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Like every other piece of tech, our smartwatches can get sluggish after continual use. Maybe you're waiting several seconds for your smartwatch to load functionalities, or you're experiencing annoying glitches that distract you from using the watch.
By continually using the smartwatch, regularly switching between apps, or running too many apps at the same time, you're bogging it down with data that clutters it and slows performance. This could result in frozen or unresponsive screens, or lag.
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You can do a few things to address this, like initiating a restart or a reset. In this article, I'll walk you through when you should perform a restart and when you should reset.
Restarting your Pixel Watch can correct issues like the frozen "G" logo that won't go away, an error message stating that something went wrong, timed-out updates, or a forgotten PIN, Google writes in an article.
There are two ways to initiate a restart on your Pixel Watch.
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If your smartwatch were a room, a restart would be like someone washing the windows, vacuuming the floors, and changing the bed linens. A reset is like someone emptying the room and scrubbing it clean of its tenant. The restart refreshes your smartwatch to make it cleaner, fresher, and faster, while a reset clears the watch of every bit of data on it to start anew.
Resetting your smartwatch should fix major issues and clear it completely of its data. You would typically do this if you're giving your smartwatch away or if a restart didn't fix a glitch you've been seeing.
One Redditor said his Pixel Watch was "a bit janky for a while," so he performed a reset. He said that not only did resetting the watch fix a battery drain issue, but it also removed an additional feature that was seemingly causing glitches.
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