The Pebble smartwatch is making a comeback. Google has open-sourced the Pebble software, which means anyone — including Pebble’s founder — can make one.
The company — which can’t be named Pebble because Google still owns that — doesn’t have a name yet. For now, Migicovsky is hosting a waitlist and news signup at a website called RePebble. Later this year, once the company has a name and access to all that Pebble software, the plan is to start shipping new wearables that look, feel, and work like the Pebbles of old.
Dude, Migicovsky fucked it up once and already wants back in? He sold the Pebble company and fucked almost all the workers on the way out. They were promised their jobs, that their jobs would be part of the deal. At the last minute they find out, nope, Migicovsky signed off on the deal that left them all without jobs. He walked away with a fat stack of cash.
Then the idiot spun up Beeper and hacked his way into the iMessage system with a workaround which Apple them promptly blocked within a few days. People were paying for this service. What was Migicovsky's plan? None, he gave up after Apple blocked them once.
Further, Beeper is just a re-skinned Matrix client with the Beeper company hosting the open source bridges between services, which means they have always had some weirdly serious access to the chats they're helping you compile all in one place. Initially you basically had to give them way too much control over your Apple account to use the iMessage stuff since they had to have a fleet of Macs for each iMessage user they were supporting.
I'm sorry. I don't care how good it was. Don't let Migicovsky take your money and mismanage it again.
Why do people keep giving this guy good graces when he fucked over his own devs on the way out and didn't even have a plan on how to keep his iMessage system working for paying customers?
Please stop letting this guy fuck up and walk away with the money.
I'm aware that pine64 sells a smart watch that they encourage flashing your own OS onto. I wonder how hard it'd be to just port the pebble code onto that hardware (a lot harder than I just made it sound, no doubt.) It could be a good way to get a pebble-like experience for people who prefer not to support this guys new company.
Thank you for this perspective. It is against reminder of how sad it is to be a part of something as an Engineer, or even as a janitor so long as it wasn't a contracted out company, where those above make way to save themselves while the workers who made everything get left with nothing or another round of a resume update. The workers should get the sold profits, not just the executive parts. They sometimes don't even get the ethics and degrees that allow you to understand the work.
There were actually a couple attempts, but it's kinda in Apple's hands... I think he was hoping he could generate enough public outcry to force them to not block it. You can also still access it now, if you have your own mac.
Further, Beeper is just a re-skinned Matrix client with the Beeper company hosting the open source bridges between services
It's their own client, not just reskinned, and it has a bunch of new features designed to make cross-service nice and simple. Also, the bridges ARE open-source, but the beeper company wrote a few of them and decided to open source them.
Don't let Migicovsky take your money and mismanage it again.
He refunded everyone who bought a subscription when Apple blocked it. Beeper main is also free.
Having been in company at sales time my self, I can tell you that management will say all sorts of things. But once the sale completes the new owners can do anything, that could be drop all the staff.
I my self also loved the pebble, till it all died. I did try repebble. But the android app was way past it then.
My hope is that the mobile apps get a much needed update, then all the working watches get a firmware update. If that happens, I might have to get my working watch out and setup.
I wasn't interested in one at the time so I didn't know any of this, I thought they just stopped making watches. I've been reconsidering getting one and probably wouldn't have looked into the history of each company so I appreciate the rant.
My gramin instinct fits this description. Mine is 1st gen and if I didn't use it for gps activity tracking the battery would probably last 2 weeks.
Think I've had it for 4 years now.
I also had a pebble 2 hr, even had two because I bought another one off eBay (unopened box). 3d printed some buttons and used is for many years until the battery basically died, and the software started to show it's age. Notifications became unreliable and such things, making it kinda pointless.
Still want nothing more than for it to work properly again. It's easy enough to swap the battery, now with the ability to fix the software, there might be a point to it.
The pebble time is still the best Smart Watch I've ever owned. Perfect with notifications, good battery life, easy controls, beautifully efficient e-paper screen. Can't wait to see what they do now!
I think it was something like reflective LCD and not epaper, that's what allowed it to have a fast refresh rate but still use very little power. I'm still surprised I haven't seen much tech using that type of screen.
I've made many posts on many platforms wondering the same thing, especially for something like a watch that you want to be always on. Sure, amoled exists, but isn't e-paper much better for that use case?
I'm even daily driving an e-paper android tablet for notes and reading and it's awesome. A charge lasts me over a week with heavy use.
Also, not entirely sure of the exact tech for the original pebble, was it TFT? The RePebble site linked by OP talks about e-paper but maybe that's just what they want going forward
I hope they make one I can make calls from without a phone I tried to switch to smartwatch-only late last year but even the Samsung watch couldn't handle that.
It could barely make calls. It can make calls as a party trick but you can't really access your contacts book in an easily usable way, you can't start new text conversations, and you can't view your full calendar and you definitely can't add events. I don't need much for a watch to replace my phone but I do need it to call and text well and I need to be able to access my calendar. It's very clear that those devices are designed and intended to add more tracking and monitoring and dopamine hooks on top of your phone, not to replace it with a less intrusive alternative. It was actually fairly frustrating.
This is interesting timing! I was considering trading in my Pebble Time, since Samsung was running one of their "trade in any smartwatch, any condition" deals. But I couldn't do it. I found myself reconnecting the watch and setting it up to connect to the third party Rebble servers and putting apps on it like the old days. It's remarkable how well this device aged, and its interface is still so much more fun and endearing than anything WearOS can offer. So I wish them the best!
Battery life. With the battery and cpu efficiency improvements in the last 10 years, if the features and other specs stay the same then battery life should be incredible. I think month-long battery is likely possible.
Improved voice recognition and AI features. Pebble had voice recognition but it sent everything to a server to process. Now they could run speech-to-text on the watch itself or on the connected phone.
More durable buttons. A known issue with the Pebble 2 is eventually the buttons turn to mush.
My AmazFit Bip could do a month when it was new (it's down to ~10 days now after a few years), so I would think a month from Pebble would be feasible.
I don't understand using a watch that you can't use for AT LEAST a weekend without power ... as it is, I'm pissed off that I'm down to 10 days (it's stayed steady here for 6 months or so, so, I'm hoping it won't degrade too much more before the new Pebble comes out).