Wrestling with the Infograph Watch Face

I have spent a lot of time in the last few months trying to figure out how to configure my Apple watch infograph watch face. This watch face certainly brings to mind the old warning about being careful what you wish for. For so long I’ve been looking for a watch face with many complications and now Apple has given it to me. The problem is, I made a big mess out of it. My first attempts involved using all of the available complications. If it was shiny, I put it in. The trouble with that is the complications surrounding the watch hands tend to blend in with the watch hands. As a result, when you glance at your watch, sometimes it is difficult to tell what time it is.


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Ultimately, I decided that complications in the center of the watch face were generally a bad idea.

The only exception I made for that was the calendar watch face. I hyper-schedule my days… still. I like having appointments set up for my next tasks and I run these all day. I frequently look at my watch to see where I need to go next or what I need to be working on next. Having the calendar available and the next event written across the top of the infograph face is quite useful. For that reason, I have been leaving the calendar in the center complication, but that’s it. The rest of the center of the watch face is blank. Making it easy to read the watch hands.

The idea of this watch face is to create something for use during the day while I’m trying to be productive. I have a separate face that I use for my workouts. I did not include any health-related information on this watch face. Instead, I knew I wanted to use the drafts and OmniFocus complications. The trouble with these complications is that they add text along the rim of the actual watch face. With OmniFocus, it gives you your next task, and with drafts, it gives you your inbox count. I don’t want that across the top of the watch face because looking at those words on top of the next appointment makes a jumble of letters that again is difficult to read as you’re getting through your day. As a result, I decided to put the OmniFocus in drafts complications in the bottom slots.


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For a while, I tried the watch just like this with no additional complications across the top, but it made the watch look bottom heavy, and I do love complications. As a result, I decided to put some additional complications across the top of the screen. I don’t want words combining with my next appointment, a condition of any complication going across the top of the screen is that it’d not have words across the bottom of it, but instead a line or some other graphic image. Ultimately, I decided on the timer and CARROT weather.


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I use timers all day for things like the Pomodoro Technique or just checking on the water in the garden. This one has already been a winner for me on my day to day watch face. I’m not sure about the need for a weather complication. I live in California, and the weather is generally pretty mild. I don’t need a minute by minute update of what the temperature is.

I am, in general, pretty happy with this setup for the Apple infograph watch face. I am, however, still not entirely convinced it’s any better than the Siri watch face. I used the Siri watch face all of last year, and it generally gives me the information I need when I need it. I am disappointed that it hasn’t done a better job of servicing third-party application information as we were promised with iOS 12. While I’m giving the infograph face a real try here for awhile, I can’t promise I won’t ultimately end up back on the Siri watch face, particularly if it gets better at third-party integration.

Free Agents 61: The Morning Routine

Join Mike and me on a fresh episode of Free Agents. We dig in on our morning routines. Mike finds himself entering the Free Agent arena like never before, and I want to start year-end planning.

This episode of Free Agents is sponsored by:

  • FreshBooks: Online invoicing made easy.

  • Timing: The automatic time-tracking app for macOS. Use this link to save 10% on your purchase. Check out the Timing blog for articles for independent workers.

Mac Power Users 458: MPU+: There’s Something You Didn’t Tell Me

Katie has a big announcement. I have a new Field Guide. We both have new iPads. Also, we discuss the new MacBook Airs, Apple’s pricing, our daily routines, and answer listener questions on this week’s episode of Mac Power Users.

This episode of Mac Power Users is sponsored by:

  • FreshBooks: Online invoicing made easy.

  • Luna Display: The only hardware solution that turns your iPad into a wireless display for your Mac. Use promo code POWER at checkout for 10% off.

  • The Omni Group: We’re passionate about productivity for Mac, iPhone and iPad. 

  • Gazelle: Sell your iPhone for cash at Gazelle!

Get SaneBox at Your Back (Sponsor)


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This week MacSparky is sponsored by SaneBox, the email service that can help you get control of your inbox. I’ve had some significant challenges lately on my time. Before SaneBox came into my life, times of unexpected down time always preceeded an email train wreck. That’s not the case for me now though. SaneBox helped me stay on top of the most important email and kept things going. With SaneBox, you add a powerful set of email tools that can work in just about any email client. SaneBox allows you to:

  • Wake up everyday to find that the SaneBox robots have automatically sorted your incoming email for you so you can address the important and ignore the irrelevant.

  • Defer email for hours, days, or weeks so it is out of your life until a more appropriate time.

  • Set secret reminders so if someone doesn’t reply to an important email, SaneBox gives you a nudge to follow up.

  • Automatically save attachments to the cloud (like Dropbox).

  • Use their SaneForward service to automatically send appropriate emails to services such as Evernote, Expensify, and Kayak.

  • Move unwanted email to the SaneBlackHole and never see anything from that person again.

One of the best parts about SaneBox being a web services is that it works no matter which mail application you prefer. If you want to jump between different mail apps on your iPad, no problem. If you want to upgrade your Mac to High Sierra, there’s no need to wait for SaneBox to work. It already does. SaneBox is a set of tools that will move with you between different applications on different platforms with no trouble at all.

Why not straighten out your email today? I’ve been a paying subscriber for years and can’t imagine getting by without it. If you sign up with this link, you even get a discount off your subscription.

The New Galaxy’s Edge Soundtrack

This one pushes all of my buttons.

As an annual passholder, I’ve enjoyed watching Star Wars grow out of the Disneyland backlot over the last year. The new Star Wars themed land will be called Galaxy’s Edge and, thanks to Josh Gad (long story), I spent some quality time with the primary Galaxy’s Edge designers. If you are curious, I explain the story and the details in this episode of Rebel Force Radio.

This week Disney announced that John Williams is creating new and original Star Wars themes just for the new park. They even posted a video showcasing the new music with some very recent flybys through the area under construction. Disney says the California iteration of Galaxy’s Edge is supposed to open this summer.

Every time I watch the below video, my inner eight-year-old flips out.

Some Geek-Friendly Black Friday Deals

There are several good Black Friday Deals available today.

Apple HomePod (up to $100 off)

While this product seemed to start with a fizzle, it is definitely gaining momentum. Everyone loves them in my house. If you’ve got an Apple Music subscription, they’re great.

Today Best Buy has them for $100 off and Costco has them for $80 off (Costco Membership required).

Apple Gift Cards with Apple Hardware

Apple’s big promotion this year involves giving away Apple Store Gift Cards with purchases going all the way up to $200 with a new Mac.

Application Sales

Some of my favorite applications are also on sale:

Fantastical 2 for iPad – $2.99 (usually $9.99)

Fantastical 2 for iPhone – $1.99 (usually $4.99)

Fantastical for Mac – $24.99 (usually $49.99

Cardhop for Mac – $9.99 (usually $19.99)

Unclutter for Mac – $9.99 (usually $19.99)

Daisy Disk for Mac –  $5.99 (usually $9.99)

CleanMyMac X from MacPaw (30% off)

Gemini 2 from MacPaw (30% off)

Affinity Photo for Mac – $34.99 (usually $49.99)

Affinity Designer for Mac – $34.99 (usually $49.99)

Screens for Mac OS – $20.99 (usually $29.99)

Screens for iOS – $13.99 (usually $19.99)

Alto’s Adventure – $2.99 (usually $4.99)

Star Wars Knights of the Old Republic – $2.99 (Usually $9.99)

Baulder’s Gate – $1.99 (Usually $9.99)

Automate Text Entry for Your Whole Team with TextExpander (Sponsor)


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This week MacSparky.com is sponsored by TextExpander, the easiest way to start automating your work on Mac, iPad, and iPhone. TextExpander is a text replacement tool. With it, you can type a phrase like “ccell” and it will automatically fill in your cell phone number. But TextExpander is so much more than that.

TextExpander brings so much power to text automation, including Team Support. I’m a TextExpander for teams subscriber myself. Using TextExpander, my team supporting the Field Guides is able to get quick responses to customer inquiries with exactly the right information. Imagine if all of your customer support team could use a common bank of snippets, written and edited by your best writers and shared with everyone on your team. Not only that you can update the snippets at any time and they automatically populate to everyone.

I’ve done so much with TextExpander over the years that I even have a page of snippets I’ve created that you can download ranging from movie to reviews to conference calls. One of my personal favorite groups is foreign thanks where you can say thank you to people in most language. Sending an email to a French friend, just type “french thanks” and TextExpander gives you “Merci”. It’s like your own, personal translator.

To learn more, head over to TextExpander.com and let them know you heard about it at MacSparky in the “Where did you hear about us” field.