map (cycling), Freizeitkarte (general outdoors), OpenMTB (mountainbiking and hiking), etc.

Currently I'm using Garmin's version of OpenStreetMap + an overlay for the Dutch cycle path network [1] on my watch.

[1] If you are in the Netherlands, this is a gem: https://planner.gps.nl/download.php?toolid=1 . Download the device version, copy it to your Garmin gpsr or Watch and you have a very nice overlay of the cycle network with nodes (knooppunten), etc.

by microtonal

5/3/2026 at 1:08:16 PM

My kids pointed out that Apple Maps shows street lights, which makes navigation much easier than waze or google maps. They use apple maps exclusively.

by mannyv

5/3/2026 at 3:05:52 PM

This is a very weird comment considering that Google Maps has had that feature for years.

by miyoji

5/3/2026 at 3:54:26 PM

> In that light, I may be hard pressed to call it a debacle, but it’s still third-rate.

Not sure how that isn't a debacle:

"The product wasn’t ready," Cook, who will step down as CEO in September, said during an Apple town hall on April 21, Bloomberg reported. "We apologized for it and we said, 'Go use these other apps. They're better than ours.' And that was a humble pie. But it was the right thing for our users."

https://www.usatoday.com/story/tech/news/2026/04/24/tim-cook...

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2026-04-22/tim-cook-...

(Bloomberg site paywalled, so used a non-paywalled source quoting Bloomberg)

by dylan604

5/3/2026 at 8:45:32 PM

To clarify, if this wasn't clear already: Apple Maps at launch was a debacle. It's present day Apple Maps I would be hard pressed to call a debacle.

by SllX

5/3/2026 at 2:37:11 AM

Apple is so intent on making the Apple Watch a catch-all that it doesn’t necessarily do any specific activity amazingly. After three Apple Watches over many years I finally sold my 10 last year and won’t be buying another. I bought a Coros and am pretty pleased with it, would consider a Garmin in the future. Coros and Garmin devices are built with activity in mind and not unneeded apps, like Uber. Garmin and Coros both have maps too.

by jsbisviewtiful

5/3/2026 at 7:01:49 AM

With Garmin you have to pay attention to the model though. E.g. cheaper Forerunners, Instinct, etc. do not support maps, though some support breadcrumb trail navigation. Then there are some models that do not support it, but have third party apps that add maps. For the models that do (e.g. Fenix, Venu X1, high-end forerunners), it is glorious though. There is a large community making specialized maps (typically based on OpenStreetMap) for Garmin Watches and GPSr units. Installation is typically as easy as dropping an .img file in the right folder on the Watch/GPSr.

Also Garmin's own maps are based on OpenStreetMap and have become pretty good.

Also worth mentioning (probably the same with Coros) that these are offline maps, so they always work, and you typically install them for a whole continent.

by microtonal

5/3/2026 at 10:12:40 AM

And I am happy with my Huawei GT-6 41mm. Looks like an actual real watch unlike the Apple ones, does everything Apple does, just no third party apps. Guess what, never needed one. Battery lasts a week instead of a day. Very refreshing to end the day with 91% battery left rather than 11%.

by ulfw

5/3/2026 at 10:26:34 AM

But we can have apps and developers like David on the Apple Watch. This is what makes it different from Garmin, where you need the company to build pretty much everything.

by ymolodtsov

5/3/2026 at 8:39:23 AM

> no 1st party Apple made hiking and topography map on the Apple Watch

I regularly use hiking and topography maps on my Apple Watch with the first party maps app, so it sure what you’re talking about

by astafrig

5/3/2026 at 9:44:58 AM

That's a regional feature not available everywhere

by thrownawaysz

5/3/2026 at 4:18:11 PM

Everything involving geography is a regional feature because it takes time to create things for physical stuff across the physical world; its not just some arbitrary limitation like streaming media.

by astafrig

5/3/2026 at 5:31:25 AM

Tbf there is no such app for the iphone either

by throwaway27448

5/3/2026 at 12:45:13 AM

Is it? They have a platform you can run other apps on, and this one in TFA and others provides this functionality.

by coldtea

5/2/2026 at 10:47:46 PM

Honestly, the less Apple made apps, the better for the ecosystem and the quality of the apps in general. Apple's recent "sherlocked" apps are not good quality at all, but they make it substantially more difficult for 3rd parties to compete with the now default offerings.

by cromka

5/2/2026 at 11:49:18 PM

Not a developer, but I feel like Apple improving the defaults has been good for the ecosystem. The Reminders app is an example of this, because as it has gotten better over the years, the baseline for a good iOS to-do app has been raised, without reducing the market.

by Sir_Twist

5/3/2026 at 12:37:24 AM

I agree 100%. I ended up building myself a utility to wrangle my reminders (like keep them from getting missed/lost) instead of using a third-party app.

by Schiendelman

5/3/2026 at 12:46:02 AM

Can you describe that utility?

by coldtea

5/3/2026 at 3:17:48 AM

Yeah! I mean I published it on the app store, too. It does three core things: 1) Makes sure every reminder gets a date and time if it doesn't have one 2) Snowplows them ahead of you, so if you go on vacation they're still in the near future 3) Moves reminders out of the way if you accept or create a calendar event conflicting with it

It also preserves ordering when moving things (hence my snowplow approach).

Soon it'll summarize what you did that day so you can feel good about what you get done - that's coming shortly, I'm testing the feature for another few days.

There are a bunch of settings to tweak this - picking what reminder lists to include, setting a time window for when it'll reschedule things, etc.

This should link to it:

https://apps.apple.com/us/app/reminder-wrangler/id6759400510

by Schiendelman

5/3/2026 at 1:13:46 AM

Nice try, Claude Code

by xp84

5/3/2026 at 1:45:56 AM

Is that meant to be a joke? I've been on HN for over a decade. Closer to ELIZA's era than that of LLMs.

I'm curious because I'm also interested in hacking the Reminders app via its API, to add some features in a side app

by coldtea

5/3/2026 at 6:10:51 PM

One thing I miss from the Newton was the universal design it had for accessing app data and extending apps that made such add-ons to the built-in apps relatively easy.

by NetMageSCW

5/3/2026 at 10:52:20 PM

EventKit is surprisingly good.

by Schiendelman

5/3/2026 at 3:18:47 AM

If you try it out, I'm curious what you'd add! I'd be happy to make improvements.

by Schiendelman

5/3/2026 at 1:47:36 PM

One issue is: when the Reminders app was simple, making a better reminders app just had to be a little more complex that a single developer could improve upon it and charge for it once and make a living. Now, the bar is so high, that it takes significantly more work/time to make a better app, and thus we have to pay subscription pricing in order to use it.

Instead of: let me buy this app for a few bucks and give it a spin, its now: even if I like this app, do I want to pay for it a few bucks a month for forever?

by djfdat

5/3/2026 at 12:28:19 AM

Generally speaking, Apple should be improving and adding to the base operating system all the time, including new apps. It is better for their users including new users if the phone itself is capable of more out of the box.

Where they fall short though, the App Store is right there. There’s almost always a better alternative for those who value having something better.

by SllX

5/3/2026 at 5:58:23 AM

> There’s almost always a better alternative for those who value having something better.

That alternative comes with a $60/year subscription these days, though.

by ileonichwiesz

5/3/2026 at 9:11:23 AM

I don’t know what you’re paying for that you see a $60/year subscription, but if it’s worth the $60/year to you, then you pay it. If it’s not, you don’t.

There are two apps I pay for that replace an app on my phone: $15/year for Overcast replaces Apple Podcasts and & $25/year for Transit replacing the transit function in Apple Maps (which I may be able to drop now that I’m on Google Maps, but I haven’t tried yet, and the app is so damn good I’m not sure I want to). Those are easily two of the absolute best and most used apps on my phone.

But if you don’t want to spend money on another vendor, or there is nothing suitable for the price you want to pay, at least the phone often has something serviceable.

by SllX

5/2/2026 at 11:44:17 PM

Didn't it take them 10+ years to make a calculator app for the iPad?

by joe_mamba

5/3/2026 at 6:11:47 PM

No, it took them that long to decide they wanted to ship a calculator on the iPad.

by NetMageSCW

5/3/2026 at 8:41:41 PM

What's the difference when the end result is the same?

If you can't decide for 10 years what you want from a calculator app, then it took you 10 years to make one, regardless if writing the app was only 2 weeks coding effort and 9,6 years of deciding.

Didn't know Apple has so many astro-turfers here.

by joe_mamba

5/2/2026 at 10:40:02 PM

Apple Maps on WatchOS is pretty good but the usual routine is that I get on my bike with a route set and 3 minutes in the “are you working out?” screen takes over and I can’t see the maps without stopping to turn it off. Surely that screen should turn into a notification or silently record after some time without taking over the screen.

I’m surprised to hear people at Apple work on this because surely they must encounter this issue.

If this guys maps can somehow take the screen and hold it, I think he’s got a killer feature for me. Though I glanced at the App Store page and it wasn’t clear to me which features are subscription gated and which ones aren’t and I despise apps that won’t tell me till I’ve set everything up (it just feels so frustrating that it wasn’t clear ahead of time) so I’ll probably just endure and try to remember to start a workout manually so it won’t take over.

by arjie

5/2/2026 at 10:50:30 PM

You can also turn off the "are you working out" feature. It's in the settings of the workout part. Just turn off "Check In Reminders"

by Dork_Sider

5/3/2026 at 6:15:58 PM

That’s a bad name.

by NetMageSCW

5/3/2026 at 8:58:42 PM

That is one functionality, but there is also the "Start Workout" reminder / "Pause Workout" reminder / "End Workout" reminder. These are the ones that I'd have to change, particularly the "Start Workout" reminder. However, I do want that, I just don't want it to be a persistent screen takeover.

by arjie

5/3/2026 at 12:47:30 PM

I was looking to see if someone had commented on this. For me it sometimes even happens if I start the workout before starting navigation – it will start off in the right configuration but then suddenly switch back to workout data in the middle of the ride.

Google Maps on the iPhone has a similar problem where a banner notification can block the section at the top that shows the next turn. If it's persistent (e.g., a calendar reminder), you have to try to swipe it away while driving without clicking on it by mistake. I guarantee multiple people have crashed because of this.

Whoever at Apple thinks that anything at all should override navigation for more than a couple of seconds without explicit user action is an idiot.

by sobjornstad

5/3/2026 at 4:03:57 PM

Hahaha the Google Maps thing is so annoying. “You have Astra’s appointment in 30 min”. Yeah, genius, that’s what I’m driving to. Infuriating.

by arjie

5/3/2026 at 12:28:02 AM

Really enjoyed reading this. A lot. Reminds me when I was a teenager reading technical blogs in the earlier days of the internet.

BTW, that last line about hiring/commissioning a cartographer, very rad and cool :~)

by maz1b

5/2/2026 at 10:57:36 PM

Static tiles on a watch is the right call. Tried dynamic rendering on a constrained device once and pan/zoom got eaten by GC pauses every frame.

by kweiza

5/3/2026 at 11:50:02 AM

That might be right - Garmin is doing the best they can with vector maps, but in Apple land, 3 fps rendering wouldn't fly.

by tomaskafka

5/2/2026 at 11:31:46 PM

There’s no GC on watchOS, it uses ARC

by timojaask

5/3/2026 at 1:44:12 PM

I have been using WorkOutDoors for awhile. I’ll check this out.

by hyraki

5/3/2026 at 3:02:32 AM

While traveling in another country, I once forgot my iPhone passcode (don't ask, I'm autistic like that)

After a few retries it put me on a 2 hour timeout.

I had to get back to my room. I knew the way back on foot well enough, about 30 minutes away, but I wanted to take a look at the map anyway.

I thought I'd try it on my Apple Watch Ultra 3. It was a few months ago so it was the latest OS.

There were a few bugs in trying to do that simple task, like when typing out the name of a location the keyboard kept disappearing as if the UI was crashing or something.

I sighed, muttered a few curses at the state of things and the people in charge who let it get this way, and lowered my wrist and just enjoyed the stroll.

Like so many things in Apple software since the past 5 or so years, so much shit just doesn't work when you REALLY need it. F'n hell

by Razengan

5/3/2026 at 6:16:52 PM

On the watch it can be better to dictate than type anyway.

by NetMageSCW

5/4/2026 at 12:16:39 AM

Dictation like Siri is another one of those Apple things that you know will suck so you never try using it.

Certainly not going to hold my wrist up to my mouth on a noisy street and yell at my watch until it gets the names of foreign streets right lol

by Razengan

5/3/2026 at 3:52:34 AM

Awesome work, truly. (But I'll stick with my Garmin.)

by mrcwinn

5/3/2026 at 1:04:06 PM

Maps has really come a long way since the icon depicted a route driving off a bridge.

by ModernMech

5/3/2026 at 10:29:48 AM

[dead]

by GRMPZ23

5/3/2026 at 1:00:44 PM

[dead]

by qzgrid37

5/2/2026 at 10:03:52 PM

[flagged]

by eckelhesten

5/2/2026 at 10:06:01 PM

We really can't afford to keep blacklisting words for reasons that have no basis in reality. We're gonna run out of words.

(parent edited their comment - the suggestion was that "pedometer" is a bad name because of the first four letters being reminiscent of pedophiles and Epstein)

by rogerrogerr

5/2/2026 at 10:52:35 PM

Can we also not ban people for pointing out an evidently funny naming?

by puttycat

5/3/2026 at 12:13:37 AM

Who was banned?

by phainopepla2

5/2/2026 at 10:16:01 PM

Let's start by banning words like 'pediatric' instead, which directly reference children and are thus more related to pedophiles. We can just call people 'doctor/dentist for small people'.

by apt-apt-apt-apt

5/2/2026 at 10:04:53 PM

I can’t believe you made me sign in just to downvote this.

by blairbeckwith

5/3/2026 at 6:11:51 AM

And it's a f:ing subscription delete

by opentokix

5/3/2026 at 6:27:56 AM

How do you expect the developers to pay for the service? Map tiles alone are already very expensive and data heavy.

by davidkuennen

5/3/2026 at 2:24:27 PM

The monthly and yearly subscriptions are fine, and merited given the time and effort that went into this product, but offer a lifetime subscription.

by y0ink

5/3/2026 at 9:38:23 AM

Render tiles locally on iOS companion app side

by petu

5/3/2026 at 10:43:34 AM

That's not what they were talking about

by saagarjha

5/3/2026 at 9:11:15 AM

https://openfreemap.org

by rob

5/3/2026 at 11:03:50 AM

Thank you for sharing this; however, given a significant piece of the author's journey was hiring a cartographer to create custom map designs for his use case, I suspect that this might not be directly suitable for him, any more than Apple Maps was.

This would presumably transfer the need to host map data back to the author, which would represent an ongoing cost, and therefore maybe justify a modest subscription?

by mft_

5/3/2026 at 10:16:57 AM

This is just outsourcing the payment to donations...that may or may not arrive ("We aim to cover the running costs of our public instance through donations.").

by dewey

5/3/2026 at 2:41:01 AM

I spend a lot of time in wilderness areas that I don't know, and I simply pull my phone out of my pocket to see where I am. My watch measures my heart rate and that's it. While I have no doubt that pedometer++ is great and the work that went into it is impressive, I can't really see myself switching away from a big screen workflow to see exactly where I am. And I don't need to check where I am every 5 minutes. Typically only every 30 minutes or longer. Dunno, maybe I'm missing something :shrug:

by kobieps