![]() ![]() Go to My Watch > Glances, then tap the red minus sign by the ones you don’t want to see. Remove apps you don’t want to see in Glances from the Apple Watch app on your iPhone. While plenty of apps have glance views, you quickly realize that you don’t need immediate access to summaries from every single app on your watch. Swipe up on the watch face to view glances, which are quick nuggets of information, either the latest or the most important, from both native apps like Weather and Activity and third-party ones like the New York Times and Twitter. ![]() You’ll still see notifications for email and messages, but you need to tap one to see what it actually says. If you’re worried about them inadvertently seeing previews of your email messages in the notifications list, just go to the Apple Watch app for iPhone, and turn on Notifications Privacy, in the Notifications menu. You’ll be demonstrating your new Apple Watch to friends and family and random passersby-trust us, a lot of people are going to be interested in how it works. Once there, you can clear notifications one at a time by swiping it to the left and tapping the X, or just force-touch the screen for a larger X button that can clear all the notifications in one tap. You get to your notifications screen by swiping down from the watch face. (It’s on by default, but you can get rid of it in the Apple Watch app for iPhone, by going to My Watch > Notifications, and turning off Notifications Indicator.) ![]() When you raise your arm to view your watch’s face, you’ll see a tiny red dot if you have new notifications. Otherwise, the watch will drive you nuts. This can be insanely time-consuming, but worth it. Something to note: If you want to make sure you receive notifications on the watch from specific apps, you need to change all of those apps’ notification settings on your iPhone. ![]()
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