I would assume that it works like handoff over BT LE, as that is what can actually detect if the watch is near the computer or not.
I just hope the new MBPs will be out by the time macOS Sierra is released so I can use the great new features.
Really you won't know until launch in September/October.I assume I need the following:
Any idea if it works over BT LE or wifi? I'm not sure if my (ancient) 2011 MBP will be able to use it, or if I need my newer Air?
- macOS Sierra
- iOS 10
- watchOS 3
Does anyone have a clue why the watch can unlock a Mac but an iPhone can't? Is there a hardware reason or is it just Apple deciding how it should be to give another reason to buy the watch? If TouchID on an iPhone is acceptable for Apple Pay then I can't see why it couldn't also be used to unlock your computer. Possibly iPhone 7 will address this as I'm not really likely to justify buying a watch just to unlock my Mac. The only benefit of the watch is that you have the security of knowing that its attached to the user's arm, but surely the fingerprint on an iPhone is enough?
I think it's more about the time you spend getting the iPhone out of your pocket and scanning your fingerprint would be about the same as typing the password so there's no real benefit from it. I doubt the iPhone 7 will change any of this.
You would be able to use these "great new features" with the current lineup of macs.
Does anyone have a clue why the watch can unlock a Mac but an iPhone can't? Is there a hardware reason or is it just Apple deciding how it should be to give another reason to buy the watch? If TouchID on an iPhone is acceptable for Apple Pay then I can't see why it couldn't also be used to unlock your computer. Possibly iPhone 7 will address this as I'm not really likely to justify buying a watch just to unlock my Mac. The only benefit of the watch is that you have the security of knowing that its attached to the user's arm, but surely the fingerprint on an iPhone is enough?
I think it's more about the time you spend getting the iPhone out of your pocket and scanning your fingerprint would be about the same as typing the password so there's no real benefit from it. I doubt the iPhone 7 will change any of this.
Anyone think there will be a work around to the requirement that the AW have a passcode enabled? The last thing I want to do is put a passcode on my AW.
Your 2011 MBP is on the supported devices list - it should work fine (my 4,1 MBP from 2008 however, I'm going to have to tweak a bit).Does anyone know if there is a wifi replacement card that does work with auto-unlock for the 2011 MBP?
I personally have a 2012 Retina which should be support but isn't. I upgraded my wireless card to AC which enabled it. Like you said though...it shouldn't make a difference.
Anyone think there will be a work around to the requirement that the AW have a passcode enabled? The last thing I want to do is put a passcode on my AW.
Actually, the 2011 isn't on the supported devices for Auto Unlock.Your 2011 MBP is on the supported devices list - it should work fine (my 4,1 MBP from 2008 however, I'm going to have to tweak a bit).
I was curious about the "2013 Mac or newer" bit. When I check the specs on the 2014 vs 2012 Mac Mini's, they both have BT 4.0 - NOT LE. (now, BT LE will downwardly support BT 4.0, so it should be fine).
Anyone have any idea why they're saying 2013 or newer for this feature? (only delta I saw was that the 2014 Mini had 802.11AC). Is that a requirement for this feature? (if so, we should be able to get USB cards that support 802.11AC)
Edit: And (just checked) how can they make that a requirement when the watch only supports 802.11b/g/n??
Also, you don't even need to put it in, if you have a paired iPhone with TouchID. Just put the watch on your wrist first, then unlock the iPhone.You know you only have to input a 4 digit code once every time you put it on, not every time you wake it, right? Not that much hassle.