Showing posts with label Pebble. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pebble. Show all posts

Friday, December 23, 2016

Apple Watch First Impressions

 ...from a former Pebble user


When Pebble announced their acquisition by FitBit, I was cautious about the future of the product: I backed the original Pebble on Kickstarter, as well as the Pebble Steel, Time Steel and finally, Time 2 when the opportunities presented themselves. But then recent things like having a total reset screwing up all my settings (and needing to do a factory reset to get things back) and a limited lifetime (and no more warranty support) for the existing units, I decided to look elsewhere for a good smartwatch.

As a longtime iPhone/iPad user I'd looked at the specs for Apple Watch when it was first released, and between the significant cost difference from the Pebble (like 4x more expensive, depending on the edition and band choices) and significant hardware limitations (Single-day battery life? Really? Not water resistant?), the sale of Pebble was making my smartwatch options pretty bleak.

However, the recently released Series 2 from Apple addressed 2 of the 3 biggest faults I had with the platform (nothing is going to address the cost problem: this is Apple we're talking about, and all of its options are boutique-priced) by adding significant strides to battery life along with 50M water resistance.

So I pulled the trigger and yesterday was able to take delivery of a 42mm Stainless Steel with Milanese Loop band in Space Black.
42mm Apple Watch Series 2 in Space Black
with Milanese Loop band
If you're interested in an un-boxing, you can search elsewhere. Suffice it to say that, in typical Apple fashion, the watch was simultaneously beautifully and over-packaged; a fair expectation for an $800 timepiece, whether it comes from Apple or not, but the amount of material waste from the packaging hails back to when Apple thought they were competing in the luxury timepiece market rather than the fitness wearables market. They really, really could've gone with less.

I started by placing the watch on the charging disc for a few hours to make sure it was well charged, then I went through the pairing process. Unlike Pebble, the Watch doesn't use two different Bluetooth profiles (one standard and one low-energy), and pairing with my iPhone 6s running iOS 10.2 was smooth and less error-prone compared to my usual experience with Pebble pairing. If there's one thing to be said for getting the two devices from the same manufacturer, it's the effortless user experience with pairing.

Before purchasing, I visited a local Apple store to get a feel for my choices in cases and bands. I selected the 42mm over the 38mm because of the larger display and my old eyes. The stainless steel case is a heftier feel over aluminium (or ceramic), which I definitely prefer, and there was a noticeable difference between the 38mm and 42mm as well, solidifying my choice of that size. Lighter watches tend to slide around to the underside of my wrist, while heavier ones seem to stay in place on the top. And if I have to deal at all with the watch on the underside of my wrist, the sapphire crystal of the stainless steel & ceramic cases was a must. I also prefer the heavier link band, but between the $500 premium and its "butterfly clasp" (which I hate), there was no way I was going with the Apple link band. The Milanese felt "weighty" enough in comparison to the link band, and its "infinite adjustability" had some appeal as well.

Once I had the watch paired and on my wrist, I started digging into the features I'd come accustomed to on the Pebble. Probably the biggest surprise was the dearth of watch face choices: unlike the Pebble ecosystem, with thousands of watch faces to choose from—everything from utilitarian designs to homages to Star Trek to the silly "Drunk O'Clock" face—the handful of faces available in the Watch ecosystem was a big surprise.

Worse, while all the Watch faces are customizable to some degree, all of them have the limitation of disallowing the customization of "time" itself. The face I'm most accustomed to on the Pebble—YWeather by David Rincon—is nearly reproducible on the Watch using the "Modular" face, but the options—or "Complications" as Apple terms them—aren't very flexible and make "time" a less-prominent feature in the face. Which, in my opinion, sort of defeats the purpose in a watch face.
Apple Watch
"Modular"
Pebble
"YWeather"

If I could just move the Time to the center section and make it more prominent, while moving the date to the upper-right, it'd be good enough...

Notifications are also very different on the Apple Watch; the most significant seems to be the suppression of all notifications when the phone is actively being used, which I'm extremely unhappy with. Among other things, it means that I'm not getting notifications when I've got the phone plugged into power and showing a route in Waze. Even when the phone is locked & screen is off, I'm finding that notifications I usually received on the Pebble are missing/silent on the watch: I've yet to get a notification from Slack, which is one of the busiest apps on my phone after Mail itself.
Yes, I've made sure that things like "cover to mute" is disabled and "mirror phone" is set for pretty much all of the integrations on the watch, but the only type of notification that I get seems to be Messages and Calendar.

Application integration is nice for many apps I have on the phone; being able to quickly raise/lower the garage door using GarageIO on the watch instead of the phone is nice, as is checking the home alarm. However, it does seem that some watch app integrations require the phone-based app to be running (or at least "backgrounded") in order for the watch component to function. It's not consistent, so I'm still trying to figure out which ones need to be running in order to work.

The blob of apps in the App Layout sucks, however. While I have the ability to move apps around to change their proximity to the "central" Clock app, the fact that there are so many that I'd just as soon never see—even after telling Watch to uninstall the integration—is mind-boggling when you consider the minimalist design elements used everywhere else in all Apple products.

At any rate, I'm still getting used to this thing, but from my perspective, I like parts of it, but other parts are still inferior to Pebble

Sunday, February 10, 2013

It's not a watch, it's a Pebble

After being prompted by a tweet from Chris Grossmeier (@cgrossmeier) to check out a Kickstarter project he decided to back, I joined him in the ranks of backers for the single most successful project in Kickstarter history. Originally requesting $100,000 to build a modest little "smart watch," Pebble Technology founder Eric Migicovsky found his project with over $10 million in backing before "selling out."

With that sort of support, Migicovsky revised the scope and breadth of the project, including additional features for the device and plans to retail the watch to non-backers. After many delays—not surprising with Kickstarter projects, but wholly appropriate for the new scope and scale of this one—a Pebble was delivered to my eager hands.
The friendly box design
Inside the spartan box: Pebble watch & its USB power cord
Kickstarter Edition
When first "firing up" the watch, it simply prompts you to pair it with a supported smartphone; in my case, I'd already downloaded the Pebble app from the Apple App Store and was ready to get going.

iOS App
First impressions are everything. It took very little effort to accomplish the Bluetooth pairing, and a software update for the watch was already available for transfer: it shipped with v.1.5.3 and was updated to v1.7.1. With the hints from the iOS app, I was also able to get some of the interactive functions going between watch and phone; it's also the conduit for loading additional watch faces.

Status and tipsApp & Watchface Loading
At this time, the SDK isn't publicly available, but a watch face design tool and app creator SDK are in the works. The watch comes with three "hard coded" watch faces, and five more are available in the iOS app. The built-in watch faces can't be deleted, and there's no function for hiding or reordering the menu: new faces always appear below the lowest permanent menu item (Settings).

Built-in Watch Face OptionsAdditional Menu OptionsDefault Watch Face
Strangely enough, while the Pebble has a configuration option for setting whether it's a 12- or 24-hour clock by default, one of the original, optional watch faces ("Big Time") was purpose-built to ignore the setting. Since my original inquiries about the behavior, the Pebble team has replaced the original design with a pair of watch faces—Big Time 12 and Big Time 24—to accommodate user desires rather than updating the single face to honor the system setting. This makes me wonder a bit about how sophisticated the API for custom watchfaces is going to be...

WatchfacesTwo faces instead of one
The Pebble is a work in progress: there are some gyrations that one must complete to get notifications for Mail and non-cell applications going (SMS and Call notifications work as soon as pairing is complete) for iPhone, and there are plenty of bugs being discussed on the Pebble forums. Luckily, the guys behind the project "get it," and have been serious about keeping backers updated.

Text Alert on phone
With "project update #32," they went through a laundry list of known issues. Although I'm personally experiencing some problems with my Pebble, it was heartening to see all those issues identified as "known problems" for my Pebble/Phone combination.

From a cosmetic standpoint, I've found that wearing the Pebble on the inside of my wrist is most comfortable; I've found other watches to work better that way, too, but there's the real potential for badly-scratching the watch face.
Watch "rolls away" on back of wrist.Inside wrist, face stays in a good place.
The backlight is understated enough that it won't cause comments from others at the movie theater, but plenty bright to make the watch readable in a dark(ened) room. It comes on when pressing buttons as one would expect; it will also come on with the flick of the wrist, a cool feature now that the watch contains an accelerometer (not in the original scope).

Overall, I'm satisfied with the Pebble, and am looking forward to the improvements in the functionality as time goes on.