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Don't toss your Apple Watch away if you get a hard fall warning, like Steven Spielberg did

Pressing the onscreen "X" will cancel any sort of false alarm on the Apple Watch.

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Director Steven Spielberg was giving a talk when his Apple Watch suddenly said he'd taken a hard fall. His reaction to the false alarm ended up making matters worse.

Although false warnings from an Apple Watch are rare, they are not unknown — and can sometimes happen at inopportune moments. In this case, the renowned filmmaker was in the middle of giving a talk about his earliest feature film.

When the Apple Watch on his wrist beeped and displayed the warning, Spielberg should have simply pressed the on-screen "X" to cancel it. Instead, eager to resume his talk, he removed it, and dropped it on the ground.

"I'm not going to press the SOS [button]," Variety reported him as telling the audience. "I'll pick it up later." Shortly thereafter, the Apple Watch — having not received any response from its owner — began an audible countdown before calling emergency services.

Spielberg then quickly retrieved it, and turned off the alert.

When it does not receive a response from someone who has actually taken a hard fall, or been in a vehicle accident, it will make an audible final attempt to get a response from the wearer before calling emergency services and the owner's primary contact in the Health app.

The Fall Detection feature was first introduced with the Apple Watch Series 4, and has been credited many times for saving people after an accident, calling for help when they cannot respond.

False alerts can happen when the Apple Watch detects it is moving rapidly, then stops suddenly. The device has had occasions where it falsely report crashes or falls during rollercoaster rides, and false hard falls or crashes while people skied, though Apple has since worked to reduce the number of incorrect alerts.



22 Comments

DAalseth 6 Years · 3067 comments

I’ve gotten a number of those. I find them funny. I have learned to take my watch off if I’m going to be hammering or something like that. This is a Spielberg failure. 

powermacbandit 19 Years · 51 comments

This is related to one of my biggest gripes about all the emergency features on the Apple Watch and iPhone.  When you accidentally activate any of them in a hurry to cancel it and the way to cancel it is very subdued compared to the activate function. It can cause you to panic while trying to find the deactivate option before time runs out.  This could be changed ever so subtly so the X is much more apparent. 

Xed 4 Years · 2896 comments

I got my first one recently. I did fall, but it wasn't anything severe. I simply looked at my watch and hit the option that noted that I was OK. 

chasm 10 Years · 3624 comments

This is related to one of my biggest gripes about all the emergency features on the Apple Watch and iPhone.  When you accidentally activate any of them in a hurry to cancel it and the way to cancel it is very subdued compared to the activate function. It can cause you to panic while trying to find the deactivate option before time runs out.  This could be changed ever so subtly so the X is much more apparent. 

To be fair, my vision is still pretty good -- but the X on the illustration above looks pretty clear and large enough to easily tap to me.


You'll note also that the call function has to be *slid across the screen* in order to work. This is a deliberate design choice to prevent accidentally calling for help when you don't need it.

Also, a minute is quite a long time really. If you're okay, you shouldn't be panicking.

Finally, if for some reason the call does go through, you should stay on the line with emergency services and tell them you are okay. Do not hang up prematurely.

VictorMortimer New User · 239 comments

I got one a few months ago, no idea why.  I had not fallen.
I just canceled it.