Return of the Pebble (Watch)

Author
Discussion

ajprice

Original Poster:

30,402 posts

209 months

The Pebble e-ink watch is coming back, updated by Eric Migicovsky (Pebble founder) with new chips and better battery life.

https://ericmigi.com/blog/introducing-two-new-pebb...

https://repebble.com

I never had a Pebble the first time around, but these look interesting, the apps and watch faces are still around, after being bought out by Google own Pebble (via Fitbit) and the OS is open source now. https://rebble.io have kept the apps and watch faces going. $150 for Core 2 Duo (Pebble 2, b/w screen) or $25 for Core Time 2 (Pebble Time, colour screen).

tangerine_sedge

5,617 posts

231 months

ajprice said:
The Pebble e-ink watch is coming back, updated by Eric Migicovsky (Pebble founder) with new chips and better battery life.

https://ericmigi.com/blog/introducing-two-new-pebb...

https://repebble.com

I never had a Pebble the first time around, but these look interesting, the apps and watch faces are still around, after being bought out by Google own Pebble (via Fitbit) and the OS is open source now. https://rebble.io have kept the apps and watch faces going. $150 for Core 2 Duo (Pebble 2, b/w screen) or $25 for Core Time 2 (Pebble Time, colour screen).
I had a few over the years, they were much superior to any other smartwatch for ages, but they all failed in the end - they were just not robust enough.

I'll probably buy one of these new ones wink

phil4

1,435 posts

251 months

I had one way back... worked well and liked it.

However things moved on, and "smart watches", meant you could run useful stuff, and do things interactively. Even without a phone.

Much as I liked it then, I don't think I'd get one now unless I was going through a "digital cleanse".

dapprman

2,556 posts

280 months

I am intrigued as to whether the new phone software will work with the old watches. I stopped using my Pebbles when Android effectively locked the software out (about a year after iOS did the same). TBH I do prefer my present Garmin, but that has a ~3 week battery life, where as my Pebble Classic was just under 2 and my Time Steel, just over 1.

What does concern me over the new watch is once more Eric Migicovsky is going the crowd funding route. Last time the company failed as a result of his mismanagement. it was only a few years later when it came out that the Kick Starter money for the Pebble 2,0 was actually been used to cover existing costs/debts and not for the new watch. Sure he may be more sensible this time and I do hope it goes well, however this could also be another Fisker.