Did anyone suggest kicking your door down and taking your Casio?How about a digital watch that lasts decades, ain't that sustainable? Meanwhile Smart Watches last so little it is ridiculous.
I think you missed a couple of iterations after the OG.I was an original Pebble Kickstarter backer. Now I have a Pixel Watch 3 XL.
I liked my Pebble...12 years ago. Today? No, I wouldn't make that trade. At the very least, it's going to need much nicer hardware. A nice glass and metal body, withna crisp, clear screen as close to that watch glass as possible. An off the shelf e-ink screen buried 3mm behind some injection molded plastic isn't going to cut it today.
Heck my current Seiko watch is solar powered, so no batteries being replaced and thrown out every few years.How about a digital watch that lasts decades, ain't that sustainable? Meanwhile Smart Watches last so little it is ridiculous.
And that fact is such a bummer. If this does come to fruition I hope they find a way to do the basic integrations"Apple has limited the functionality of third-party smartwatches so that users who purchase the Apple Watch face substantial out-of-pocket costs if they do not keep buying iPhones."
There's the Silicon Valley oligopolistic market distortions we know and... know.
or a replacable solar charged button cell like most solar quartz watches. Make it easily serviced like a regular watchWhat I'd like is an e-ink display, a solar cell ring, integrated capacitors, and no battery.
Nice-to-haves would be bluetooth and/or NFC communication via open standards, a few hardware buttons, and possibly ANT integration (so the body sensors go in a dedicated piece of hardware separate from the watch, and the watch is limited to displaying notifications and acting as a mobile remote.
I personally think that the bigger "14 day" battery in the Fossil hybrids justifies the extra weight, but it's academic now that Fossil has exited the smartwatch game.The Pebble Time Round is the best watch I've ever had.
Yeah the battery was small but it was beautiful and light and tiny.
I haven't been able to use a smart watch since my last Pebble died. I tried the Fossil Hybrids, but they are just to heavy in comparison.
Why is his morality being put to question for Beeper Mini?I owned two Pebbles. I enjoyed them a lot. It would be neat if they made a comeback. That said, this is the guy who decided it was his company's right to hack into the iMessage protocol and resell access to Apple's messaging servers without authorization.
I simply don't trust him.
"Smart watches" sit on your wrist and can be used to tell the time, but that's where the similarities with traditional watches end. They're primarily phone peripherals rather than timekeeping devices.How about a digital watch that lasts decades, ain't that sustainable? Meanwhile Smart Watches last so little it is ridiculous.
Maybe for you, but if I wanted a smart watch, I would absolutely not give two shits about a metal and glass body or a fancy screen that makes the battery life crap.I was an original Pebble Kickstarter backer. Now I have a Pixel Watch 3 XL.
I liked my Pebble...12 years ago. Today? No, I wouldn't make that trade. At the very least, it's going to need much nicer hardware. A nice glass and metal body, withna crisp, clear screen as close to that watch glass as possible. An off the shelf e-ink screen buried 3mm behind some injection molded plastic isn't going to cut it today.
For me indeed. Thats why I said "I" rather than "you" or "anyone" or "everyone".Maybe for you, but if I wanted a smart watch, I would absolutely not give two shits about a metal and glass body or a fancy screen that makes the battery life crap.