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Fitbit Will End Support For Pebble Smartwatches In June (arstechnica.com)

Today, Fitbit announced that it will extend its support of the Pebble smartwatch ecosystem, including devices, software, and forums, until June 30, 2018. "During this time, we invite the Pebble community to explore how familiar highlights from the Pebble ecosystem are evolving on the Fitbit platform, from apps and clock faces to features and experiences," the company's blog post states. Ars Technica reports: Fitbit's invitation is a hopeful one for the company itself. After the buyout, members of the Pebble team helped Fitbit develop its own smartwatch OS that debuted on the $300 Fitbit Ionic last year. Fitbit is likely hoping that diehard members of the Pebble community, many of which developed apps and programs for the smartwatch platform, will try making similar programs for Fitbit's new wearable operating system. The Fitbit SDK is already quite accessible, allowing developers to sign up and start building programs using all-online tools. But in addition to the accessibility of the SDK, Fitbit wants to entice Pebble users with a discount: users with a valid Pebble device serial number can get $50 off a Fitbit Ionic smartwatch. It's currently the only device that runs Fitbit OS, and it's useful to have if you want to test out any apps made with the SDK. But for those who want nothing to do with Fitbit OS development and only care about how long their Pebbles will last, this news is bittersweet. According to Fitbit's announcement, Pebble devices will continue to work after June 30, but these features will stop working: the Pebble app store, the Pebble forum, voice recognition features, SMS and email replies, timeline pins from third-party apps (although calendar pins will still function), and the CloudPebble development tool.

7 of 93 comments (clear)

  1. SMS/Email will work for Android still by bongey · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Just wanted to point out SMS and Email will still work on android, only IOS will stop working. Voice recognition will die for all platforms.

    Kinda stupid in that fitbit could have made a simple subscription model and generate a steady revenue without much effort , instead they are killing pebble.

  2. Nope - Former Pebble Owner by WoodburyMan · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I had the original Pebble watch from Kickstarter, and Pebble Time Steel from Kickstarter. My favorite watches. I had the Pebble Time Steel 2 on Pre-order on Kickstarter when it was canceled. I will absolutely NEVER buy a Fitbit product again due to the way they ripped apart Pebble.

    Understandably, Pebble was in trouble and was going bankrupt. Legally Fitbit had every right to do what they did, and maximize profits. However the way they bought only Pebble's IP, and hired on it's Developers, not taking on the company itself, was just a dick move. People who bought a BRAND NEW Pebble 2, Pebble Round, or any other pebble the DAY before the announcement LOST their warranty and ALL SUPPORT, despite Fitbit making it seem like they took over the company. I for one had my vibration motor for notifications die just a few days after the announcement, despite being under 1 year old, I was stuck. Likewise Pebble had all the leg work done for the Pebble Time Steel 2 watch, that IS the Fitbit Ionic in 95% of the features, including Tooling, design, software.. they could have just released it. Pebble was also HUGE and had inlays into retail and big online stores. Fitbit could have EASILY utilized the branding and name.. but chose the cheap way out. I feel like another company could have easily come in and actually done right and kept the brand going. Instead they let themselves be cannibalized by Fitbit.

  3. Cacelling the Pebble... by pots · · Score: 4, Interesting

    They're cancelling the Pebble to try and get people to buy the Ionic. The Pebble cost $150, the Ionic costs $300. The Pebble had a 7-day battery life, the Ionic has a 4-day battery... So what does the Ionic actually do better? Well, it looks like it has a color screen. Also, it has a pedometer and it's spying on you.

    I can see how it's worth the extra money.

  4. Ah, Fitbit by fyngyrz · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Ah, Fitbit. The company that couldn't even get face rotation for the appropriate wrist done correctly.

    No thank you. I'd rather not deal with outright incompetents.

    --
    I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
  5. So the online stuff goes away... by Kernel+Kurtz · · Score: 3, Interesting

    ...but my Pebble will continue to do what I need. Showing golf yardages, showing speed and distance while I'm biking, showing caller ID and MP3 names. Basically it is just a remote display for my phone. It does not need any online services to do this.

    I'm sad to see Fitbit kill Pebble, but the simplicity of the original is what made it what it was. Trying to make it "smarter" did not necessarily make it better. Just another in a huge field.

  6. Re:Cute by the-matt-mobile · · Score: 3, Interesting

    That's a pretty ridiculous statement. Apple, for all its faults, supports its products way longer than just about any other hardware maker you can buy from. There's a lot to criticism Apple for, but this ain't one of them. (Disclosure: Owner of a Series 0 Apple Watch that just got a software update yesterday and can count on continuing to get them for years to come).

  7. Re:No ePaper display by ukoda · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Yes, I am well versed in LCD technology. The active colour LCDs use more power than the simple black and white LCDs but you are right, it is the backlight that uses the most power. I don't display seconds by default but could flip over to another watch face if I really needed that. My Pebble runs about a week on a charge and is always ready read. No colour LCD can match that.

    My key point is smartwatches are a convenient display alternative to my phone screen but I do not play games or movies or anything else that need 60Hz refresh so ePaper is perfect as it is on 100% of the time. LCDs are the fatal flaw (IMHO) with every other smartwatch.