Unlock Apple Watch 2

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Fix Apple Watch Will Not Unlock with Password. Most people complaints that I can't unlock. Apple is adding an option in iOS 14.5 that will let you use your Apple Watch as a secondary source of authentication in turn allowing you to unlock your iPhone while wearing a mask. The COVID-19 pandemic has forced millions of people worldwide to wear masks for their own safety and to reduce the transmission of the virus. If your Apple Watch is disabled but you know your passcode Your Apple Watch will be disabled after 10 unsuccessful login attempts, which can happen if you forget your passcode or your kids try to access your Apple Watch. If you remember your passcode, you can unlock your Apple Watch from your paired iPhone. Open the Apple Watch app on your iPhone.

Auto Unlock works when you're wearing your unlocked watch and are very close to your Mac. If necessary, move your watch a little closer.

How to automatically log in

This feature gives you instant access to your Mac when you're wearing your Apple Watch. Just wake up your Mac and you're ready to go—without typing a password.

The first time you log in after you turn on, restart, or log out of your Mac, you must log in by entering your password manually. After that, Apple Watch logs in for you.

How to approve other password requests

You can also use your Apple Watch to approve other requests to enter your administrator password. This works anywhere you need to type your Mac password, such as when viewing passwords in Safari preferences, unlocking a locked note, approving an app installation, or unlocking settings in System Preferences.

Watch

For example, when you click the lock to make a change in System Preferences, your Mac prompts you to approve with Apple Watch:


To automatically enter your password without having to type it, just double-click the side button on your Apple Watch:

How to set up Auto Unlock

  1. Make sure that your Mac and Apple Watch meet the system requirements for Auto Unlock.
  2. Make sure that your devices are set up as follows:
    • Your Mac has Wi-Fi and Bluetooth turned on.
    • Your Mac and Apple Watch are signed in to iCloud with the same Apple ID, and your Apple ID is using two-factor authentication.
    • Your Apple Watch is using a passcode.
  3. Choose Apple menu  > System Preferences, then click Security & Privacy. Select 'Use your Apple Watch to unlock apps and your Mac' or 'Allow your Apple Watch to unlock your Mac.'

If you're not sure whether your Mac supports Auto Unlock, press and hold the Option key while choosing Apple menu > System Information. Select Wi-Fi in the sidebar, then look for 'Auto Unlock: Supported' on the right:

Learn more

If you're having difficulty getting Auto Unlock to work, try these solutions:

  • In Security & Privacy preferences, deselect 'Use your Apple Watch to unlock apps and your Mac,' then restart your Mac and turn this setting back on.
  • Make sure that your Mac isn't using Internet sharing or screen sharing.

Learn about more Continuity features for your Apple devices. Apple magic keyboard 2020.

Sunday, 21 February 2021

I don't generally write about features in beta versions of iOS. In fact, I don't generally install beta versions of iOS, at least on my main iPhone. But the new 'Unlock With Apple Watch' feature, which kicks in when you're wearing a face mask, was too tempting to resist.

First things first: to use this feature, you need to install iOS 14.5 on your iPhone and WatchOS 7.4 on your Apple Watch (both of which are, at this writing, on their second developer betas). So far, for me, these OS releases have been utterly reliable. Your mileage may vary, and running a beta OS on your daily-carry devices is always at your own risk. But I think the later we go in OS release cycles, the more stable the betas tend to be. Over the summer, between WWDC and the September (or October) new iPhone event, iOS releases can be buggy as hell. The x.1 releases are usually the stable ones, and the releases after that tend to be very stable in beta — Apple uses these releases to fix bugs and to add new features that are stable. If anything, I think iOS 14.5 is very stable technically, and only volatile politically, with the new opt-in requirement for targeted ad user tracking.

After using this feature for a few weeks now, I can't see going back. As the designated errand runner in our quarantined family, it's a game changer. Prior to iOS 14.5, using a Face ID iPhone while wearing a face mask sucked. Every single time you unlocked your phone, you needed to enter the passcode/passphrase. The longer your passcode, the more secure it is (of course), but the more annoying it is to enter incessantly.

Unlock Apple Watch 2

For example, when you click the lock to make a change in System Preferences, your Mac prompts you to approve with Apple Watch:


To automatically enter your password without having to type it, just double-click the side button on your Apple Watch:

How to set up Auto Unlock

  1. Make sure that your Mac and Apple Watch meet the system requirements for Auto Unlock.
  2. Make sure that your devices are set up as follows:
    • Your Mac has Wi-Fi and Bluetooth turned on.
    • Your Mac and Apple Watch are signed in to iCloud with the same Apple ID, and your Apple ID is using two-factor authentication.
    • Your Apple Watch is using a passcode.
  3. Choose Apple menu  > System Preferences, then click Security & Privacy. Select 'Use your Apple Watch to unlock apps and your Mac' or 'Allow your Apple Watch to unlock your Mac.'

If you're not sure whether your Mac supports Auto Unlock, press and hold the Option key while choosing Apple menu > System Information. Select Wi-Fi in the sidebar, then look for 'Auto Unlock: Supported' on the right:

Learn more

If you're having difficulty getting Auto Unlock to work, try these solutions:

  • In Security & Privacy preferences, deselect 'Use your Apple Watch to unlock apps and your Mac,' then restart your Mac and turn this setting back on.
  • Make sure that your Mac isn't using Internet sharing or screen sharing.

Learn about more Continuity features for your Apple devices. Apple magic keyboard 2020.

Sunday, 21 February 2021

I don't generally write about features in beta versions of iOS. In fact, I don't generally install beta versions of iOS, at least on my main iPhone. But the new 'Unlock With Apple Watch' feature, which kicks in when you're wearing a face mask, was too tempting to resist.

First things first: to use this feature, you need to install iOS 14.5 on your iPhone and WatchOS 7.4 on your Apple Watch (both of which are, at this writing, on their second developer betas). So far, for me, these OS releases have been utterly reliable. Your mileage may vary, and running a beta OS on your daily-carry devices is always at your own risk. But I think the later we go in OS release cycles, the more stable the betas tend to be. Over the summer, between WWDC and the September (or October) new iPhone event, iOS releases can be buggy as hell. The x.1 releases are usually the stable ones, and the releases after that tend to be very stable in beta — Apple uses these releases to fix bugs and to add new features that are stable. If anything, I think iOS 14.5 is very stable technically, and only volatile politically, with the new opt-in requirement for targeted ad user tracking.

After using this feature for a few weeks now, I can't see going back. As the designated errand runner in our quarantined family, it's a game changer. Prior to iOS 14.5, using a Face ID iPhone while wearing a face mask sucked. Every single time you unlocked your phone, you needed to enter the passcode/passphrase. The longer your passcode, the more secure it is (of course), but the more annoying it is to enter incessantly.

'Unlock With Apple Watch' eliminates almost all of that annoyance. It's that good. It's optional (as it should be), and off by default (also as it should be, for reasons explained below). It's easy to turn on in Settings on your iPhone: go to Face ID & Passcode, enter your passcode, and scroll down to the 'Unlock With Apple Watch' section, where you'll find toggles for each Apple Watch (running WatchOS 7.4 or later) paired with your iPhone.

Here is how the feature seems to work.

  1. Does Face ID work normally? I.e. is the face in front of the phone you, the owner, and are you not wearing a mask? If so, unlock normally. Normal non-mask Face ID is unchanged when this feature is enabled.

  2. If Face ID fails, is there a face wearing a mask in front of the phone? If so, is an authorized Apple Watch in a secure state (i.e. the watch itself is unlocked and on your wrist) and very close to the iPhone? If so, unlock, and send a notification to the watch stating that the watch was just used to unlock this iPhone. The notification sent to the watch includes a button to immediately lock the iPhone.

Because it's a two-step process (step #1 first, then step #2), it does take a bit longer than Face ID without a mask (which is really just step #1). Apple version of word. But it works more than fast enough to be a pleasant convenience experience. Regular Face ID is so fast you forget it's even there; 'Unlock With Apple Watch' is slow enough that you notice it's there, but fast enough that it isn't a bother.

It's important to note that in step #2, it works with any face wearing a mask. It's not trying to do a half-face check that your eyes and forehead look like you, or anything like that. My iPhone will unlock if my wife or son is the face in front of my iPhone — but only if they're wearing a mask, and only if my Apple Watch is very close to the phone. I'd say less than 1 meter — pretty much about what you would think the maximum distance would be between a watch on one wrist and an iPhone in the other hand.

When this feature kicks in, you always get a wrist notification telling you it happened, with just one button: 'Lock iPhone'. If you tap this button, the iPhone is immediately hard-locked and requires your passcode to be re-entered even if you take your mask off. (It's the same hard-locked mode you can put your iPhone into manually by pressing and holding the power button and one of the volume buttons — a good tip to remember when going through a security checkpoint or any other potential encounter with law enforcement.)

I'm not sure if anyone will be annoyed by this mandatory wrist notification, but they shouldn't be, and it shouldn't be optional. You want this notification every time to prevent anyone from surreptitiously unlocking your iPhone near you, just by putting a face mask on.

Also, if your Apple Watch is in Sleep mode (the bed icon in WatchOS's Control Center), the feature does not work.

It's occasionally slow. And two or three times, I got a message on my iPhone that my watch was too far away for the feature to work, even though I raised my watch-wearing wrist next to the phone. These hiccups were rare, and to my recollection, I only ran into them with iOS 14.5 beta 1, not beta 2.

Even in the worst case scenario, where the feature doesn't work, you're no worse off than you were before the feature existed: you simply have to manually enter your phone's passcode.

Last but not least, the 'Unlock With Apple Watch' feature very specifically seems to be looking for a face wearing a face mask. The feature does not kick in if Face ID fails for any other reason — like, say, if you're wearing sunglasses with lenses that Face ID can't see through. (I wish they'd make this work with sunglasses, too.)

Unlock Apple Watch 2019

Addenda

Throwing Shade: There seems to be some confusion over what I'm asking for w/r/t sunglasses. Face ID has always supported an option to turn off 'Require Attention for Face ID'. When off, Face ID will work even if it doesn't detect your eyes looking at the screen. (It's an essential accessibility feature for people with certain vision problems.) If you own sunglasses that the iPhone's TrueDepth camera system can't 'see' through, you can disable 'Require Attention for Face ID' to allow Face ID to work while you're wearing your shades.

This is far from ideal though, because it weakens Face ID all the time, not just when you're wearing sunglasses. What's nice about the new 'Unlock With Apple Watch' feature is that it only applies when you're wearing a mask and your Apple Watch. What I'm saying I'd like to see Apple support is an extension of 'Unlock With Apple Watch' that would do the same thing for sunglasses that it currently does for face masks. I've heard from readers who have trouble with Face ID when wearing their motorcycle helmets, too, and I'm sure there are other examples. Basically, I'd like to see Apple add the option of trusting your Apple Watch to unlock your iPhone in more scenarios where your face can't be recognized. My request is very different from, and more secure than, the existing 'Require Attention' feature.

Apple Watch Unlock

(Speaking of which, while wearing a mask, 'Unlock With Apple Watch' does not check for whether your eyes are looking at the display, regardless of your setting for 'Require Attention for Face ID'. Again, this makes sense, because it's not Face ID — 'Unlock With Apple Watch' is an alternative authentication method that kicks in after Face ID has failed.)

Apple Pay: I didn't mention the fact that 'Unlock With Apple Watch' does not work with Apple Pay. This makes sense, because however secure 'Unlock With Apple Watch' is (and I think it's quite secure), it's not as secure as Face ID authenticating your actual face. For payments, you obviously want the highest level of secure authentication.

Also, for Apple Pay, if you're wearing your Apple Watch (a requirement for 'Unlock With Apple Watch'), you can just use your Apple Watch for Apple Pay.

Apple Watch 2 For Sale

It also doesn't work with apps that use Face ID for authentication within them. Banking apps, for example, or unlocking locked notes in Apple Notes. But this makes sense too — the feature is specifically called 'Unlock With Apple Watch'. It unlocks your phone, that's it. Anything else that requires Face ID for secure authentication still requires Face ID.

Apple Watch 2 Manual

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