Wear OS 6 Is Supercharging The Always-On Display With Media Controls And More

wear-os-6-is-supercharging-the-always-on-display-with-media-controls-and-more
Wear OS 6 Is Supercharging The Always-On Display With Media Controls And More

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Active Watch face on Pixel Watch 3

Summary

  • Most Wear OS apps don’t support always-on display (AOD), forcing screen to go fuzzy when not in use.
  • Google introduced “Force Global AOD Experience” setting in Wear OS 5.1 for Pixel Watches to keep screens useful.
  • The Wear OS 6 update will unify AOD experience, keeping last-used apps active on screen, including media controls in Material 3 Expressive flair.

Most top smartwatches have had always-on displays (AODs) for a while now, letting you check the time, for example, without lifting a finger. The Pixel Watch has had AOD since day one, but Wear OS never really played nice with it. So, if you’re using an app that doesn’t support AOD and you drop your wrist, all you get is a fuzzy version of the screen with the time slapped on top.

A smartwatch with the Wear OS logo and some icons beside it.

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Right now, only a handful of apps can stick around on the screen even when you’re not actively using them. They just dim down and go a bit gray in AOD mode. But, as mentioned above, most apps don’t have that kind of AOD support. So, when you stop using them or drop your wrist, they vanish completely. The same goes for stuff like media controls and a good chunk of the Wear OS interface.

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As a partial remedy, Google rolled out Wear OS 5.1—built on Android 15—to Pixel Watches, and while there are a bunch of tweaks, one quiet game-changer slipped in: a new setting that forces AOD across all apps. It’s called “Force Global AOD Experience,” and it basically makes sure your screen stays useful no matter what app you’re using. The catch, however, is that you’ll have to dig into Developer Options to switch it on.

Wear OS 6 is finally fixing the AOD mess for good

9to5Google now reports that Google is finally tackling that long-running AOD issue with Wear OS 6. According to the tech giant, the update will unify everything under one smooth always-on display experience across devices. What’s new? When your watch goes into ambient mode, your last-used app will still stay up and active on screen.

Google gives a solid example of how this plays out: even if you’re not tapping your watch, your current song and media controls will still show up. It’s a small thing, but it highlights the upgrade in which important information stays put on your screen without the need for wrist flicks.

9to5 also caught a fresh new look for media controls with that Material 3 Expressive flair. Now, all the buttons sit in bold, color-backed shapes. As shown in the pictures above, the play/pause button gets the signature pill-style vibe. Once AOD kicks in, those controls slim down to simple colored outlines, but your song title stays sharp and tappable. It’s a nifty visual shift that keeps things functional without making your watch screen feel dead.