Bandbreite is the app you need to track your Apple Watch band problem
What you need to know
- Apple Watch bands are pretty addictive and we all buy too many of them.
- Bandbreite is an app that was built to make it easy to keep track of them all.
- You can mark bands as owned and add them to a wishlist, too.
It's very easy to find yourself collecting Apple Watch bands because Apple makes some pretty great colors and combinations. But with so many available and some questionable naming decisions, it's sometimes difficult to remember which bands you own. That's why you need an app.
Bandbreite is that app and it's available right now from the App Store. You can tell the app which bands you have and which bands you want to get your hands on in the future. You'll see images of every band and information on when they were released and whatnot. It's all pretty special!
The fact that Bandbreite is free is just the icing on the cake. You can download it right now from the App Store. Go grab it!
Master your iPhone in minutes
iMore offers spot-on advice and guidance from our team of experts, with decades of Apple device experience to lean on. Learn more with iMore!
Oliver Haslam has written about Apple and the wider technology business for more than a decade with bylines on How-To Geek, PC Mag, iDownloadBlog, and many more. He has also been published in print for Macworld, including cover stories. At iMore, Oliver is involved in daily news coverage and, not being short of opinions, has been known to 'explain' those thoughts in more detail, too. Having grown up using PCs and spending far too much money on graphics card and flashy RAM, Oliver switched to the Mac with a G5 iMac and hasn't looked back. Since then he's seen the growth of the smartphone world, backed by iPhone, and new product categories come and go. Current expertise includes iOS, macOS, streaming services, and pretty much anything that has a battery or plugs into a wall. Oliver also covers mobile gaming for iMore, with Apple Arcade a particular focus. He's been gaming since the Atari 2600 days and still struggles to comprehend the fact he can play console quality titles on his pocket computer.