Apple announced the ECG feature on Apple Watch Series 4 will be released later this year, but do we know exactly when? Any ideas of when it could be available?
This Tuesday?
A Tuesday, probably.This Tuesday?
Later this year in the US only.Apple announced the ECG feature on Apple Watch Series 4 will be released later this year, but do we know exactly when? Any ideas of when it could be available?
No one knows for sure. Having stuck their neck out with the "this year" promise, I'm sure Apple is doing everything in its power to make that happen. Unfortunately, we have a federal agency involved. And that can lead to delays.
I think it'll happen this year. However, unless its hidden in the code for WatchOS 5.1.2 (possible but I think someone would have sniffed it out by now), it'll either have to be done via another release (5.1.3? 5.2?) with no betas (seems unlikely) or Apple flips a switch somewhere and it becomes active.
Having "sign-off" and having the paperwork in place that accompanies that sign off can be 2 very different things.Apple claimed they already had FDA sign-off during the September event. I haven't looked that up, but presumably you can do so.
I don't know whether it needs to be in or referred to in an iOS update. Possibly it will arrive as a free-standing app.
Having "sign-off" and having the paperwork in place that accompanies that sign off can be 2 very different things.
Apple spokespeople clearly indicated that the regulatory approval in the US was complete.
FDA clearance letter, dated September 11, 2018, is here.
Did you read the letter? It clearly lays out prerequisite testing and controls which must be in place before the ECG can be put on the market. In the future tense.
I did. Did you?
As a result of this order, you may immediately market your device as described in the De Novo request, subject to the general control provisions of the FD&C Act and the special controls identified in this order.
Technically, "marketing" means taking your product to market (to sell), so it could depend on legal definitions.Yes. Marketing does not equal selling. And note the last clause re special controls, which refers to the 5 numbered items. None of those were listed as already having been done. So the logical inference here is that Apple was allowed to talk about the app at the iPhone event (marketing) but cannot deploy it until it met those conditions.
Yes. Marketing does not equal selling. And note the last clause re special controls, which refers to the 5 numbered items. None of those were listed as already having been done. So the logical inference here is that Apple was allowed to talk about the app at the iPhone event (marketing) but cannot deploy it until it met those conditions.