[HN Gopher] Over 16k people still use a Pebble smartwatch
___________________________________________________________________
 
Over 16k people still use a Pebble smartwatch
 
Author : will0
Score  : 437 points
Date   : 2022-11-03 10:37 UTC (12 hours ago)
 
web link (rebble.io)
w3m dump (rebble.io)
 
| m-p-3 wrote:
| Sadly mine has a dead battery, and I'm afraid to replace it and
| damage the seal. I switched to multiple "cheap" smartwatches (Mi
| Band, Amazfit Bip) before settling on the bangle.js2, but despite
| the specs being similar, the OS on the Pebble feels way more
| responsible and faster. Hopefully that improves over time, and
| the main developer (Gordon Williams, who is also the main dev for
| Espruino upon which the bangle.js firmware is based on) is easy
| to reach out and talk to :)
| 
| Loved my Pebble, and I appreciate my bangle.js2 more and more.
 
  | troyvit wrote:
  | Yeah I've been agonizing about the bangle for months now
  | (thanks HN) and I saw a recent post from Gordon[1] that says
  | the cutting edge builds are getting much faster.
  | 
  | [1] https://forum.espruino.com/conversations/381203/
 
| ClassyJacket wrote:
| After the disaster that was the Galaxy Watch 4, I've given up
| completely on Android Wear - it is just too slow, even right out
| of the box, and the battery life is abysmal. Going flat at 7pm
| without anything extra installed and with 4G off is unacceptable.
| 
| So I'm trying to move to a simpler watch with just basic smart
| features and longer battery life, but one where I can customize
| the watchface with code.
| 
| I ended up going with Watchy: https://watchy.sqfmi.com/
| 
| And it's cool, but it's extremely basic, a bit bulky and ugly,
| and has all the drawbacks of E-Paper.
| 
| Pebble would have been perfect. If they still sold them I would
| buy one today. It's tragic the company went under so quickly.
| 
| Maybe I should get a Pebble. But I don't really want to buy a
| second hand smartwatch, and I don't see the point in investing
| into something that will never be updated and has no official
| support. All this update does it make the phone companion app
| work on a Pixel 7.
| 
| RIP Pebble. I hope someone makes something similar.
 
  | reaperducer wrote:
  | _And it 's cool, but it's extremely basic, a bit bulky and
  | ugly, and has all the drawbacks of E-Paper._
  | 
  | Can you elaborate a bit about the e-paper part? I always
  | believed that watches were the perfect place for e-paper. Low
  | power, durable, always-on, wide viewing angle, no need to
  | constant refresh.
  | 
  | I thought the smaller the display, the better suited it was for
  | e-paper.
 
  | ProAm wrote:
  | What features are you looking for? I moved away from the
  | 'Smartwatch' arena to the fitness watch (Suunto Baro or Garmin
  | Fenix). It allows notifications/messages, music streaming,
  | fitness tracking. And the battery last 5-7 days (depending on
  | what you use and how often, for example if I fitness track
  | often the battery life decreases due to extra monitoring,
  | etc..) I found it a good middle ground between a full blown
  | smart watch and a dumb watch.
 
  | dboreham wrote:
  | > After the disaster that was the Galaxy Watch 4
  | 
  | Wait...what?? I've used all the Samsung watches, with 3G/LTE,
  | and the 4 is leaps and bounds better than anything that
  | preceded it (and is for me quite usable and hassle-free).
 
  | lhoff wrote:
  | You might want to look into the Amazfit and Mi Band Devices
  | that are supported by Gadgetbridge[1]
  | 
  | I haven't looked into the process of watchface creation but
  | there is a huge collection[2] that can be installed via
  | Gadgetbridge. It also has the benefit that its privacy friendly
  | without any cloud connections and fully opensource.
  | 
  | [1]https://www.gadgetbridge.org/
  | [2]https://amazfitwatchfaces.com/
 
| bullen wrote:
| Yes; my Time, 2 and 2 HR still work.
| 
| The final smartwatch.
| 
| Sleep monitor is perfect and notifications really help so I never
| miss anything important without disturbing anyone else.
 
| centro wrote:
| Maybe Rebble is a new brand that can start production of e-ink
| based smart watches that don't try do to everything.
 
| enobrev wrote:
| I'm genuinely surprised a similar alternative has never popped
| up. Every time Pebble comes up, there are so many people posting
| about how much they loved it and how they still keep theirs alive
| or how they had had to relucantly give up and go to a different
| watch due to it being out of support.
| 
| Seems like a giant hole wishing to be filled. I know I want one -
| but I don't want to revive one - I want a new one with active
| support.
 
| odiroot wrote:
| I'm one of them. Still love it. The built-in compass and the
| third-party app that integrates with Google Maps are priceless to
| me. Using physical buttons as opposed to touchscreen is another
| great feature.
| 
| All these years, I haven't found a replacement.
 
  | hobo_mark wrote:
  | Wait, which versions have a compass? My P2HR does not mention
  | that anywhere.
 
    | 51Cards wrote:
    | My Time model has a compass and I use it quite a bit. There
    | are several compass apps in the store.
 
    | odiroot wrote:
    | I have Pebble Time. The compass app is a factory one, I
    | believe.
 
  | esel2k wrote:
  | How or what do you integrate with google maps? I only see
  | notifications and it stops after a while.
 
    | odiroot wrote:
    | I bought (ages ago) the _Nav Me_ companion app. It parses
    | Google Maps notifications and shows you directions on the
    | watch. Also vibrates and turns the light on for every step.
 
| robg wrote:
| Wonder how many are still using an iPod nano as a watch.
| 
| https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/1104350651/tiktok-lunat...
 
  | reaperducer wrote:
  | _Wonder how many are still using an iPod nano as a watch._
  | 
  | I still use my iPod Shuffles a couple of days a week, so
  | there's probably someone out there.
  | 
  | Every time I upgrade macOS, I'm amazed that even the ancient
  | iPods are still supported. I bunged my launch day Shuffle (17
  | years old) into my new Mac over the weekend, and it works fine,
  | still syncs, and Finder even still shows the icon for it.
  | 
  | Same with my also 17-year-old iPod Video. Man, 17 years went by
  | quickly.
 
  | maratc wrote:
  | My iPod nano battery expanded and cracked the whole device
  | open. I almost literally cried, as I loved that little device
  | too much.
  | 
  | Getting a replacement is not an option as any iPod nano battery
  | is about 10 years old now. A sign of what will happen to all
  | the Apple Watches out there.
 
    | mmmlinux wrote:
    | a replacement battery is 15$USD on ifixit...
 
    | SanjayMehta wrote:
    | I loved my 80Gb classic iPod. When its hard drive finally
    | died I couldn't bring myself to dispose of it.
 
      | hellomyguys wrote:
      | You can definitely replace the hard drive with parts
      | online!
 
| RajT88 wrote:
| It is a tragedy that I don't much enjoy wearing watches (I don't
| like the sweat under the band), because I loved my Pebble 2. I
| still wear it sometimes if I am doing something outdoorsy and
| likely to be covered in fish guts or river water or mud or
| whatever.
| 
| Occasionally, I am one of those 16k.
 
| fny wrote:
| Another really cool toy we need to start hacking is the Sony FES
| U [0]. This thing has e-ink on its strap, and it runs Free RTOS.
| It's the sickest watch concept I've seen in years.
| 
| [0]: https://fashion-entertainments.com
| 
| [1]: https://fashion-entertainments.com/fes-watch-u/fw/oss.html
 
| emj wrote:
| I'm looking at buying readily available a cheap programmable
| smartwatch. PineTime was easy to write programs for and that
| Casio replacement board [0] discussed here earlier also hade a
| nice tool chain, but with shipping and taxes it's just too
| bothersome.
| 
| [0] https://www.crowdsupply.com/oddly-specific-objects/sensor-
| wa...
 
  | anoonmoose wrote:
  | I bought into the Bangle.js 2 Kickstarter and I have to say,
  | I'm incredibly happy with it. Granted, I've done nothing with
  | it besides design my own watch face and take advantage of the
  | GPS to set the time occasionally, but I know it's capable of a
  | lot more. It was very easy to write the watch face code, and I
  | feel like it would be pretty easy to do whatever I wanted to
  | do. Ecosystem for it is probably a bit more developed than it
  | was at launch, too- they were supposed to follow up with some
  | apps that made interfacing it with your phone easier, dunno
  | where that ended up.
  | 
  | To be fair- I've also got PineTime bookmarked for if my
  | Bangle.js 2 ever breaks, or I just want to mess around with
  | some lower-level aspects of watch firmware.
  | 
  | https://www.espruino.com/Bangle.js2
 
    | triyambakam wrote:
    | How easy is to write games for a Bangle.js 2? I want a
    | hackable smart watch that I can make simple games for :)
 
      | emj wrote:
      | There is an emulator on the web, so develop something
      | simple and the order one. I wanted to buy ten watches so
      | Bangle.js was not an option, but if you just want something
      | programmable I do recommend it.
      | 
      | https://www.espruino.com/ide/?emulator
      | https://www.espruino.com/Bangle.js+First+App
 
| helsinkiandrew wrote:
| I've got a friend who still uses a Palm Pilot (circa 1998) as a
| daily calendar manager/notepad. Works at Google and delights in
| telling younger colleagues it's a Pixel 8 prototype.
 
  | GloriousKoji wrote:
  | I miss the old Palm Pilot and even Windows CE devices. Despite
  | the massive amounts of computational power and an endless
  | library of software I find modern smart phones PDA inferior.
 
    | jhatemyjob wrote:
    | Yea, all the iPhone did was make PDAs palatable by the
    | masses. I wonder how much further we would be as a species if
    | it was never released.
 
  | rchaud wrote:
  | I'm sad that tech did away with replaceable batteries.
  | 
  | I would love to use my 5-inch 16:9 Samsung phone from 2016. It
  | still works fine, but the battery barely lasts an hour. Instead
  | I have to use one of their gigantic replacement phones with a
  | ridiculous 21:9 ratio.
 
    | gibolt wrote:
    | You can get a replacement battery pretty easy online. I'm
    | sure somewhere would be willing to do the replacement. It
    | isn't impossible, just hard without the right tools
 
    | dieselgate wrote:
    | It's strange to me how 'newer' phones (referencing my iphone
    | 5s) seem to have software control battery life? I got the
    | battery replaced multiple times on an iphone and none of them
    | really provided a sustained increase in the battery life of
    | the device.
 
      | mrcheesebreeze wrote:
      | planned obsolescence
 
      | dont__panic wrote:
      | I've replaced my iPhone SE (2016)'s battery three times
      | since I originally bought it.
      | 
      | Every time, I waited until the phone started to shut off or
      | rapidly drain below 20% battery. Replacing the battery
      | fixed that and brought my battery life back to original
      | (impressive!) longevity each time. As in, I can reliably
      | use my phone for 2 days without charging, as opposed to
      | barely making it to midnight of the first day.
      | 
      | You do have to "recalibrate" the battery by fully charging
      | it, sitting on the charger for a few hours, then fully
      | discharging it, letting it sit dead for a few hours, and
      | finally recharging to 100% uninterrupted afterward. Maybe
      | if you leave that out it takes a lot longer to see the
      | impact?
 
    | andrepd wrote:
    | I'm in the exact same position. Only now that my 5-inch 16:9
    | from 2016 completely died (and I can't get replacement
    | batteries anywhere) did I begrudgingly buy a Pixel 4a.
 
    | huehehue wrote:
    | I have fond memories of rooting early Android devices, and
    | having to constantly rip the battery out when the phone would
    | inevitably lock up.
    | 
    | I have less fond memories of waiting all day for a newer
    | phone to run out of battery when the same thing happened.
 
      | unsafecast wrote:
      | I've never ever ran into a situation where holding the
      | power button for ~15 seconds didn't reset the phone. This
      | stuff runs at a _way_ lower level than the software you can
      | mess with.
      | 
      | Non-removable batteries are still stupid though.
 
        | womod wrote:
        | I recently managed to "hard-brick" my Motorola one 5g ace
        | after updating magisk, getting stuck in a bootloop, and
        | naively deciding to attempt to boot from the B slot
        | instead. On qualcomm-based devices you can get into EDL
        | (Emergency DownLoad) mode where you have nothing that is
        | actually bootable on the device, and the phone will
        | remain entirely unresponsive save for appearing as a
        | serial device when plugged in over USB. You then need to
        | "talk" to the phone with the appropriate protocol (Sahara
        | or Firehose depending on the age of the device) and you
        | can gradually work towards recovery. In my case I was
        | able to manually reconstruct a valid bootloader.img for
        | my particular software version, re-flash it, and get back
        | into a "soft-brick" state from there.
        | 
        | However, I do know of some slightly older HTC devices
        | that would have the EEPROM straight-up completely die,
        | leaving the device permanently trapped in a "hard-brick"
        | state unless someone felt like doing some BGA soldering.
        | 
        | Modern phones do have a lot of stuff running under the
        | hood that makes it a lot harder to mess things up, but
        | once you go off the beaten path things become much less
        | certain.
 
        | whitexn--g28h wrote:
        | I have seen newer 1+ phones lock up and it fail to
        | respond to the reset sequence. After receiving a call the
        | modem crashes and it reboots. No other input can reset
        | the device.
 
    | capitainenemo wrote:
    | The Samsung XCover6 Pro has an easily replaceable battery
    | (and water resistance and physical buttons and dedication to
    | 5 years of patching). In fact, I think it uses the same
    | battery as the XCover from a couple of years ago. I just
    | ordered mine yesterday actually. Kinda excited.
 
      | frosted-flakes wrote:
      | I'd buy one if it wasn't as slow and unperformant as all
      | the reviews say it is. I want a Galaxy S10e in that
      | package.
 
        | capitainenemo wrote:
        | Yeah, it's a mid-range phone, not a top-end one. But, eh,
        | $600. And frankly, for what I'm doing, a mid-range phone
        | is quite adequate. It has for example, 3x the memory and
        | 2x the processing power of the temporary phone I'm using
        | right now which is functional-but-annoying.
 
      | jbj wrote:
      | sadly it does not have support for /e/, graphene or
      | similar.
      | 
      | My 3 last phones have been samsung, and after using /e/ I
      | have no intent of getting an original samsung software
      | again
 
    | zeppelin101 wrote:
    | You can still get those batteries replaced. It's just a lot
    | more work.
 
      | bitwrangler wrote:
      | There are many You-tube videos showing step by step. If
      | you're slightly handy with small screws it's not hard. I've
      | replaced my Samsung battery twice over the years. Look into
      | it before you cast doubt and lose hope.
 
        | tdeck wrote:
        | It depends on the phone. Some are constructed with glue
        | as well as screws, or have plastic tabs that become
        | brittle and can easily break when servicing the phone.
 
        | janef0421 wrote:
        | That was likely true of models from the mid-2010s, but
        | based on what I've seen of Hugh Jeffrey's work, most
        | modern, high-end smartphones are held together with glue
        | and require the disconnection of multiple fragile ribbon
        | cables to replace the battery. It's a daunting task even
        | for someone with experience working on computer
        | components.
 
        | rchaud wrote:
        | I might go to a shop, but I'm not going to fiddle around
        | with a screwdriver and a YouTube video for something
        | manufacturers themsleves let you do in 5 seconds.
        | 
        | However, that does not leave me with workable
        | alternatives. I respect what Fairphone is trying to do,
        | but EUR500 for a replaceable battery phone with internals
        | several years old isn't the right choice for me.
 
        | gambiting wrote:
        | >>but I'm not going to fiddle around with a screwdriver
        | and a YouTube video
        | 
        | But.....why? It's hardly any effort. Saying "I won't
        | fiddle around with a screwdriver" is a stance as
        | respectable as someone saying they are proud of not being
        | able to do maths or know basic geography facts.
 
    | pmontra wrote:
    | I opened my Samsung A40 two days ago and replaced a camera
    | that didn't autofocus anymore. 20 Euros with shipping. The
    | battery can be replaced too. Actually I had to disconnect it
    | to remove the upper motherboard and access the camera. It
    | seems a pretty serviceable phone. You should check YouTube
    | for tear down videos about your model.
 
    | dont__panic wrote:
    | As long as you have a phone that's reasonably well designed,
    | it's usually not _too_ much trouble to replace the internal
    | battery every 2-3 years.
    | 
    | I think our culture is really wasteful with batteries. I
    | can't _believe_ that my iphone doesn 't have a built-in
    | setting to cap charging at 80%. Studies show that you can
    | decrease battery wear to negligible levels by doing this. Yet
    | my Android e-ink tablet, my iphone, my smartwatch, and my
    | laptop all do not support a hard battery cap.
    | 
    | At least I can install al dente on my laptop, and root my
    | tablet. Everything else I just have to manually take off the
    | charger before 80%!
 
      | theodric wrote:
      | You can get a gizmo called a Chargie that lets your phone
      | control charge rate and max charge% over Bluetooth to this
      | little interposer dongle that sits between the charger and
      | phone. Getting enough to equip all my usual charge points
      | would exceed the cost of a replacement battery, but I guess
      | if they last for more than one phone it's possibly
      | worthwhile.
 
      | andrepd wrote:
      | If you are on Android and have root, you can install ACC
      | (https://f-droid.org/en/packages/mattecarra.accapp/). It
      | lets you customise the charging profile of your phone as
      | well as see battery statistics, but out of the box it
      | 
      | 1. Caps charging to 80%
      | 
      | 2. Pauses charging if it gets too hot, until it's below
      | 40degC
      | 
      | If you sporadically need full capacity (travelling, etc),
      | just hit the "charge once to 100%" button and you're good
      | to go.
 
      | jackmott42 wrote:
      | I believe the research would suggest 80% doesn't really
      | make an especially good target. Its mostly a linear
      | relationship between state of charge and speed of battery
      | aging, other than a step change around 50-70% depending on
      | the chemistry.
      | 
      | source (one of many):
      | https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.1149/2.0411609jes/pdf
      | 
      | I keep my EV charged to just 50% most days for this reason,
      | get below that step change.
 
        | gnramires wrote:
        | Interesting, just a note to someone reading that paper:
        | I'm not sure what methodology they used (did they keep
        | the cell SoC in storage?), but storing depleted cells can
        | severely degrade them due to self-discharge (that's why
        | the recommended storage SoC is usually 40%).
 
      | HWR_14 wrote:
      | > I can't believe that my iphone doesn't have a built-in
      | setting to cap charging at 80%
      | 
      | They have a "smart charging" setting which is poorly
      | defined. It says it limits charging to 80% sometimes using
      | AI. I think the idea is it charges to 100% overnight, and
      | 80% the rest of the time.
      | 
      | But i agree, it would be nice if it had a selector switch.
      | Some laptops have a "aim for 60%, 80% or 100% battery
      | charge" option.
 
      | detritus wrote:
      | I had to bite my tongue seeing a young woman idly hoy one
      | of those extremely wasteful ecigs in the bin on my way home
      | earlier. I wa mentally working all the bits of complexity
      | going to landfill.
      | 
      | Still, perhaps I should buy ex-landfill sites on the cheap,
      | so my descendants can mine them.
 
      | WanderPanda wrote:
      | Al Dente didn't really work for me. I used it constantly
      | for 1.5-2 years (capped at 60-80) and my battery still went
      | to 88% of design capacity. My iPhone's battery on the other
      | hand has been tortured for three years (always charging
      | 100%, fast charging, getting very hot in the sun) and is
      | still at 85%.
      | 
      | I feel like the batteries nowadays are just made to last
      | 2-3 years to get to 85-80% capacity no matter how you treat
      | them
 
      | Ma8ee wrote:
      | I just got the batteries replaced in my iPhone X for about
      | $45, and I was without the phone for less than an hour. I
      | am amazed, and very happy not having to shell out $1000 for
      | a new phone that would just have been a marginal upgrade to
      | my current one.
 
  | jonny_eh wrote:
  | I got a Palm in 2002 for school, but only every played games on
  | it. Sold it and bought a Gameboy Advance. I still have it and
  | use it :D
 
  | thepasswordis wrote:
  | Dang that's really cool. I remember having a palm and loving it
  | in high school. There was a utility that would crawl a website
  | and then package it up to a certain link depth, and put that on
  | your palm pilot for offline viewing.
  | 
  | I used to crawl fark.com so I could read the stories and
  | comments later.
 
  | eddieroger wrote:
  | I would love to do this. I'd be super curious to re-experience
  | life with an offline device in a very online world. I loved
  | every Palm I had up through the Pre, but there was a magic
  | about trying to play Zork on a Palm, or syncing a day's worth
  | of light reading for the (school) bus. I really miss this app
  | Four Point Oh that tracked homework and stuff.
 
    | nehal3m wrote:
    | You could pull the SIM out of a smartphone. Not the same, but
    | similar?
 
| insane_dreamer wrote:
| Pebble was a great watch; mine's been in my drawer for years as I
| ran into some issues with updates after the company went away.
| Switched back to my trusty analog (Citizen World Time Eco Drive)
| for years, and recently got a Withings Scanwatch for the ECG
| feature (afib detection). It's pretty much what I want in a
| "smartwatch" -- analog, discrete notifications, HR during
| cycling/workouts, long battery life. I don't need a fully
| computer on my wrist.
 
  | gnicholas wrote:
  | Can it control music playback from a linked smartphone?
 
| 2OEH8eoCRo0 wrote:
| I'm sad that I chucked my Pebble 2. The rubber on the watch
| itself started to deteriorate and I figured these services were
| never coming back.
| 
| It's the only smartwatch I've owned and I loved it. I'm back to
| my $5 Casio now.
 
| Pfhortune wrote:
| Folks ITT will talk about watches that are similar in hardware,
| but what was magic about Pebble was the software and ecosystem.
| The OS was just a delight to use, fast, wonderfully animated, and
| let you sideload whatever you want.
| 
| I've tried a couple of Garmin watches (Vivoactive 3 and
| Forerunner 55) and the Amazfit Bip, and this is where they all
| fall completely flat. The UX is just horrible by comparison. It's
| like these companies have no regard for designing the OS UX and
| are just trying to cram features in.
| 
| And the fact that companies want to make touchscreen watches is
| just with few/no buttons is baffling to me. Tapping tiny buttons
| on a tiny screen is a horrible experience. And there's tons of
| moving targets because of the tiny amount of real-estate.
| 
| Pebble _just got it_ with the 2.0 OS and beyond. They were a joy
| to use.
| 
| I begrudgingly have gone back to using an Apple Watch, because
| despite being subpar, the UX is somewhat together these days,
| just enough to be tolerable. When I move away from iOS again,
| I'll probably either pull out an old Pebble that still has some
| battery life, or a Casio GBD200, which isn't really a smartwatch
| but ticks some major boxes for me (always-on-display, silent
| vibration alarm, and timers, chief among them). The GBD200 runs
| on a coin cell too, so I never have to worry about charging or a
| replacement being difficult to find!
 
  | monsieurgaufre wrote:
  | I've never had a Pebble and mostly wanted to comment on the
  | Garmin/smartwatches part of your comment.
  | 
  | I was gifted a Garmin Vivoactive 3 a few years ago. Like you,
  | I've come to the exact same conclusion regarding the Garmin
  | watches. It is slow and annoyingly needs to connect to their
  | servers to do anything (couldn't even access my own data when
  | they were hacked). I still use it mostly when i run/cycle but
  | battery life is slowly going away.
  | 
  | Also, i want to stress the point that while smartwatches are
  | nice for certain applications, they mostly are toys. Yes, the
  | data is interesting, but how many of us really do something
  | from that data? I know I don't. And if you really need this
  | data (professional athlete or whatever), most of the time,
  | someone will pay the gadget for you.
  | 
  | For a lot of reasons (price, planned obsolescence, privacy),
  | i'll probably get a g-shock that'll last years on a coin cell
  | that's easily replaceable everywhere.
 
  | etothepii wrote:
  | I'll buy an Apple Watch, but I'd pay through the nose for an
  | Apple Watch with four buttons.
  | 
  | Steve Jobs obsession that the mouse should have only one button
  | was probably right for the computer, but the input device had
  | over 80 buttons minimum. (Keyboard)
  | 
  | Clearly whoever makes the call about Apple Watch buttons
  | doesn't swim, sprint or cycle.
  | 
  | All the marketing about "sports" is to make you feel sporty not
  | because it's actually useful.
  | 
  | Of course, for the use Apple make money from (Apple pay) there
  | is a tactile button dedicated for the purpose.
 
    | wlesieutre wrote:
    | You'll be excited to hear that for $800 you can now get an
    | Apple watch with one more button to assign to a sports thing!
 
    | balfirevic wrote:
    | > Steve Jobs obsession that the mouse should have only one
    | button was probably right for the computer
    | 
    | LOL. Mine has 12, of which I regularly use 10.
 
    | bryceacc wrote:
    | what would you map those buttons to?
 
      | jonny_eh wrote:
      | Lap? Reset? The buttons on there only talk to the OS, apps
      | don't have their own buttons to use.
 
  | davidbanham wrote:
  | I loved my pebbles and was very sad when my Time Steel finally
  | died.
  | 
  | I now wear a Garmin Instinct. The UI isn't as joyful and it's
  | not quite as pretty. It's every bit as practical as the pebble
  | and then some. Also you couldn't kill it with a stick.
 
  | modeless wrote:
  | Pebble's software was second to none. They built an entire
  | operating system and app store, to run on microcontrollers!
  | Multiple orders of magnitude less RAM and power consumption
  | than Android or Apple watches, but the user experience was
  | excellent and the app store had tons of stuff in it.
  | 
  | I once interviewed a candidate who came from Pebble. He had the
  | most impressive interview performance of any candidate I've
  | ever interviewed.
 
| diego_moita wrote:
| I use 5 of them!
| 
| And I have one more with a wasted battery that I intend to
| replace.
| 
| And I'll still buy some more, because I want to have them
| available for the rest of my life.
| 
| There are things that only the Pebble does:
| 
| - button only interface that you can handle in the dark without
| glasses
| 
| - a screen that barcode scanners can easily read for
| authentication into the gym and library
| 
| - a TOTP app (authentication tokens) that you can access with
| only a button press, etc.
 
  | haunter wrote:
  | > a screen that barcode scanners can easily read for
  | authentication into the gym and library
  | 
  | Only Pebble can do this? Apple Watch does that too, like
  | literally I use mine for the same cases you described
 
    | diego_moita wrote:
    | Don't know about the Apple Watch, I'm out of Apple's walled
    | garden.
    | 
    | My experience with bright screens is that low density bar
    | codes work ok mostly. But some high density codes don't work
    | well. One of them is Plessey, still used in Europe.
 
      | WorldMaker wrote:
      | Apple Watch's OLED seems great with even the densest QR
      | code profiles. (I have an older Series 5, I think, and have
      | never had a problem scanning a QR code from the watch.) I
      | think Apple tests it heavily, too, because a lot of the
      | codes on "Apple Wallet cards" for things like a store's
      | rewards program get scanned as QR codes, and at least
      | several of those are extremely dense. (I haven't done the
      | debugging myself, but I believe I read on HN elsewhere that
      | at least one was just stuffing a full bloated JWT into a QR
      | to explain its extreme density.)
 
    | Jackim wrote:
    | I think the above posted was saying more that the Pebble is
    | the only smartwatch with all of those features.
 
    | jonas-w wrote:
    | I don't get it, many smartphones and smartwatches can be read
    | by Barcode scanners never had any problems with it. (I used a
    | few different samsung phones and watches)
 
    | john-radio wrote:
    | Apple Watch is arguably not a general purpose "smartwatch"
    | since it's actually only usable by those who happen to use
    | iPhones.
 
  | FeistySkink wrote:
  | Most Garmins (Fenix, Forerunner series) can do all of your
  | "only Pebble" parts. In fact I replaced my touchscreen
  | smartwatch with Fenix 6 precisely for not having one and
  | relying on buttons instead.
 
    | diego_moita wrote:
    | > I replaced my touchscreen smartwatch with Fenix 6
    | 
    | Interesting. And it also has an sdk in C.
    | 
    | Although it costs almost 4 times what I'd pay for a Pebble on
    | eBay.
    | 
    | But it is the best Pebble alternative I've seen so far.
 
  | esel2k wrote:
  | Pebble user here as well! I moved from PTS to PTR (fall on the
  | ground - dead) now back to PTR and it is amazing: long battery
  | life, the apps on it are great. I use: Rain, Checklist, timer,
  | LMS controller and alarm and torch. You?
 
    | diego_moita wrote:
    | - MultiTimer - for short naps, setting alarms when cooking,
    | etc
    | 
    | - Authenticator - TOTP authorization tokens
    | 
    | - Skunk - barcodes
    | 
    | - Time Tracker - I work remotely as a contractor
    | 
    | - Pebble Controler - a remote control for my laptop
    | 
    | I also use a lot the standard apps on the Pebble:
    | 
    | - alarm, to wake me up by vibration, without waking up my
    | wife
    | 
    | - canned messages - to answer phone calls when driving
    | 
    | - notifications, notifications
    | 
    | - hang up phone calls I don't want
    | 
    | - steps counter, when running
 
  | jbj wrote:
  | Have a pebble and a fenix, I got all of those set up on my
  | pebble, and all but one of those things set up on fenix.
  | Unfortunaltely the opensource barcode app for connectIQ only
  | supports 1D barcodes and not QR codes.
 
  | SyneRyder wrote:
  | _> And I have one more with a wasted battery that I intend to
  | replace._
  | 
  | I wish Rebble would offer a paid mail-in service to replace the
  | batteries, to have someone trusted & reliable do the work. I'm
  | down to about 2-days battery life on my Time Steel. I do have a
  | replacement Time Steel that I bought on eBay, but I'd love to
  | get this one fixed.
  | 
  | I love Rebble, but I wish they did more to round out the
  | service. I'm really surprised they don't have their own web
  | store for new-old stock & certified-Rebble refurbished Pebbles.
  | A Discord channel really doesn't cut it, at least not for me
  | (even eBay is a better experience).
 
    | gnicholas wrote:
    | Totally agree. I've been looking into replacement and it's
    | not something I'm comfortable doing on my own.
    | 
    | One tip: put your Pebble in airplane mode each night. For me,
    | it extends my battery life substantially. I mapped long-hold
    | left button to toggle this setting, for ease of use.
 
    | will0 wrote:
    | We'd love to offer something like that, but there's all kind
    | of considerations around liability with repairs. Plus we're
    | entirely run by volunteers, and watch repairs take a lot of
    | time.
    | 
    | That being said, a store for refurbed Pebbles might be
    | doable, but it would be a big time and cost overhead.
 
      | SyneRyder wrote:
      | That's fair - I hadn't realized Rebble were volunteers. I'd
      | hoped the subscriber money might stretch to also
      | compensating people involved. I certainly wouldn't expect
      | volunteers to be working on repairs out of the goodness of
      | their hearts.
      | 
      | I guess my dream is for Rebble to be like a cross between
      | Framework & iFixIt - somewhere you can buy all your spare
      | parts (and accessories?), maybe find repair guides... and
      | then to continue the Pebble mission by making new models
      | that can run Pebble software on modern designs. I guess
      | it's just a dream. But if there's only about 2k of us
      | Rebble subscribers, I'm proud to be one of those 2k!
 
| MereInterest wrote:
| I've wanted a smartwatch, but times I'd looked into smart
| watches, especially for activity/sleep tracking, I couldn't find
| a single one with a reasonable privacy policy. In the US, unless
| the data are self-hosted or covered by HIPAA, there's nothing
| binding about a privacy policy. Even if the privacy policy
| currently prevents the data from being sold, the policy can be
| changed, the company could be bought, or the company could go
| bankrupt with the databases sold at auction. Because HIPAA covers
| medical companies rather than medical data, it does nothing to
| prevent this. Until this loophole is closed (or a miracle happens
| and the US passes something akin to the GDPR), the lack of
| privacy prevents me from getting one.
| 
| And every time I hear about the Pebble and self-hosting, I get
| disappointed that it no longer exists.
 
| throwaway2203 wrote:
| I just want a watch that shows the time, lets me see and respond
| to notifications and set the occasional reminder/alarm.
 
| ajolly wrote:
| I love my pebbles. Especially with notification center on
| Android, I can set complex regex filters for what messages get
| sent to my watch, vibration patterns etc.
 
| 627467 wrote:
| I have a pebble time and a og pebble steel in the drawer.
| Recently wanted to start using the steel but unfortunately it
| suffers from the dead button syndrome... I can even accept the
| onboarding pairing.
| 
| Apparently I may be able to fix this if I try some soldering, but
| I'm an inexperienced solderer...
 
| paulcole wrote:
| The smart watch market is just huge.
| 
| If there are 100 million people who wear an Apple Watch, it's not
| surprising that less than .02% of that number would like
| something as niche as the pebble.
| 
| It's like the iPod Classic people. Billions of people want music
| with them wherever they go. 12 of them like it in MP3 form on a
| little brick that's not their phone.
 
  | cptaj wrote:
  | Its me. I'm 12 of them.
 
  | ghaff wrote:
  | It's interesting to me that when the Apple Watch was coming out
  | (and maybe more broadly when fitness bands etc. were becoming
  | available) there was a pretty widespread sentiment that younger
  | people didn't want watches because why would they? They always
  | had their phones.
 
    | andrepd wrote:
    | Honestly, I still don't see the value in a smartwatch. Paying
    | with nfc with your wrist? That's probably the only use case I
    | can see. But then it's not worth it having to charge _yet
    | another device_ daily
 
      | lotsofpulp wrote:
      | I like it because it lets me be on call without having my
      | phone on me, which lets me avoid using my phone too much
      | and give full attention to kids or whoever I am with.
      | 
      | Also, the vibrate function for alarm or calls in the middle
      | of the night does not disturb anyone else, but still gets
      | me up.
 
      | mikepurvis wrote:
      | I was in this position as well but after about a year of a
      | FitBit Luxe, I'm a convert. Fitness-wise, I like the
      | heartrate and GPS tracking for walks and bike rides, and
      | length-counting for lane swims. I like that it's an easy
      | interface to input my weight and see that as a trend over
      | time. And I like the sleep tracking and smart-wake alarms
      | quite a bit.
      | 
      | Notifications I could take or leave; they're not super
      | reliable but have occasionally been useful.
      | 
      | Battery life is IMO fine; I charge it once or twice a week
      | while sitting at my desk or having a shower.
      | 
      | I know I could cobble together these capabilities from a
      | suite of other apps-- Strava, Apple Health, whatever. And I
      | get annoyed that certain things on the watch aren't more
      | customizable. But the overall package is more than good
      | enough for my basic needs, and has motivated me to make
      | (and stick to) real lifestyle changes, which is ultimately
      | the point, at least on the fitness side.
 
        | xrd wrote:
        | Can you write your own apps for a FitBit Luxe, i.e., can
        | you pull the GPS data off using your own app, or get it
        | off the device somehow?
 
        | mikepurvis wrote:
        | No, you can't-- it's only the large-screen devices that
        | support custom JavaScript-based apps. For example, using
        | https://github.com/200Tigersbloxed/FitbitHRtoWS to get
        | realtime heartrate data, for example to display as a
        | Twitch stream overlay.
        | 
        | And it doesn't have its own GPS; it piggy-backs off the
        | phone for that. Which is fine for cycling and running,
        | but obviously doesn't work for open water swims where you
        | could use GPS for position but wouldn't normally bring
        | your phone.
 
      | JCharante wrote:
      | I like mine since I don't have to carry my heart rate
      | monitor (HRM) around if I want to exercise. Some are good
      | at sleep tracking too. It's a good pedometer and I can go
      | on a run w/o my phone and the built in GPS keeps track of
      | things. If my phone battery dies, I can still communicate
      | with people (although many apps on the Apple Watch are
      | badly designed to require a phone connection rather than
      | just data).
      | 
      | The notifications are nice if I'm on the subway and don't
      | want to pull my phone out of my pocket to see what's up.
      | 
      | It doesn't take long to charge the watch, whenever I take a
      | shower I put it to charge and it's full battery by the time
      | I'm back at my desk.
      | 
      | I also like turning off alarms by using the watch rather
      | than pulling out my phone.
 
      | ccouzens wrote:
      | I don't get it either.
      | 
      | I do own a smart watch, but I don't use it in the typical
      | manner.
      | 
      | I don't ever want to see notifications on my wrist. People
      | seem to think it's ok to read notifications in situations
      | where looking at a phone would be rude, such as at dinner
      | or whilst having a conversation.
      | 
      | I wear mine when doing sport. I like that I can play music
      | and track my activity without my phone.
      | 
      | And I wear mine when navigating cities. I like that I can
      | pay for public transport and check map directions without
      | making myself a target by getting my phone out.
      | 
      | Other than that, I don't wear mine. I don't see the point
      | of wearing it day to day.
 
      | david_allison wrote:
      | I don't own one, but I can also see the uses of:
      | 
      | * Consuming notifications without potentially being
      | distracted once you unlock your phone
      | 
      | * Haptics for notifications - I'd like to be notified of
      | some things, but 'vibrate' is a little too much
      | 
      | * Fitness/sleep tracking
 
      | paulcole wrote:
      | I wear a Coros Apex Pro all day. Between notifications and
      | GPS running ~40 miles a week I charge it about every 2.5
      | weeks.
 
        | xrd wrote:
        | Do you know what the developer story is for Coros? I'd
        | never heard of it until you mentioned this, and it is an
        | expensive device for sure.
 
        | paulcole wrote:
        | Pretty locked down as far as I know. I really just use it
        | stock out of the box and connect it to my Strava account.
        | Strava does have a pretty cool API though.
        | 
        | https://developers.strava.com/
        | 
        | The Coros I have was around $400USD refurbished on
        | Amazon. I considered the Apple Watch Ultra which was
        | nearly 2x the price but wanted something made by a
        | company focused on runners rather than a consumer
        | products company making a running watch.
        | 
        | Overall I've been extremely happy with it as a semi-
        | serious runner.
 
      | hprotagonist wrote:
      | hr tracking, and listening to your own music with no sack-
      | whacking in the gym.
 
      | insane_dreamer wrote:
      | Best use case I've found is as a phone for kids. We
      | recently got a cheap one for our 10-year old with a $10/mo
      | plan so he can call/text us. Gave him a great sense of
      | security, and us as well. (We can use FindMe to locate him
      | if necessary, he can only test/get calls from contacts we
      | add, so no robocalls, etc.)
      | 
      | My mom, in her 70s, uses hers for calls a lot -- though in
      | her case it's tethered to her phone so the phone has to be
      | within range (I don't see how that's very useful, might as
      | well use the phone).
 
      | ClassyJacket wrote:
      | I just like being able to customize the watch face
      | basically, and see notifications without pulling out my
      | phone.
 
      | robertlagrant wrote:
      | > But then it's not worth it having to charge yet another
      | device daily
      | 
      | This is why the Pebble was good. Charge it once a week.
 
      | ghaff wrote:
      | I have a use case for a watch. I like being able to just
      | look at my wrist.
      | 
      | Especially when traveling and doing activities like hiking,
      | I do find watch modestly useful. Hiking distance etc. Apple
      | Pay as you say. Calendar events and other notifications.
      | 
      | It is for me modest benefit and I often wear a cheap Timex
      | at home. And yes the charging is the big downside although
      | there are quite a few things I do daily that are a routine.
 
      | dotnet00 wrote:
      | Just as phones are conveniently charged overnight, a
      | smartwatch usually charges fast enough that you can usually
      | just put it on the charger for 30-40 minutes before bed (or
      | overnight if you don't care for sleep tracking).
      | 
      | For me telling the time is the least valuable aspect. It's
      | convenient for email notifications, particularly since I
      | don't tend to keep my phone in my pocket (or often even in
      | sight), it's a convenient way to control music playback
      | when out and about and things like weather reports are also
      | neat info to have on a wrist.
      | 
      | But even more valuable are the health related features, I
      | tend to get too easily absorbed in work so the reminders to
      | stretch when I've been sitting too long and the water
      | consumption tracking is very useful. I also often have
      | trouble sleeping, where the sleep coaching functionality is
      | pretty useful for identifying what I need to do to fix
      | things. Additionally having things like step count on my
      | wrist has gotten me to try to walk more as it's a constant
      | reminder of how little I walk. It's also a very convenient
      | morning alarm since it stays on your wrist and can just use
      | vibration to wake you instead of playing a loud sound and
      | making you dig around for the phone while half asleep.
 
      | Gigachad wrote:
      | Charging it isn't really a difficultly. I don't like to
      | sleep with a watch on so I take it off and put it on my
      | side table. Where the magnetic charger snaps on. Basically
      | no more effort than not charging it.
 
    | reaperducer wrote:
    | _there was a pretty widespread sentiment that younger people
    | didn't want watches because why would they?_
    | 
    | I remember this, too.
    | 
    | But good companies plan for the future, not the past. And all
    | of those young people get older. That's one of the few
    | certainties of life.
    | 
    | So what Apple did (intentionally or unintentionally) is
    | create a market, and then let its customers mature into it.
    | 
    | Financial institutions do this all the time.
 
| hnbad wrote:
| I still have one and wear it daily.
| 
| I need a smartwatch that tells the time, gives me notifications,
| doesn't blind me in the dark but is readable in daylight and
| lasts days without charging. Calendar access and weather are a
| bonus. The pebble does all of that.
| 
| I was somewhat excited when the Apple Watch was announced only to
| find out that it, of course, was going to be usable with iOS
| devices only and therefore not an option for Android users like
| me. I still haven't found a good alternative to the Pebble and
| all the lo-fi watches are primarily fitness trackers, which I
| have no use for.
 
| fattybob wrote:
| I have one somewhere, lived the idea and possibilities, sadly the
| watch (steel version) had scarily sharp edges i felt it was
| dangerous!!! But I still watched them closely hoping they could
| improve in the model
 
  | chaostheory wrote:
  | I've owned two pebble steel watches. I didn't notice this even
  | with the one I kept
 
| SentientAtom wrote:
| If it works for you, why would you migrate to a different product
| with features or performance outside of your needs? We are so
| deep into a disposable society that we eagerly await the NEXT BIG
| THING (TM) without ever evaluating what our need consists of or
| whether we have any need for an upgrade to begin with.
 
  | o10449366 wrote:
  | Agree. I'm still using the original iphone SE from 2016. I've
  | replaced the battery four or five times and see no reason to
  | upgrade, even though it's officially out of support now.
  | 
  | Funnily, when I meet people now with the latest and greatest
  | iphone and they see my old phone they often express they wish
  | they still had one of them.
 
  | darau1 wrote:
  | I know a guy that bought every new Samsung flagship device as
  | soon as they hit stores. He said he just has to upgrade.
 
    | lnsru wrote:
    | I know a guy who does this with Apple products. Half monthly
    | salary for a phone for a year sounds extreme to me. Plus all
    | the gimmicks that come with the phone - pad, phones and
    | watch.
 
      | ghaff wrote:
      | Admittedly there are tradeins. I know someone who does a
      | fair bit of reviewing of camera gear including smartphone
      | cameras. His approach seems to generally be to effectively
      | rent a phone for a year.
      | 
      | With that said, I generally go for 3 years and use the
      | older phone to drive my stereo, sometimes act as a travel
      | spare, etc.
 
      | rootusrootus wrote:
      | Wouldn't be my choice for sure. But he presumably sells the
      | old one.
 
      | cableshaft wrote:
      | At least Apple products hold their value pretty well. I'm
      | only just now starting to think about upgrading my 2015
      | Macbook Pro and it looks like I could still get $400 for
      | it. A year old Apple device probably gets at least 60% of
      | its MSRP back when sold.
      | 
      | I wouldn't do it personally (see me still using a >7 year
      | old Macbook), but they're likely not dropping anywhere near
      | the full MSRP every year, after they sell the old one.
      | 
      | Meanwhile, I've had three gaming Windows laptops during
      | that same time, and two of them literally fell apart (one I
      | kept using until enough of the plastic frame around the
      | monitor cracked that I could no longer keep it in place
      | with binder clips). The most recent one (ASUS ROG Strix
      | G15) is still doing well, but I've only had it for about
      | two years at this point.
 
    | guerrilla wrote:
    | I would hate it if everyone (or even many people) did this,
    | but it's nice to know someone outside of Samsung has tried
    | them all, but then again, I guess you wouldn't ncessarily get
    | very neutral reviews from such a person.
 
      | darau1 wrote:
      | Well, I doubt he's had a bad experience because I don't
      | think he ever has one long enough for it to start showing
      | signs of age.
 
    | aliqot wrote:
    | I wonder sometimes how can people reconcile buying a new X
    | every Y and still be concerned about human rights and the
    | environment, etc.
 
      | biftek wrote:
      | Because it's not an individuals buying decisions harming
      | those things? Those are the result of governments and
      | corporations.
      | 
      | I'm not going to buy a new phone today and it sounds like
      | you probably won't either, I'll check back in tomorrow and
      | see how the environment is doing!
 
        | [deleted]
 
      | benj111 wrote:
      | Human rights?
      | 
      | That's kind of a tenuous link at best. You could make the
      | case that buying more increases the opportunities for those
      | at the bottom.
      | 
      | I'm not even necessarily making a factual statement here,
      | but _personally_ I don 't feel that there's anything to
      | reconcile.
 
        | bunderbunder wrote:
        | A lot of raw materials that go into modern electronics
        | are produced using slave labor, and the "recycled"
        | devices tend to end up poisoning the environments of
        | people in similarly disadvantaged communities.
        | 
        | I don't know enough about these things to know whether
        | buying more or less of these devices directly helps
        | enslaved people, but I don't think it's a stretch to
        | observe that rampant consumerism does fuel the
        | postcolonial economic machine that perpetrates that kind
        | of exploitation. And I think that those of us who stand
        | to benefit the most from this system would do well to be
        | _extremely_ cautious about how we are incentivized toward
        | motivated reasoning.
 
        | toolz wrote:
        | It's also important to recognize consumerism has driven a
        | lot of innovation which has benefited humanity. I venture
        | to say one of the most impactful advancements in human
        | history is providing access to the internet in almost
        | every spot on the globe. That was influenced at least in
        | part by so many people owning smart phones.
        | 
        | A sufficiently technologically advanced human species
        | might be the only thing capable of stopping the next
        | extinction event. Something that will almost certainly
        | occur naturally without any intervention.
 
        | bunderbunder wrote:
        | I always worry a little when something is both the
        | purported solution to and the primary cause of a problem.
 
        | x86x87 wrote:
        | Hmm. A sufficiently technologically advanced human
        | species may greatly accelerate the arrival of the next
        | extinction event.
 
        | benj111 wrote:
        | Ok. Well there's 2 elements here, the factual and
        | emotional.
        | 
        | Factually you could argue either way. I suppose broadly
        | you could say that industrialisation is bad for those at
        | the bottom in the short term. But after the hump things
        | get better. Is that pain reasonable? Is it avoidable? Are
        | we morally obligated to avoid it? Are all somewhat open
        | questions.
        | 
        | The GP used the word 'reconcile' which to me is a more
        | emotional metric. Personally I don't make the link
        | (rightly or wrongly) between me buying X and person Y
        | suffering. So personally I don't have anything to
        | reconcile. That is _a_ correct answer. It isn 't _the_
        | answer, but as an answer to the GP, it is legitimate.
        | 
        | I can also see it being a reasonable answer to say that
        | in buying Congolese cobalt you are helping the country
        | industrialise, which in the long term is a good thing.
        | Again you may disagree with the reasoning or morality but
        | it seems to me a legitimate way of reconciliation.
 
        | jasonlotito wrote:
        | > A lot of raw materials that go into modern electronics
        | are produced using slave labor,
        | 
        | Can you confirm this for Apple products? I couldn't find
        | anything recent.
 
      | automatic6131 wrote:
      | You tell yourself you're allowing someone else to enjoy
      | (nth-)last years X and Y at a lower price point, being
      | subsidised by your use first.
      | 
      | Everyone can reconcile almost anything, practically
      | humanity's superpower. It's rare the person that fails to -
      | on any issue. I think we all do it all the time for most
      | issues.
 
        | tppiotrowski wrote:
        | "So convenient a thing to be a reasonable creature, since
        | it enables one to find or make a reason for every thing
        | one has a mind to do."
        | 
        | -Benjamin Franklin
 
      | coffeeblack wrote:
      | Both is to raise your social status among your "friends".
 
      | scarface74 wrote:
      | So by only buying a new X every zY you're somehow showing
      | more concern about human rights?
 
      | irrational wrote:
      | How do you know any of them even are actually concerned
      | about those issues and don't just give lip service (if even
      | that)?
 
      | jasonlotito wrote:
      | I wonder sometimes how can people reconcile buying a new X
      | ever and still be concerned about human rights and the
      | environment, etc.
 
      | rootusrootus wrote:
      | I expect that most people buy what they want and human
      | rights and the environment are just something they discuss
      | online.
 
        | smolder wrote:
        | Probably true, though to different degrees for different
        | folks. I've always taken joy in holding out for the right
        | component upgrades for my PC and related gear to get the
        | best bang for the buck and biggest leaps in performance.
        | It's a lineage that's been going since 2000 or so, where
        | at least one part always gets carried forward, and the
        | rest is gifted or sold at steep discount. It started as
        | me trying to get the most from my limited money, but
        | decades later it's more about minimizing the guilt of
        | frivolous e-waste. My last phone of 5 years sadly got the
        | boot from my carrier, forcing an upgrade. I know I've
        | seen other people take pride in their slow/picky
        | upgrades, too.
 
        | x86x87 wrote:
        | Sometime this also happens in person.
        | 
        | Also being shamed for everything you do as bad for the
        | environment or bad for human right does not work.
 
  | ZaoLahma wrote:
  | I bought a Big Brand Flagship Phone (tm), the Samsung Galaxy
  | S9, in 2018. They stopped upgrading the OS with new
  | functionality in 2020 only two years after its release, and
  | this year they stopped providing security updates!
  | 
  | Considering how much functionality and information is on that
  | phone that could affect my life in absolutely fantastically
  | negative ways if it was hacked (online accounts including owned
  | licenses for software, banking), I have little choice but to
  | buy a new phone now, even though the hardware is more than
  | adequate for my needs and even though new phones don't really
  | do much more much better.
  | 
  | Planned obsolescence, or whatever you prefer to call it, really
  | drives this behaviour.
 
    | arsome wrote:
    | I've always been curious about this one - what kind of
    | exploits are you concerned about that could wind up with
    | those sorts of consequences? Most of the security updates
    | tend to patch things which are local only or barely
    | exploitable in the first place. Assuming you're not
    | installing entirely untrustworthy software on daily basis,
    | it's probably not much of a difference. Looking at the latest
    | Android security report, even the "Critical" vulnerability
    | reported is a code injection in data that's usually only
    | available to the app that wrote it in the first place.
    | 
    | Important applications like the browser, webview, media
    | players, etc are patched via Play Store regularly so
    | untrusted data is usually processed through those pipelines
    | regardless. Perhaps hardware decode on untrusted content
    | could still provide a vector there, but judging by the
    | practice it's not exactly a large one.
    | 
    | There haven't exactly been worm-grade exploits flying around
    | in the mobile space, even big public things like StageFright
    | pretty much turned out to be non-starters and the targeted
    | attacks are so far ahead that I wouldn't even worry about
    | public exploits - the private ones have you covered already
    | even on the latest OS.
    | 
    | Maybe I'm the minority here, but I wouldn't exactly rush out
    | and blow $1000 over anything short of an unpatched and
    | readily exploitable RCE.
 
      | fullstop wrote:
      | Regarding installing untrustworthy software, you also have
      | to be mindful of software which has been acquired by
      | another entity. Your trusty file manager could turn into
      | something entirely different just by applications
      | automatically updating.
      | 
      | This happened with ES File Explorer.
 
        | ehnto wrote:
        | This is the duality of automatic updates, on one hand you
        | don't automatically get security updates, on the other,
        | you don't automatically get exploits from new owners or
        | compromised accounts.
        | 
        | In a software project this is really a responsibility I
        | think people don't appreciate that they have, especially
        | in regards to package managers.
        | 
        | But for end user devices it's encouraged to have
        | automatic updates on. I think this is a personal
        | responsibility as no-one really has your back on your
        | device, except the highly automated app store
        | verification. Which in fairness to them, likely stops a
        | lot of exploits/malware making it to user devices.
 
    | thorin wrote:
    | Is this in the US only? I have a Samsung S9 (and a spare S9
    | actually), and the last update was installed on the 23 Sept
    | 2022.
 
    | dotnet00 wrote:
    | To be fair the situation regarding updates is starting to
    | improve now that new phones bring very little to the table
    | besides faster processing and marginal camera improvements
    | and similarly OS updates don't do much besides change the UI
    | slightly.
    | 
    | Samsung (and IIRC Google) now promises at least 4 years of
    | regular updates and 5 of security.
 
    | bombcar wrote:
    | This alone is a huge reason that the iPhone is doing well -
    | iOS 16 still runs on the 8 and iOS 15 releases are still
    | getting patches:
    | https://support.apple.com/guide/iphone/supported-models-
    | iphe... https://support.apple.com/en-us/HT213490
 
      | olau wrote:
      | Interesting perspective. I have an iPad 3rd generation
      | where Apple doesn't allow OS updates and doesn't allow
      | installing a non-Apple browser engine. So it's essentially
      | getting bricked as web sites start relying on features not
      | implemented in the ancient Safari engine on it. Twitter,
      | for instance, refuses to load. Youtube does work okayish,
      | as long as you don't log in.
      | 
      | Once it's completely bricked, I'm throwing it out and not
      | getting anything with an Apple logo. Unless something like
      | the EU manages to make them open up.
 
        | Retric wrote:
        | What 10 year old iPad alternative is still receiving
        | updates?
        | 
        | I get the annoyance, but I just don't know of viable
        | alternatives.
 
        | fsflover wrote:
        | There are none, but PineTab will receive updates forever,
        | since it can run mainline Linux kernel.
 
        | bombcar wrote:
        | I think the argument is that the alternatives can have
        | Linux installed on them (though I suspect a 10 year old
        | iPad can be jailbroken if you want to).
        | 
        | 10 years is a dang good run for a tablet; only thing that
        | really can hope to compete would be actual computers.
 
        | bunderbunder wrote:
        | I imagine the argument is that a less locked-down device
        | would be able to receive community support 10 years
        | later.
        | 
        | I suspect, though, that that's optimizing for perfection
        | in rare cases rather than doing better overall. The
        | number of iPads that survive to 10 years is presumably
        | puny. The batteries wear out, they get dropped, etc. I
        | would guess that the number of 2-3 year old devices that
        | get replaced simply because the OS updates stop or the UX
        | gets slow is much greater. And, while community OS and
        | firmware projects do exist, they haven't made it into the
        | mainstream in any meaningful way, so I doubt they make a
        | dent in overall consumer behavior. In which case, perhaps
        | Apple's way of doing things is a net win (or at least the
        | lesser of some number of evils) compared to others' in
        | the aggregate.
        | 
        | Hard to say without any hard numbers, though.
        | 
        | (Disclaimer: A couple months back I opted to replace the
        | battery on my 2013 MacBook, which is still going strong,
        | instead of buying a new Framework laptop. That may
        | indicate some bias.)
 
        | Angostura wrote:
        | For context, this model was discontinued 10 years ago
 
  | [deleted]
 
  | dpcx wrote:
  | Well, the threat of the service going away is a pretty big one.
  | Until we have devices that can work from our own hosted
  | systems, this will always be a concern.
 
    | fsflover wrote:
    | > Until we have devices that can work from our own hosted
    | systems
    | 
    | We already do: https://pine64.org/pinetime.
 
      | hedora wrote:
      | Is that working yet?
      | 
      | (I like my pine book pro; honest question.)
 
        | fsflover wrote:
        | It seems so:
        | https://www.pine64.org/2022/10/18/infinitime-1-11/.
 
  | Gigachad wrote:
  | The pebble was a bit of a gimmick. It was the start of the
  | future but on its own it was kind of worse than a regular
  | watch. It looked ugly, had a terrible screen, didn't have any
  | of the stuff you mostly do with a smartwatch now. And half the
  | features no longer work.
 
    | SyneRyder wrote:
    | _> And half the features no longer work._
    | 
    | Which features don't work? I'm still wearing a Pebble Time
    | Steel every day with Rebble Services and not encountering
    | problems.
    | 
    | Okay, I guess Apple integration doesn't work anymore, but
    | that's an Apple problem. If Apple allowed sideloading & half
    | of the things you can do on Android, Pebble would still work
    | there. I used to be an iPhone owner (I was one of those
    | queue-on-day-one types that got a standing ovation from the
    | Apple employees as you walked out of the Apple Store), but I
    | am _so_ glad I switched to Android.
 
      | koenvdb wrote:
      | Funny that you say that, I did the exact opposite. Was
      | quite an Android fanatic until I switched to iPhone and
      | noticed how greatly everything was integrated. Next to the
      | integration of my AirPods and Watch the apps on the iPhone
      | are generally of better quality than my experiences on
      | Android. Everything just feels a lot more native and
      | faster. Probably caused by the fact that Apple is just a
      | lot more stricter in what it allows developers to do + the
      | fact that Android runs on literally thousands of different
      | screen sizes, where there are only a couple of screen sizes
      | that a developer has to take into account on the i(Pad)OS
      | side.
 
    | [deleted]
 
    | yonaguska wrote:
    | And it had an insanely long battery life, I could respond to,
    | and read text messages without opening my phone. It didn't
    | have unnecessary stuff- it was simple and met my watch needs.
    | I don't have a smartwatch now, because I'm not interested in
    | having yet another computer on my wrist. I guess I've just
    | decided to settle for a gimmicky automatic watch, it doesn't
    | even have an alarm! And it dies if I stop using it for a few
    | days.
 
      | maratc wrote:
      | > settle for a gimmicky automatic watch
      | 
      | You probably mean the marvel of mechanical engineering that
      | has zero dependency on the outside world, needs no software
      | updates, and will still continue running as new for years
      | after all the smart watches will turn into useless pucks?
 
        | adregan wrote:
        | Minimal dependency: you will have to get it serviced from
        | time to time, but I find that charming--like getting a
        | pair of shoes resoled or renewing a piece of wooden
        | furniture. You're extending the life of the object, some
        | beyond your own lifespan.
 
      | benj111 wrote:
      | >And it had an insanely long battery life.
      | 
      | Is there a term for complementing something that is
      | objectively much worse than what came before only because
      | it's better than what we have now.
      | 
      | Stockholm syndrome?
      | 
      | Watch batteries used to last month's/ years / didn't need
      | batteries at all.
      | 
      | It's the same with phones, they used to last a week easily,
      | now we get excited when they last 2 days.
 
        | yonaguska wrote:
        | For me, I didn't wear watches before. Pebble got me into
        | it. And now I wear watches with no batteries, so maybe
        | reverse Stockholm syndrome?
        | 
        | I loved my Garmin, but I hated the notifications. And I
        | couldn't disable the fitness related notifications. I'm
        | at a point where I hate all notifications though, and
        | have them only enabled for work and my wife.
        | Everyone/everything else can wait.
 
        | stinkytaco wrote:
        | I don't think these are apples to apples comparisons.
        | Yes, watches had much longer batteries, but they didn't
        | have smart features. So you're really comparing the
        | Pebble to something with a comparable feature set, like
        | another smart watch.
        | 
        | Phones used to be powered directly from the wire and work
        | even during a power outage and now they have batteries
        | and die, but I'm still willing to trade that feature to
        | have a GPS and text messaging.
 
        | benj111 wrote:
        | Well it's less featured than a modern smart watch so it's
        | not an apples to apples comparison there, but the
        | comparison was still made.
        | 
        | Further Casio made a range of smartish watches back in
        | the day. I don't know battery life's but they weren't
        | measured in days.
 
        | stinkytaco wrote:
        | Some of it has to do with existing experience. I suspect
        | many people in this thread have not worn something other
        | than a smart watch with regularity in at least 15 years,
        | possible longer if they were below watch wearing age when
        | cell phones became common. Additionally, I'd argue that
        | the pebble is closer to an apple watch than even a
        | digital watch and certainly closer than an automatic
        | watch. You chose to compare a smart phone to a flip phone
        | rather than a POTS phone? Likely you either have very
        | limited experience with POTS phones or you view the
        | smart/flip comparison as more apt. Either way, I think
        | context is important when making comparisons so I still
        | think it's entirely fair to say "the Pebble has good
        | battery life".
        | 
        | And those Casio watches were terrible. Even without a
        | comparison to anything else, they just didn't work
        | reliably.
 
        | dotnet00 wrote:
        | I agree with the existing experience point, I hadn't worn
        | a "dumb" watch since middle school (~12 years ago) until
        | I finally ended up buying a smart watch last month, which
        | I wear nearly 24/7.
        | 
        | If it's just for telling the time I don't exactly need a
        | watch, I'm almost always looking at or within reach of
        | some device that can tell me the time anyway. A smart
        | watch is useful for other purposes.
        | 
        | Also while weeklong battery lives would be nice, even
        | needing to charge daily isn't too bad, I just stick it on
        | the charger at night while relaxing and getting ready to
        | sleep.
 
        | MereInterest wrote:
        | I don't know of any official name, but it would be
        | adjacent to the Rachet Effect [0]. Where the Rachet
        | Effect is a steady increase in expectations, rather than
        | a steady decrease, they both derive from the same limited
        | time frame used for comparisons.
        | 
        | [0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ratchet_effect
 
        | scambier wrote:
        | > Is there a term for complementing something that is
        | objectively much worse than what came before only because
        | it's better than what we have now.
        | 
        | What kind of smartwatch came before it, that had a
        | battery that held for more than a week? And no, a simple
        | watch is not a smartwatch, so that doesn't count.
 
      | robertlagrant wrote:
      | Yeah I really liked mine. Still have it, I just don't get
      | on with wearing any watch that much. I like how it had
      | voice commands way back when.
 
    | tekchip wrote:
    | That was v1. The latter versions solved most of those
    | problems and rebble.io keeps a pebble 100% functional.
 
  | GuB-42 wrote:
  | - Parts breaking that can't be easily replaced. In particular
  | Li-ion batteries have a limited lifespan, both in time and in
  | number of cycles.
  | 
  | - Security: hackers constantly find new vulnerabilities. And
  | depending on the kind of device, it can be a big deal.
  | 
  | - Services shutting down, it can be direct (if the device
  | connects to the internet), or indirect (if some "companion app"
  | is no longer available).
  | 
  | - Or just plain obsolescence. The device may be incompatible
  | with modern standards, irrelevant, unfashionable, etc...
 
  | amelius wrote:
  | True. But perhaps 16k people sold their Pebble because they
  | wanted a shiny new watch, and they were bought by 16k other
  | people who can't afford that new watch.
 
    | Cthulhu_ wrote:
    | sort-of-smart watch, you can get watches that tell the time
    | for $5 or less.
 
      | stinkytaco wrote:
      | I'm not sure why that's relevant. You can buy a shirt that
      | covers your body for $5, but most of us are wearing
      | something more expensive for a variety of reasons. If you
      | are wearing a pebble, you probably want the sort of smart
      | features.
 
| edejong wrote:
| There still is no good replacement for these properties of the
| Pebble 2 smartwatch:
| 
| - > 7 days battery life
| 
| - HR monitor (useful as a sports watch)
| 
| - < 10 mm thickness
| 
| - toned down to fit different clothing styles
| 
| - hackable
| 
| - high-contrast, always-on screen
| 
| - buttons
| 
| I am currently wearing a Garmin Fenix 7 Sapphire sportswatch,
| which comes close.
 
  | jerlam wrote:
  | Another Garmin Fenix user here - the screen is what separates
  | it from being a Pebble replacement the most. Most Garmin
  | watches use a screen that is roughly on par with the Pebble
  | Time, not the superior high-contrast Pebble 2. And if you get a
  | higher-end Garmin with sapphire, the screen gets even more
  | washed out.
  | 
  | Never tried the Garmin Instinct though - its monochrome screen
  | looks better, but the rest of the watch has a distinctly
  | downmarket feel.
 
  | gnicholas wrote:
  | Just to clarify, you're talking about the version that was
  | never released -- the one with the Kickstarter that was
  | cancelled? All of the above features except the HR monitor
  | exist on my PTS, I think.
 
    | edejong wrote:
    | The Pebble 2 was released to the backers of the Kickstarter
    | campaign. I've had 3 different ones over the years (all of
    | them eventually broke down)...
    | 
    | (correction, I lost one because the band snapped and the
    | watch dropped into the sea).
 
    | lapetitejort wrote:
    | The second (or third?) kickstarter was for the Pebble (and
    | Time) 2, which was cancelled after Pebble was purchased by
    | FitBit. They still release the base Pebble 2 with the heart
    | rate monitor.
    | 
    | I bought that after the Kickstarter fell through. I loved it
    | until the plastic membrane over the buttons degraded,
    | rendering it open to the elements. It didn't last long after
    | that.
 
  | czx4f4bd wrote:
  | This thread brought back so much nostalgia for me. The Pebble
  | was one of the greatest recent examples of "less is more" in
  | tech design. Mine sadly died not long after they were
  | discontinued, but I loved it. Since then, I got a Huawei watch
  | (I forget which model) and I currently have an Apple Watch, but
  | neither has ever really felt as useful to me. It's funny,
  | they're capable of doing a lot more, but somehow they don't
  | feel as fun or desirable to use as the Pebble did.
 
  | bedast wrote:
  | The "Venu" line of watches from Garmin are their "lifestyle"
  | watches. They are more toned down from the more tactical look
  | and feel of other Garmin watches.
  | 
  | The Venu Sq 2 was just recently released. I have the Venu 2,
  | myself.
  | 
  | Missing from your list: * <10mm thickness - it appears to be a
  | smidge over * hackable - You have a Fenix 7 so you're familiar
  | with the ecosystem * always-on screen - it's OLED and not
  | always on, but works well enough - there is an always on mode
  | but it's not recommended for OLED
  | 
  | As for the rest: * >7 days battery life - Venu 2 is rated up to
  | 12 days, I charge about once a week * HR monitor - it's there,
  | works reasonably well * toned down - as a lifestyle type, it's
  | a bit more toned down * high-contrast - it's as high contrast
  | as any OLED, and clearly visible in sunlight * buttons - 2 of
  | them
  | 
  | I'd throw in cost as a valid metric. The Pebble watches were
  | really inexpensive and I think that's what brought more broad
  | appeal to them early on. My Venu 2 was $400. That's a tough
  | pill for some to swallow.
 
  | aembleton wrote:
  | Amazfit Bip S - https://www.amazfit.com/uk/amazfit-bip-s.html
  | 
  | - 40 day battery life
  | 
  | - HR monitor
  | 
  | - 11.4mm thickness
  | 
  | - Always on transreflective screen
  | 
  | It's not hackable, is a bit thicker and only has one button but
  | unlike the Fenix 7 it is very affordable.
 
    | aembleton wrote:
    | Also, the Neo is worth looking at as you get four buttons
    | https://www.amazfit.com/en/neo
 
  | INTPenis wrote:
  | Not hackable but I replaced my Pebble Time with a Fossil
  | Collider HR and was very happy until it broke 1 week ago. Now
  | I'm in a different country trying to get a replacement.
  | 
  | It had a MONTH charge and it filled all my requirements which
  | were mainly about getting notifications.
 
    | gnicholas wrote:
    | How did it break? I've read in forums that the screens go bad
    | when exposed to to much sunlight, which seems like an odd
    | weakness for a wearable.
 
      | INTPenis wrote:
      | I believe I bumped it one too many times and created a way
      | for moisture to enter, but the first visible sign was that
      | I had left it on the toilet to shower and it was a steamy
      | shower so when I came out it had moisture inside the glass.
      | 
      | The moisture was stuck there for a day or two, came and
      | went depending on temperature and outside climate. After
      | about a week it became even worse and eventually it gave up
      | and showed 0 charge.
      | 
      | I live in northern europe so too much sunlight would not
      | affect it. I was so hyped for this watch that I actually
      | had an american friend ship it to me before it was released
      | here.
 
  | gnicholas wrote:
  | Can the Garmin control music playback from your smartphone?
 
    | edejong wrote:
    | Yes. I had to look it up, because I always control my music
    | via the headphones.
    | https://www8.garmin.com/manuals/webhelp/fenix66s6xpro/EN-
    | US/...
    | 
    | (and confirmed for iPhone)
 
    | LeifCarrotson wrote:
    | Yes, and better than that, most new Garmin watches can also
    | store several GB of music on the device itself and play it
    | over Bluetooth headphones, no need to carry your phone with
    | you.
    | 
    | Watches are a strange sort of luxury good, where some people
    | will pay thousands of dollars, and Garmin _aggressively_
    | price-segments their products. Use this comparison tool to
    | see the different features:
    | 
    | https://www.dcrainmaker.com/product-comparison-calculator
 
      | DC-3 wrote:
      | When people pay large amounts of money for watches, they
      | are doing so for premium materials and exquisite
      | workmanship (brand is often a large factor too, of course).
      | It's not obvious that the same value proposition applies to
      | mass-produced electronics, even if they also tell the time
      | and sit on the wrist.
 
    | FeistySkink wrote:
    | Yes for Android.
 
      | bedast wrote:
      | And iPhone. So basically the answer is just "yes".
 
  | razemio wrote:
  | Just checked the Garmin Fenix 7 and now I want to add one
  | missing point to your list:
  | 
  | - affordable
 
    | seized wrote:
    | Garmin has a wide range of watches, many of which meet most
    | of those criteria. Except for hackable. I have a Vivoactive 4
    | and I've been very happy with it.
 
    | LibertyBeta wrote:
    | The Forerunner 255 fits that bill. Or the other cheaper
    | Forerunners. The Fenix line is more akin to the iPhone Pro
    | Max.
 
    | edejong wrote:
    | Yeah, although the Garmin Fenix 7 is an awesome watch,
    | especially as an amateur athlete, it is ** expensive.
    | 
    | Features from the Fenix 7 which I value over Pebble (apart
    | from the obvious):
    | 
    | - Materials: titanium and sapphire. Means it is
    | indestructible. Great for hiking expeditions.
    | 
    | - Garmin Connect (SaaS fitness community).
    | 
    | - HRV (Heart Rate Variability).
    | 
    | - Regular, well tested updates.
    | 
    | Stuff that I miss:
    | 
    | - Hackability (I want to transfer my data directly to
    | InfluxDB)
    | 
    | - Thickness (14.5 mm, which is 5 mm more than the Pebble)
    | 
    | - Community
 
      | jbj wrote:
      | another advantage on fenix is that you can use totp 2fa
      | without keeping the phone connected - if the time ever
      | drifts you can always sync it from satellites
 
    | imiller wrote:
    | You can get a similar experience to the Fenix (but without
    | the higher end sports features) with other Garmin sports
    | watches. The Forerunner 255 is well reviewed and very similar
    | to the Fenix for about half the price.
 
      | AshamedCaptain wrote:
      | Or buying older, second-hand Garmins. There is really no
      | point to having the latest and greatest and the price of
      | last year's model is basically half.
 
      | FeistySkink wrote:
      | And there are other lines like Venu, that are more focused
      | on the smart part and are more affordable.
 
        | odabaxok wrote:
        | I don't think the Venu line is "smarter" than the others.
        | It's more every day watch design and has an AMOLED touch
        | screen, but the functionality is nearly the same.
 
        | FeistySkink wrote:
        | You're right, what I mean is it puts less emphasis on the
        | sport and fitness tracking features, compared to Fenix
        | and Forerunner lines, and hence lacks some of the more
        | advanced features and metrics.
 
  | chaostheory wrote:
  | There still isn't any watch that comes close to the quality and
  | number of watch faces Pebble had right? Aside from battery
  | life, that's why I kept mine. It's really cool to see Mario hit
  | a block to update the time on mine.
 
    | edejong wrote:
    | The watch faces were something else indeed. Creative, funny
    | and very geeky.
 
| emsimot wrote:
| I am one of those people! I'm scared of the day my pebble stops
| working, it's honestly the best peiece of electronics I've ever
| owned.
 
  | brewdad wrote:
  | I had an original Pebble that I handed down to my son years ago
  | when it stopped getting official support and I bought a smaller
  | faced Garmin smartwatch to replace it.
  | 
  | He still wears it most days today. Not sure if this is the
  | software he's using today or not. I'll have to find out if he's
  | one of the 16,000.
 
| nosecreek wrote:
| Seeing as several folks have recommended the Amazfit Bip as an
| alternative, and I'm considering getting one, I'm wondering if
| anyone who owns one can comment on: 1. How well it plays with
| iPhone and 2. Do you have any privacy concerns? I don't know much
| about Amazfit as a company.
 
  | jmcphers wrote:
  | If you're at all concerned about privacy with the Bip, you can
  | use the open source Gadgetbridge app[1] instead of Zepp for
  | collecting metrics/syncing/uploading faces/etc.
  | 
  | https://gadgetbridge.org/
 
    | nosecreek wrote:
    | Thanks. Looks like it's Android only, but I'll look to see if
    | there's anything similar for iOS
 
  | fullstop wrote:
  | I have the Bip, but not an iPhone.
  | 
  | I don't use the official app, which has mostly alleviated my
  | privacy concerns.
 
  | 627467 wrote:
  | Im ex-pebble user that now uses a GTS 2. For a while I only
  | cared about personalized watchfaces and alarms on my wrist so
  | that model was more than enough.
  | 
  | But now I want some basic apps (ie TOTP) but this model doesn't
  | support apps...
 
| mfashby wrote:
| 16,001 once I manage to repair mine :)
 
| Cpoll wrote:
| I've always wanted a "watch" (bracelet) that _doesn 't_ show the
| time. Essentially a narrow bracelet with no display and a few
| buttons on it that I can program, and a vibrating function so I
| can leave my phone on silent. I already have a watch I like to
| wear.
| 
| wearchronos.com seemed to hit my use case, but the reviews aren't
| great.
 
  | 6chars wrote:
  | The old Jawbone Up fit the bill somewhat, but I don't remember
  | exactly what features it had. I thought it was a great product
  | and hoped to see more like it.
 
    | leokennis wrote:
    | I had that one. Super stylish, cool functionality. But
    | unfortunately very fragile hardware.
    | 
    | You could actually log your food intake via their app. And
    | sync data to your phone by removing the "cap" from the band
    | and plugging it into your phone's headphone port!
 
  | alin23 wrote:
  | Exactly, me too! And I've looked everywhere but nothing fills
  | this niche anymore.
  | 
  | I had the first generation of Mi Band, the one with only 3 RGB
  | LEDs, no display. And I loved it, I could easily see I have a
  | new Gmail notification when it gently vibrated and the LEDs
  | flashed red (well more of a breathe animation than a flash), or
  | a Facebook Messenger one when it was blue. The Bluetooth
  | communications it used made it easy to program your own
  | vibrations and LEDs.
  | 
  | It sounds non intuitive but 90% of the time the flashing LEDs
  | made me NOT check the phone. I was like, "oh blue, most likely
  | my brother replied, I'll check it later"
  | 
  | I also fantasized about modding my current analog watch but
  | fitting a tiny battery and a tiny BLE chip and a tiny vibration
  | motor and surfacing tiny LEDs is way outside my possibilities.
  | Chronos sounds good in theory but the end result is not what I
  | want. I don't want to increase the thickness of my watch, or
  | have to recharge it or worry about a magnet not staying in
  | place.
 
  | idoh wrote:
  | Same - something like a headless Apple Watch would be ideal. I
  | legit just want HR tracking and connecting to a chest strap HR
  | monitor, and no watch display, other than the current HR.
 
    | mmmlinux wrote:
    | Sounds like you want a heart rate monitor and not a watch.
 
      | jrmg wrote:
      | I had an Epson Pulsense years ago. Looks like the PS-100 is
      | still in sale and fits this description.
 
  | dirtyid wrote:
  | Basically, except for media controls for winter where
  | gloves+swipe don't work. I ended up using a bluetooth media
  | remote for cars. But a simple fitness band with a few buttons
  | and a silence slider would be great.
 
| FortiDude wrote:
| Count me in! In my mind my smartwatch doesn't need more computing
| power or complexity than your average microcontroller, so as long
| as it lasts I'm keeping mine in good use
 
| 51Cards wrote:
| I am one of those and every year I renew my Rebble subscription
| to keep my devices viable as long as possible. I currently have 4
| of them, including 2 still "new in box". I still haven't found
| anything else that suits my use case as well. Still makes me sad
| though that the Time 2 model didn't release as it would have
| fixed the few (!) complaints I had about my Time.
 
| jbj wrote:
| in addition to these, there may be watches without a rebble
| subscription being used with gadgetbridge which can work without
| internet
 
| kojeovo wrote:
| Pebble was a game changer. Mine's in a drawer somewhere..
 
  | ilyt wrote:
  | Same, I just got solar + radio sync watch as replacement, not
  | having to do anything ever with it beats having to charge for
  | some extra features, even if it is just once a week, "modern"
  | one that I'd need to charge every day or two just sounds
  | annoying...
 
  | imdsm wrote:
  | As is mine. Loathe to throw it away, yet quite sure it doesn't
  | work anymore.
 
    | popcalc wrote:
    | If you don't want it I'll gladly take it off your hands.
 
  | Kaibeezy wrote:
  | Mine too. Would one or two of the 16k please make the pitch.
  | What are the features that keep you using it? How much work to
  | get it going again?
  | 
  | This is timely for me as I'm now in the doghouse for missing a
  | reminder to take my kid to the dentist yesterday :(
 
    | hobo_mark wrote:
    | Runs one week on a charge, I wrote a custom time-tracking app
    | for it that I have been using for years, syncs with google
    | calendar, shows TOTP auth codes, weather and notifications,
    | controls music playback in the house, all without having to
    | take my phone out...
 
| modeless wrote:
| I'd still be using mine if the battery (and its replacement)
| hadn't worn out. I was pretty hard on the battery, using a watch
| face that updated a lot.
| 
| I plan to reluctantly get a Pixel Watch. It's the first Android
| Wear watch since the Moto 360 that looks decent. Still way too
| thick though and still with a garbage outdated SoC (which
| wouldn't matter if the software was efficient like Pebble,
| but...)
 
| rekoil wrote:
| Every time Pebble is brought up it brings a tear to my eye, and I
| wonder what would have happened to the brand if they had accepted
| the offer from Citizen, who were obviously interested in
| continuing the line.
| 
| The Pebble Time 2 was so far ahead of its time, I promise you I
| would still be rocking it (or whatever came after it from Pebble)
| if they had shipped it to me.
 
  | drewzero1 wrote:
  | I've seen a lot of smartwatches that can match maybe 80-90% of
  | the functionality of the Pebble, but miss something important.
  | I occasionally wish my Pebble Time Steel had a slightly larger
  | screen and a heart rate monitor (like the Time 2 would have)
  | but other than that it's been nearly perfect. If/when something
  | happens to it I'll probably give up on smartwatches and go back
  | to wearing mechanical or solar analog watches again.
 
  | krono wrote:
  | Never got my Pebble Time 2 either and I'm still sad about it
  | today.
  | 
  | The continuous trickle of articles about how great these second
  | generation Pebbles turned out, and my ongoing wait for an
  | alternative that comes even close certainly haven't helped me
  | forget!
  | 
  | Just noticed the Kickstarter page is still up
  | https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/getpebble/pebble-2-time...
 
    | rekoil wrote:
    | Ah man, it _still_ looks great in comparison to the stuff in
    | the market today
    | 
    | :(
 
| danjoredd wrote:
| I completely understand. They were good watches. I almost bought
| one, then changed my mind because I didn't have the funds and
| didn't want to risk overdraft. They went out of business the week
| after, so I never got the chance to get one
 
| efields wrote:
| that is... a small number
 
| breck wrote:
| I loved the Pebble and went to the first developer conference.
| They treated devs right.
| 
| Then I moved to Microsoft Band, Microsoft Band 2, FitBit Charge,
| Fitbit Ionic, Fitbit Versa, Fitbit Sense, and now on FitBit Sense
| 2 (definitely a big leap forward).
| 
| I view Pebble as a huge success, even if it wasn't an immediate
| financial windfall for the team, as they pioneered something
| critical for humans.
 
| [deleted]
 
| Daedren wrote:
| I was only forced to swap because the battery started inflating.
| Currently on an Amazfit Bip S, fills in all my needs really, and
| has even better battery life.
 
| dkasper wrote:
| I still daily drive an Apple Watch Series 3. I use it as a watch
| and a fitness tracker and have no complaints or reason to upgrade
| until it breaks. Battery life is still well over 1 day with my
| usage.
 
| h4waii wrote:
| I've got a 2SE on my wrist right now, with a few in storage.
| 
| For the cost of a brand new case ($30) and batteries, I plan to
| keep using them until the software fails spectacularly.
| 
| There's really nothing that compares for my usage.
 
| jpswade wrote:
| That doesn't seem that many, how many people use Fitbit or Apple
| Watch?
 
  | gnicholas wrote:
  | Considering how many years it's been since the devices have
  | been sold, and the fact that the company no longer exists, it's
  | not bad!
 
  | p0pcult wrote:
  | For a watch that you can no longer buy from OEM or get OEM
  | support from, it's a lot, no?
 
| naoru wrote:
| Count me two. Me and my esposa still use our Pebble Times.
| 
| Once in a blue moon I buy a hot new smart watch, but nothing
| lasted more than a week before being resold.
 
| keraf wrote:
| As a big Pebble fan, I was really sad to see the company go
| without any similar alternatives in the market (at the time). My
| watches ended up having various hardware issues over the years,
| so I switched to something else. The efforts Rebble has put in to
| keep these devices alive is amazing. If they grow bigger, I'd
| love to see them do hardware.
| 
| In the meantime, I'm wearing a Withings ScanWatch [0]. Not as
| extendable as a Pebble, but it has some features I care about and
| doesn't distract me.
| 
| [0] https://www.withings.com/ch/en/scanwatch
 
  | Belphemur wrote:
  | Withings is great if you're looking for "health" watch but not
  | really good as fitness tracker.
  | 
  | For years, I used my steel HR (got a weird one branded Nokia
  | because they had purchased Withings only to resell Withings to
  | the founder a year later), loved the sleep tracking, health
  | report etc... But the activity tracking wasn't the best,
  | especially running.
  | 
  | However the battery's life is out of this world. I loved the
  | mix between tech and good old watch.
 
    | tootie wrote:
    | I bought a Scanwatch and have found the health data to be so
    | inaccurate as to be completely useless. I explicitly wanted
    | SpO2 and sleep tracking and it's just very wrong. It would
    | wake up multiple times at night and the watch would tell me I
    | was asleep all night. I'm sure it's just some limitation of
    | the sensors, but the tech just isn't good enough to be useful
 
      | wongarsu wrote:
      | That's a common problem. If you search google scholar for
      | sleep tracking accuracy you will find that many smart
      | watches are good at detecting sleep, but not so great at
      | detecting you waking up, so they overestimate sleep time
      | and sleep efficiency. And any sleep phase "measurements"
      | are best ignored entirely.
      | 
      | The Fitbit Alta HR and the Apple Watch are worth mentioning
      | for tracking sleep time and wake ups fairly accurately.
 
  | dcormier wrote:
  | Are there any comparable alternatives to Pebble even now? I've
  | yet to see one, but I haven't followed the market very closely
  | since I stopped using one.
 
    | falcolas wrote:
    | Not in my opinion. The closest I've found are hybrid watches
    | which will forward alerts (but generally with no text), but
    | certainly nothing with the screen, battery life, and OSS
    | vibe.
 
      | rrrrrrrrrrrryan wrote:
      | I picked up an older Fossil Hybrid HR a few months ago for
      | $100. I've been rocking it every day and it's been great -
      | battery lasts a couple weeks.
 
        | falcolas wrote:
        | I had a fossil hybrid for awhile, and actually rather
        | enjoyed it (gods below it was huge though - 44mm face).
        | The problem was, if it wasn't my daily driver (that is to
        | say, always within communication range of my phone), the
        | battery would drain so fast. And it was a relatively
        | uncommon coin battery, not a rechargeable battery.
        | 
        | I wish that hadn't been the case, but after replacing the
        | battery 3x in one month because I swapped out watches
        | occasionally, it went into retirement.
 
      | blueblob wrote:
      | You guys seem to be more informed than me since I didn't
      | use the pebble. Do you know how the pinetime compares?
 
        | Avamander wrote:
        | In spirit it's extremely similar, but as it doesn't have
        | large finances behind it, it lags behind in terms of
        | features.
        | 
        | It's totally usable, but it doesn't have a vibrant app
        | store like Pebble did for example.
 
        | falcolas wrote:
        | Pinetime is new to me, going to dig in more. But at first
        | glance, I'm not sure I like the IPS display, honestly.
        | The always-visible e-ink Pebble display was one of the
        | biggest features to me.
 
    | jabroni_salad wrote:
    | Fossil Neutra, I think. They have an eink display and 2 week
    | battery life. I don't use one though, been enjoying my
    | citizen ecodrive for the past few years.
 
      | gnicholas wrote:
      | Fossil has a couple hybrid smartwatches, under their own
      | brand and under Skagen. They also license the technology to
      | Citizen.
      | 
      | I've used a few Fossil watches and found the battery to be
      | very good, but the software to be lacking. One example is
      | that if you receive a notification, you have to click the
      | center button to select it, and then the down button to
      | scroll down. The buttons on some models are quite mushy,
      | which makes navigation even more frustrating. The light is
      | also unimpressive and hard to trigger.
      | 
      | I don't love the styling of the current Fossil models. The
      | Skagen version looks nicer to me, but sadly the software
      | forced you to display a Skagen logo instead of one of the
      | four complications that's available on the Fossil-branded
      | version.
      | 
      | I don't know what I'm going to do when my Fossil dies. The
      | battery is down to 4 days if I remember to put it in
      | airplane mode every night. I'm considering the Apple Watch
      | Ultra, which should get around 5 days of battery in low
      | power mode but I don't love the styling, don't need the
      | sporty features, and don't love the price.
 
    | delecti wrote:
    | One problem with the smartwatch market is that it's hard to
    | know what "comparable" means to any given person.
    | 
    | I've found an Amazfit Bip to be a totally satisfactory
    | replacement for my Pebble Time, but it doesn't cover every
    | single usecase. It does have a battery life measured in weeks
    | though (usually 3-4 for me, less if I use the GPS to track a
    | bunch of exercise), which is a pretty nice selling point.
 
      | xrd wrote:
      | Do you build your own apps for it? I'm interesting in
      | understanding how hackable it is? For example, can you
      | write an app that pulls the GPS data from a run off it, or
      | is that data readily accessible somehow?
 
        | fullstop wrote:
        | Not OP, but you can't really make your own apps for it.
        | There are third party clients for it, though, and you can
        | export data through them.
        | 
        | I like mine, except for the fact that the front fell off
        | and I had to glue it back on. The battery lasts for 3 or
        | 4 weeks, you can receive notifications (but not respond
        | to them) and it looks fairly stylish.
 
        | delecti wrote:
        | Ha, the front fell off of mine too. It still works just
        | as well after regluing though, so I guess it's not _that_
        | big of a problem.
 
        | delecti wrote:
        | I haven't done any hacking of any of my smartwatches. If
        | that's important to you, then I don't really have any
        | recommendations for you (and it highlights my point about
        | different people's definition of "comparable").
        | 
        | I want my watch to have time/date, alarms,
        | timers/stopwatches, the ability to read phone
        | notifications, always-on screen, and battery life
        | measured on the scale of weeks. Step and heartrate
        | tracking are also nice perks that the Amazfit Bip also
        | includes.
 
    | tekchip wrote:
    | Surprised this hasn't been mentioned on this thread yet.
    | Hardware wise the closest is probably the Pine Time from
    | Pine64. Software and services wise this isn't on pebbles
    | level though. https://www.pine64.org/pinetime/
    | 
    | As others mention hybrid watches are probably the closest
    | alternative.
 
      | wingmanjd wrote:
      | I own a Pinetime, and I agree it's close to the Pebble (I
      | used to own a Pebble Steel). My Pinetime gets around 3ish
      | days battery life, usage dependent.
      | 
      | I wanted a watch that I could control my media player on my
      | phone with, gave me notifications, and didn't cost me an
      | appendage. The Pinetime was $35USD shipped (IIRC), and
      | while I can't dismiss phone notifications from my watch, it
      | does at least show me the notifications from my wrist. I'm
      | very happy with mine.
 
      | _fat_santa wrote:
      | Oh wow I did not realize they were just $35, I expected a
      | price around $150. I've never been a smartwatch person
      | because I couldn't see myself wearing one over some of my
      | mechanical pieces, but for $35 i'm very tempted to try.
 
      | porcc wrote:
      | Pinetime can't hold a candle to the bangle.js:
      | https://banglejs.com/
      | 
      | The bangle.js: - ships significantly faster - has an
      | always-on display with similar 4 week maximum battery life
      | - can be updated without flashing - has a thriving app
      | ecosystem
 
        | dTal wrote:
        | I have a bangle.js. It's... alright. Does the job. Feels
        | cheap. OS is nightmarishly slow. Only one physical
        | button, so annoying and fiddly to set with a touchscreen
        | (interacts badly with the slow OS). Has GPS, but doesn't
        | really work. Has heart monitor, but doesn't really work.
        | Not terribly stable.
        | 
        | My Pebble Time Steel was vastly superior.
 
        | palata wrote:
        | I wonder: could one possibly run a custom ROM like
        | bangleJS on a Garmin?
 
      | opan wrote:
      | Early PineTime adopter here. The lack of physical buttons
      | is such a massive downgrade that I can't really bring
      | myself to use mine anymore. The apps are also very lacking
      | compared to the Pebble. Specifically timers, stopwatch,
      | alarms. I have no other watch to recommend, I just stopped
      | wearing one. I do occasionally update the firmware and see
      | if things have improved, but they're still not as good as
      | I'd like. I do support them and what they're doing. The
      | hardware itself is maybe just too flawed. I hope that we
      | see more stuff get support from the same OS. Something with
      | more buttons.
      | 
      | With the Pebble I had app shortcuts on the long press of
      | most of the buttons and could pretty much navigate it blind
      | to start a stopwatch ASAP and lap as needed without
      | looking. I had tons of saved timer presets. The alarms
      | could actually wake me up (before the vibration motor
      | broke). PineTime won't let me save timer presets, set
      | timers over an hour or so long, and it's not obvious enough
      | when the timer ends. I think it vibrates once instead of
      | doing it until dismissed. These are basic things, and to me
      | they matter even more than seeing notifications from my
      | phone appear. I even used my Pebble without a phone for
      | months at a time before.
 
    | keraf wrote:
    | The "closest" I found that filled the void Pebble left are
    | these hybrid watches like the ScanWatch I mentioned. All
    | fully digital ones just go overboard with features, I find
    | them too gimmicky and they come with an awful battery life. I
    | don't want another smartphone on my wrist that I need to
    | charge every night...
    | 
    | I miss the simplicity, yet the huge amount possibilities (via
    | their store and SDK) and watch faces the Pebble had. They
    | still managed to keep the device distraction free along with
    | a good battery life. I'm all ears for any good Pebble-like
    | smartwatch if anyone knows one.
 
    | sethd wrote:
    | I've been using a Garmin Instinct for a few years, and it's
    | never let me down. It has a monochrome display that is not
    | affected by sunlight with incredible battery life even when
    | using the GPS. It's also tough as a brick
 
    | iamjackg wrote:
    | I've been using a Garmin Vivoactive 3 for a few years after
    | owning a Pebble Time that eventually stopped working. I've
    | been pretty happy with it: it also has a retroreflective
    | screen that's always on and perfectly visible in sunlight,
    | the battery can last about a week depending on usage, and
    | Garmin's IQ app ecosystem is solid.
    | 
    | The notification functionality is not as customizable, but
    | otherwise I haven't really been missing the Pebble much.
 
    | Belphemur wrote:
    | If I remember correctly, after Fitbit purchased pebble they
    | released the Versa line up that had some similar
    | functionalities.
    | 
    | However it looks like Google is killing that in newer
    | iterations...
 
      | happymellon wrote:
      | I got a Versa 3 after my Galaxy Active stopped working,
      | after my Bip broke, and after my Pebble screen went bad.
      | 
      | I've enjoyed it, although I am really missing the ability
      | to write my own apps. Everything else is great.
      | 
      | I understand that the Versa 4 is generally worse than the
      | 3. Insane, why would you remove music controls?
 
  | ziml77 wrote:
  | That Withings watch looks pretty nice. What I would really love
  | to see is a Pebble revival with that monitoring tech in it.
  | Like if I saw that end up on Kickstarter, I would easily drop
  | in $1k to help fund the development and production (as long as
  | the project was run by someone who will definitely be able to
  | make it happen).
 
  | stareatgoats wrote:
  | Yes, Withings things are cool, including the Scanwatch in lieu
  | if what Pebble could have been given the right funding and
  | guidance. I'll get mine if/when they add blood pressure
  | monitoring.
 
| augasur wrote:
| I was quite a fan of Pebble, but was not able to get it when it
| launched.
| 
| I had Amazfit Bip for multiple years until it finally broke.
| 
| After trying Android Wear, battery life if very bad, I am looking
| for alternatives.
| 
| Is there any modern alternative to Pebble with all basic
| functions, such as eink display, battery life, notifications or
| call muting, but it also could reply to messages/notifications?
 
  | fullstop wrote:
  | > I had Amazfit Bip for multiple years until it finally broke.
  | 
  | The face fell off of mine, and the band snapped. The face was
  | put back in with super glue and has been holding just fine for
  | two years, and the band was replaced with a metal one which
  | will last forever.
  | 
  | How did yours break?
 
| solarkraft wrote:
| That few?
| 
| I wasn't a huge fan of Pebble, the company - they didn't sell
| replacement parts, for instance (the watch for geeks? yeah,
| sure).
| 
| For some crazy reason, though, to this day, this watch is still
| almost the only one that gets such a basic thing right: Telling
| the damn time.
| 
| The formula is as simple as it is unreplicated:
| 
| - Always telling the time
| 
| - Good battery life
| 
| - Buttons
| 
| Why nobody else makes such a watch is a mystery to me. The
| Amazfit Bip comes close, but it requires touch interaction and
| doesn't look as nice as the Pebble Time Steel. It's also
| supported by GadgetBridge though and also does heart rate
| tracking while having much better battery life (while being
| smaller!). When my Bip broke after a few months I bought another
| (5 years old at this point!) Pebble and am pretty happy with it.
| I could use some heart rate tracking, though.
 
  | pmlamotte wrote:
  | Garmin Fenix/Forerunner/Instinct meets all of these, though at
  | a significantly higher cost than the pebble. It's worth it for
  | me because I'm into the fitness tracking but hard to justify
  | otherwise.
 
  | capableweb wrote:
  | Basically the only reason I got the smartwatch I got, is
  | because it always displays the time, even if it runs out of
  | battery, that it can vibrate when I receive phone calls, it
  | keeps track of my heart rate and sleeping activity. The battery
  | also lasts days rather than hours, which is pretty nice.
  | 
  | I don't exactly know which model it is, but it's a Garmin watch
  | with the traditional hour/minute arms and a tiny little screen.
  | But it really kicks ass at telling me the time :)
 
    | rypskar wrote:
    | Maybe a Garmin vivomove HR, I got mine for the same reasons
 
  | jjice wrote:
  | Tactile buttons, easy replies, and the epaper display. Such a
  | simple combination, but I don't think we'll ever see a new one
  | again. Seeing the time without having to shake my wrist like a
  | maniac was such a game changer.
  | 
  | Haven't used a smart watch in 6ish years, so maybe they're
  | better. From what I understand though, they still don't have
  | always on displays for time, right? I hope I'm wrong and that
  | they do.
 
    | mikestew wrote:
    | _From what I understand though, they still don 't have always
    | on displays for time, right?_
    | 
    | Apple is on the fourth version that has an always-on-display,
    | and Google's new Pixel watch has it. Can't say about any
    | others with any confidence, but I'd be surprised if
    | Apple/Google are the only ones.
 
      | jjice wrote:
      | Oh thank god. I'm just ignorant.
 
  | ryukafalz wrote:
  | > Buttons
  | 
  | This is the killer feature for me and why I still use mine
  | daily. I don't know why nobody else is doing this. With media
  | controls on a shortcut slot I can pause whatever media I'm
  | playing, switch songs, etc without even looking at the screen.
  | No other smartwatch I've used comes close to that convenience.
 
    | Wildgoose wrote:
    | I have a Fossil Hybrid HR Collider that allows this.
    | 
    | Real watch hands, buttons and an e-ink display. 7-10 days
    | battery life.
    | 
    | It's a really nice watch.
 
      | idiotsecant wrote:
      | Seems like a lot of reviews out there that indicate that
      | the screen fails pretty quick - have you had any trouble
      | with lack of contrast on yours?
 
  | seized wrote:
  | Garmin watches do all of those things well, including heart
  | rate and fitness tracking/etc. Take a look at the Vivoactive
  | line. My Vivoactive 4 gets >1 week battery life depending on
  | the number of notifications I get (vibration vs battery life).
 
  | will0 wrote:
  | The actual number of Pebble users is likely far higher, this is
  | just the count we get from our side at Rebble.
  | 
  | There are more Pebble users out there using Gadgetbridge for
  | example.
 
  | mrcwinn wrote:
  | "That few?"
  | 
  | "Why nobody else makes such a watch is a mystery to me."
  | 
  | There ya go.
 
    | MBCook wrote:
    | Right. Apple sold 46.1 million Apple Watches last year alone.
    | 
    | There are always people who mourn the Pebble and I understand
    | why. But the market has clearly shown you don't need a week
    | of battery life to be successful.
 
  | Chris2048 wrote:
  | Other than battery life, how does this compare to iwatch?
 
    | cianmm wrote:
    | It has more buttons than an Apple Watch and is a lot simpler
    | with less functionality, which for many is a draw.
    | 
    | I had two Pebbles and was very sad when it shut down - my
    | Pebble devices are no longer functioning but I've been using
    | an Apple Watch for maybe 6 years now and am very happy with
    | it. Sometimes I miss the battery life, but I never feel like
    | it's a restriction and the UI on the Apple Watch is really
    | very good.
 
  | stardenburden wrote:
  | Most Garmin watches fit your formula
 
  | darrenf wrote:
  | > _The formula is as simple as it is unreplicated:_
  | 
  | > _- Always telling the time_
  | 
  | > _- Good battery life_
  | 
  | > _- Buttons_
  | 
  | I'm not so sure this is "unreplicated". Since bailing on Pebble
  | I've had 2 Garmin watches which always tell the time, and have
  | good battery life and buttons.
 
| Watchwatcher wrote:
| I basically want an old school style mp3 player with bluetooth
| and a GPS tracker that I can just plug into a computer and grab
| the gpx data, and copy mp3s to its disk. No apps, no locked down
| ecosystems. If it tells the time and shows a calendar, great.
 
  | brewdad wrote:
  | I used to run with a Sansa Clip. It was perfect for that use
  | case. Tiny, practically weightless, and could store many hours
  | of music. My computer treated it like any USB drive, so it was
  | easy to update. One of mine (I think I burned through 3 of them
  | over the years even had an FM radio.
  | 
  | Today, when I run, I just carry my phone. It ends up doing
  | everything the old clip did but in a much larger and more
  | cumbersome package.
  | 
  | I'd probably carry my phone anyway these days after having a
  | run, years ago, where my IT band told me I was done NOW but I
  | was 8 miles from home. It was early Sunday morning and I ended
  | up walking 2 miles on country roads and then through an empty
  | office park before I found some place with a phone to call for
  | a ride. That sucked.
 
| rdschouw wrote:
| I use my Pebble Time Round or Pebble Time Steel daily on IOS
| using the official Pebble app.
| 
| Every major IOS release I think this is the time my Pebble app
| stops working but it is still going strong on IOS16. Safe for
| another year. :)
 
  | altintx wrote:
  | How's the battery holding on with your Round? I abandoned mine
  | three years ago because of a combination of poor capacity and
  | an unreliable charger but I miss it constantly.
 
    | rdschouw wrote:
    | Good actually. It still has 2 days life time but I tend to
    | charge it daily for 15m to keep it running forever. When I am
    | wearing my Pebble Time Steel, I make sure that it has 50%
    | charge before switching it off. This tends to keep the
    | battery level between 20 and 80% between charges. I think
    | that's the sweet spot.
 
| Markoff wrote:
| same here with Amazfit Bip, had few months stint with AMOLED
| smartwatch which was necessary to charge twice a week until I got
| fed up with that (plus unreadable display in sunlight unless
| maximum brightness) and bought again second Amazfit Bip (1st
| broke) which cost me less than 20USD used and I have to charge it
| once a month plus it has perfectly readable transreflective
| display not requiring any backlight, which looks better with more
| sunlight, it's shame almost all companies switched to nice
| looking but extremely power hungry AMOLED displays, I wish there
| were cheap options for simple watch with transreflective display
| or e-ink
| 
| I would be perfectly content with something like Casio F91W if it
| could display notifications through bluetooth from my phone, I
| don't really need any sleep tracking or any other features just
| watch with notifications so I don't have to turn on phone screen
 
  | insane_dreamer wrote:
  | > just watch with notifications so I don't have to turn on
  | phone screen
  | 
  | you might like the Withings
 
    | Markoff wrote:
    | they are anything but cheap, display to show notifications
    | seem to have only expensive models
 
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