Skip to main content

Full-on Google Maps is (almost) working on Android Wear

LG Watch Urbane
Andy Boxall/Digital Trends
The full Google Maps experience is headed to your wrist. A series of updates to the Google Maps app and Android Wear seem to have added a new style of navigation, where the screen on a smartwatch is taken up by an entire map, showing your location and providing directional views using the compass.

However, before anyone gets too excited, it’s not a seamless, perfect experience just yet, and may not even be available on your device at all. According to a Reddit post, the new feature comes alive when your watch is running Android Wear 5.1.1, and version 9.9 of Google Maps is installed on the smartphone to which it’s connected.

Recommended Videos

Officially, Android Wear 5.1.1 is only available on the LG Watch Urbane, but there are ways to install it on other smartwatches, and one of the posters on Reddit has it setup on an Asus ZenWatch. At the time of writing, our Watch Urbane is all ready to go, but Google Maps is still at version 9.8.1, which means the feature isn’t enabled yet.

Android Central reports that it has got Google Maps operating on the Urbane, but says that while it looks great, it’s not working as one would hope. Apparently, it provides a top-down view for Maps, which can be scrolled around, and a pinch will zoom in on details. A set of zoom in/out buttons work in the same way, plus it all works in ambient mode too, when the map shows as a black and white outline on the screen.

Sadly, the app is plagued by crashes and instability, making it frustrating to use at the moment. Remember, the update isn’t available for everyone, and may simply be in the late stages of testing before Maps 9.9 is sent out on general release. We’ll keep a look out, and will update here once the feature goes live.

If you’ve got this latest version of Maps running on your Android Wear smartwatch, tell us about the experience in the comments below.

Andy Boxall
Senior Mobile Writer
Andy is a Senior Writer at Digital Trends, where he concentrates on mobile technology, a subject he has written about for…
Google gives Android 13 a magic trick for music playback at CES 2023
Mockup image of Android 13's uninterrupted listening feature.

Android 13 launched last year, but Google is far from done working on it. A new feature announced at CES 2023 makes playing audio from Android devices on Bluetooth speakers easier than ever. Dubbed "uninterrupted listening," the feature aims to make transitioning from listening to audio content on your phone to other devices seamless and intuitive.

Uninterrupted listening gives users notifications on their phones when they get close to an audio device. As you go through your home, you might want to start listening to a song or podcast on another device (like your smart speaker or TV) based on your proximity to them. Listening to a song on your Pixel Buds Pro but walking into the kitchen near your Nest Audio? You'd get a notification prompting you to instantly transfer the audio from your earbuds to the speaker.

Read more
Google’s Android monopoly finds its biggest challenge, and Apple might be next
Apps screen on the Google Pixel 7.

The Competition Commission of India slapped Google with two hefty fines over anti-competitive strategies that have allowed it to dominate the mobile ecosystem in India. Totaling over $250 million, the penalties reprimand Google for forcing smartphone makers to avoid Android forks, prefer Google’s web search service, and pre-install popular cash cows like YouTube on phones.

Google was also disciplined for forcing its own billing system on developers that allowed the giant to take up to a 30% share of all in-app purchases for applications listed on the app store. Google is not really a stranger to titanic penalties; The EU handed Google a record-breaking fine of approximately $5 billion in 2018 for abusing its dominant market position — a penalty that was upheld in September this year following Google’s appeal.

Read more
Google Chrome is getting the Android tablet update you’ve been waiting for
Google Chrome app on s8 screen.

Google today announced the release of its redesign for the Chrome app on Android tablets. After long being neglected on the big screen, especially in comparison to Apple's or Samsung's browsers, Google says it'll be rebuilding the browser to help you get work done faster with a tablet or other large-screened device.

These updates can be broken down into design and functionality improvements, and we'll be kicking things off with the redesign. The first change adds a new side-by-side design when using Chrome paired with another app. This comes with an auto-scroll back feature so you can swipe between tabs, hiding the close buttons when your tabs are too small to prevent mis-taps — plus the inclusion of a restore feature.

Read more