
Antennagate. Mapsgate. Bendgate. It’s not too late for Tapticgate, I suppose. Or Tattoogate. I don’t know what to say about people with wrist tattoos who are getting false readings from the heart beat monitors on their Apple Watches. This just makes me Videos posted to YouTube have also shown users with wrist tattoos attempting to log a work out session, only for the Watch to intermittently pause the stopwatch when it failed to detect the wrist. The news follows a report by the Wall Street Journal that The Apple Watch has rumbled into trouble thanks to faulty “Taptic Engines” and a heart-rate monitor that doesn’t jibe with wrist tattoos. That butterfly on your wrist is now a mistake for two reasons. Microsoft’s HoloLens augmented-reality glasses Not all wrist tattoos will interfere with the Apple Watch's sensors — iMore found that lighter-colored tattoos did not disrupt readings as much as darker-colored tattoos, and that patterned tattoos did not appear to cause problems. The type and design of The delays The customer complaints on social media We told you about #TattooGate. Many Apple Watch customers with wrist tattoos took to social media, complaining the Apple Watch didn't work because of those tattoos. Research firm UBS, even went as It’s a heartwrenching decision: either get that expensive tattoo removal, or live a life without an Apple Watch. Or, as Apple suggests, put on a heart rate monitor instead. The company has quietly confirmed that tattoos screw with the watch’s heart .
Reports emerged this week that people with dark wrist tattoos were experiencing problems with their Apple Watches. One watch owner with a tattoo on his left wrist said the device would lock, preventing him from receiving notifications. He initially thought We discovered this problem via a thread on Reddit, where users with wrist tattoos reported difficulties using some of the wearable device’s key functions. Since then, Apple has quietly updated one of its support pages for the smartwatch, confirming the Earlier this week we heard reports that tattoos screw with the Apple Watch's wrist detection systems, and it turns out that this isn't just a rumour spreading online. Why? Because Apple has quietly confirmed that it's a problem by updating the device's Following reports from disgruntled tattooed Apple Watch users earlier this week, Cupertino has officially admitted that there is a problem with the smartwatch and those who have darkly inked tattoos on their wrist. Tattoogate, as it was inevitably .
Gallery of tattoos for women on wrist:






.jpg)









