Comment by crossroadsguy
3 days ago
Lack of GPS essentially killed the resurrected Pebble for me.
If I am buying a smart/tracking watch today, I want these things from it:
- Great battery life
- HRM (with decent accuracy; doesn't have to pass those "accuracy tests" though)
- GPS (with extremely good accuracy and yes, it has to pass those accuracy tests for GPS. And no, if I turn it ON and use it and the battery dies quickly, I won't hold it against you - that's supposed to happen)
- Do not track me - do not send any data to anywhere unless I specifically want it
- Do not need a phone to be connected to function - let me export data later if I choose to (hell, if this is the only way - I don't mind - BT not being used always isn't so bad - saves a bit of battery; if you need me to do this via a USB type C cable later, I don't mind that either)
That's all!
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If you don't have these features, I don't really mind:
- Show me the incoming call on the screen. - Give me a way to reject or silence it. If I want to answer that call, then I'll reach out to my phone anyway.
- Maybe show the time and day if I tap it or I am fine if it's always shown
- Preferably don't show me notifications from apps in general and if you do - give a very granular way to disable specific apps (this might already be possible)
- Please sell a non-touchscreen option (but I can live with one)
- Do not try to be the smartphone or replicate it somehow and end up becoming a Frankenstein in both size and spirit
- Maybe keep it lightweight?
PS. And, for the love of god, do not ever try to hardcode special chargers/cables like Philips does for their trimmers. Bas----ds sell different cables and different chargers for two trimmer models released in the same year very close to each other and in close price ranges fulfilling similar functions.
> Lack of GPS essentially killed the resurrected Pebble for me. > GPS > Do not need a phone to be connected to function
I don't really think you're in the target demographic for a pebble at all. It sounds like you want a standalone device that's essentially a smartphone on your wrist. I know you say you don't want it to be a smartphone, but if you want battery-life, a GPS, and phone independence, that's the product you're going to get.
Pebble is (and was) more of a smartphone companion, it has basically no smart functionality on its own.
I suspect you might not be aware that certain things can be "turned off" on a smartwatch or a computing device, mobile or otherwise. But if you knew, then I do not know why you still made this comment.