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posted by Fnord666 on Saturday June 16 2018, @04:25PM   Printer-friendly
from the when-you-can-snatch-this-watch-from-my-hand-grasshopper dept.

Pebble smartwatches could be kept alive by an unofficial developer group called Rebble

Pebble's online services will officially die at the end of this month, but some could live on through Rebble, an unofficial group of Pebble users who are trying to keep their watches alive.

Rebble initially popped up after Pebble said in 2016 that it would cease operations and be acquired by Fitbit. Now that Fitbit is weeks away from shutting down Pebble's remaining services, Rebble is promoting an unofficial replacement system that's meant to keep the majority of Pebble's internet-connected functions alive. Former Pebble employee Katharine Berry is spearheading the effort, and it's received an endorsement from Pebble founder Eric Migicovsky.

Also at Engadget.

Previously: Pebble Dead, Assets Sold to Fitbit


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  • (Score: 2, Interesting) by anubi on Sunday June 17 2018, @09:46AM

    by anubi (2828) on Sunday June 17 2018, @09:46AM (#694199) Journal

    I bought several Timex "Data Link" watches.

    At the time I bought them, I did not have much experience or exposure to the business tactic of forced obsolescence.

    Older but wiser, I look more into stuff like this before I open my wallet... see if the protocols are public. Had they released the protocol where I could have kept my watch going through communicating through a blinking LED instead of holding it up to a monitor which was flashing what appeared to be a four bit code, using rasterization/scanning for timing, I would have probably been using my watches to this day, instead of throwing them away and considering my investment in them as a sunk cost.

    Well, today, I know a helluva lot more and I probably would have cracked the code and built a LED flasher equivalent, but now is now and then was then.

    I was used to being encouraged to use things I had bought, like I could easily get info on how to use a UART. The people who sold me the UART knew I did not buy it just to look at it... they knew I wanted to do something with it. I had the same feelings toward TIMEX once. Well, burned once, I now seem to think down the lines of "what am I getting myself into" when it comes into buying proprietary technology.

    --
    "Prove all things; hold fast that which is good." [KJV: I Thessalonians 5:21]
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