My time with a Pebble Smart Watch

Some History

Any of us who are paying attention to the blogosphere and tech articles know that “smart” watches are the next “big thing”.  I won’t give a whole history of the smartwatch wars, but Microsoft seems to have tried to pioneer this with the Spot series of watches, but Pebble reignited the market in May of 2012 with their Kickstarter campaign.

Since then, Samsung has come out with their Galaxy Gear series of devices, Google is marketing a concept watch, and of course, all the rumors say Apple is working on something.

My First Run In With a Pebble

Towards the end of last year my good friend Miguel Castro showed up wearing a Pebble watch.  During his time in meetings, I noticed him checking his watch frequently.  At one point he stopped and mentioned that he wasn’t checking the time, but glancing at emails and notifications and he wasn’t trying to be rude.

Social – Not Just About Websites

This got me to thinking about the social aspects of smart watches.  Normally, if you’re at a meeting, conversing with someone or on a date, if you’re caught looking at your watch, it’s usually an indication of boredom.  Will smart watches changes this?  Could it be seen as more polite to quickly glance at your watch rather than constantly pulling your phone out of your pocket?  Of course, the “proper” solution in all cases is to keep your phone in your pocket, and your focus on the task at hand, but it seems that we’re quickly veering away from that single minded focus.

My Learning Time

I decided a bit ago to give a smartwatch a try and obviously ended up with the Pebble.

Historically I’ve been “into” watches and currently own 14 including the Pebble.  Would have had 15 but one “disappeared” during a move…  The watches that I’m into tend to be very thin and light, not those monstrous tank watches that people seem to love these days.

PebbleVsSwatch

The Pebble vs. my favorite super thin Swatch watch…

 

Anyway, the size of the Pebble gave me some pause, it’s not terribly thin or small, but hey, I figured it was worth a shot.

I picked up the Pebble at a local Best Buy and fended off offers of extended warranties and screen protectors.  To be honest, if this thing breaks after 6 months, I’ll just buy the Apple one… assuming it’s out by then!

The first thing you need to do when you get a Pebble is charge it.  It was a bit disappointing that I couldn’t play with it during the drive home, but I guess as an adult I need to be able to keep myself entertained while my new gadget sits in a bag!

Once home and the watch was fully charged it was time to take it for a drive.  The first thing you have to do is link it to your phone, either iOS or Android will work fine.  Windows Phone 8 isn’t supported (more below).

Watch Faces

There are a wide variety of watch faces available for download through the Pebble app on the phone, and some are pretty good, but I find that the ones that try to emulate an analog watch face just aren’t that pretty.  The resolution on the screen isn’t good enough to render them crisply, so I’m generally staying with more digital or modern watch faces.

I did discover the Zoooom (Hop-Picker) one which is a great take on analog watches – definitely worth a look…

The overall watch face area doesn't differ too much...PebbleWithZoooom

 

Applications

I’ve only loaded two applications onto my Pebble.

The first one is Pebble Cards, which allows you to scroll up and down (slowly) between multiple information pages.  In my case, I have my appointments, the weather and battery % available.  While neat, I’ve found that there are a few issues that make it less than optimal.  One is the speed – switching between cards sometimes takes longer than just pulling my phone out or going to my laptop to see my next appointment.  Second is that even though I’ve turned off “other” calendars, it shows some stuff I don’t care about, and it gets in the way.  Finally, it just shows your next meeting, but only if you’re not currently in a meeting.  Fortunately for my sanity most of my meetings don’t last the allocated time, but the card keeps showing my “current” meeting with no way to see my next one.

The other app I have loaded is the Leaf app, which is a controller for our Nest thermostat.  Not much to say – it just works.

Daily Usage

Walking the dog…  Just having this on my wrist is handy while making sure our doggy doesn’t run into traffic.

Driving – at stops…  When I drive, I keep my phone out of sight.  However, if I know I’ve received messages and I reach a stoplight, a quick flick of my wrist will show me what I missed.  Easy, safe. fast and nondisruptive.

Declining and accepting calls… Honestly, I don’t use a mobile phone for too many calls, but when they do come in, a quick glance at the watch will tell me if it’s worth getting my phone out of my pocket.  And even allows me to answer or reject the call quickly.  If I’m wearing headphones (as I usually do when walking the dog), then it’s an even better experience.

Is that a call?  A text?  A phantom vibration?  A benefit I never thought about is clarity around whether your phone actually vibrated.  

 The Social Results

Here’s where the wheels fall off.  People with, shall we say, geekish tendencies will spot the watch and ask about it.  Generally they end up pretty impressed with it, and some even appreciate that it serves mostly as a notification device and doesn’t try to be a miniature phone.

After that though, the experience goes downhill pretty quickly.  If you are in a social situation, whether it is at work or out in the real world, if you are caught looking at your watch, people will think that you are bored.  I’ve been called out on this multiple times.  At lunch yesterday with some coworkers it was agreed that if you’re going to check your email, you might as well be honest about it and pull the phone out of your pocket and look.

Not Quite Ready for Prime Time

Over the past few weeks things have gotten a bit wonky.  Frequently the watch will display a missing connection icon while the phone is sitting right next to it.  At other times, a notification will show up on the iPhone lock screen indicating that the Pebble software wants to communicate with the watch, but when I swipe it, it doesn’t do anything related to that.  It just doesn’t work.

I’ve taken to rebooting the Pebble whenever anything weird happens and usually that fixes it for a bit.  But to be honest, if it doesn’t “just work”, then it’s a real problem.

PebbleLookingForPhone

In Summary

These watches are on the edge of greatness, and ones that are designed for Android phones are starting to get revised very quickly.  Pebble had better pick up the pace to remain competitive (adding colors is weak).  And finally, will Apple actually release a watch, and if they do, will I find myself actually willing to wear only one watch going forward?  Time will tell!

 

 

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Having Wi-Fi problems on your Mac runnin

Having Wi-Fi problems on your Mac running OS X Mavericks? Here’s a fix! | iMore http://ow.ly/x0mkt

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MS made a huge mistake removing Search

MS made a huge mistake removing Search from the Microsoft Remote Desktop app. This is a really shortsighted change! https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/microsoft-remote-desktop/id715768417?mt=12

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This is a real eye-opener! Ken Shirriff

This is a real eye-opener! Ken Shirriff’s blog: iPad charger teardown: inside Apple’s charger and a risky phony http://ow.ly/wMU0h

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Wasteful IT spending in West Virginia

http://www.fragmentationneeded.net/2013/03/what-did-west-virginia-officials-buy.html

This kind of wasteful spending is just crazy. While I can understand the desire to standardize the equipment across locations, this only works if there is a small delta between requirements. You simply don’t put in a piece of gear designed for 500 users in a location that has only 5.

In my day to day work, we generally use the same chassis (Cisco 4510’s) in larger locations of 200 or more users, and then change the number of switch blades and supervisors based on needs. If the location is small (under 30 users) then a single switch can go in for a tiny percentage of the cost of a large location’s equipment.  For us, using the larger chassis instead of a small 4507 makes sense because the price difference isn’t very large, and the chassis can be relocated and expanded (blade wise) without hitting a limit that we could have easily avoided (those three slots add capability for another 144 users).  Note that clearly I’m not going into details about redundancy or the other million pieces of gear we need in order to run our business!

I wonder if the person that approved even thinks about where the money to pay for this gear comes from?  In my case, I know exactly where it comes from and how hard my coworkers have to work to bring in the revenue.  In WV’s case, do they even think about how many taxpayers had to “contribute” large portions of their income to buy this unneeded gear?

Havana does not approve…

DisapprovingHavana

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Dear potential vendors: Hiding your price lists…

Dear potential vendors: Hiding your price list from me doesn’t make it more likely that I’ll buy. It does risk wasting your time, and mine.

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Service Desk personnel don’t get enough

Service Desk personnel don’t get enough love. http://ow.ly/ieAcA

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My week with a Microsoft Surface RT

I write this blog post with a heavy heart.  After such a long hiatus from blogging, I was hoping to write a post about the glories of the latest technology to end up in my lap.  Unfortunately, it is not to be.

A week ago, my wonderful wife allowed me to convince her that I *needed* a Microsoft Surface RT (yes the full name is longer, but I don’t care).  After a quick trip to Best Buy, we brought home the new bundle of joy and began the process of getting acquainted.

From the start there was something a bit off: The Surface RT was a bit big and unwieldy, but I chose to not hold that against it, as I use an iPad Mini on a daily basis, and I find that even my wife’s iPad 2 is a bit chunkified these days.  So I decided that I would make sure that I wouldn’t let size be a factor that skewed my impressions.  One thing about the form factor though : the screen ratio is such that holding it vertically feels almost comical, whereas on the iPad switching back and forth between landscape and portrait is a natural thing to do.

Please note: Many of the negatives I list below are application related.  While one or two bad apps can be written off as, well, bad apps, the fact that so many apps behaved badly (not just the ones I whine about below), there’s clearly a bigger problem at play.

Having said that, in no particular order, here are some thoughts I had about the experience (this is mostly about the software and ecosystem):

On the plus side:

1 – The split screen feature, where two apps can share the screen is straight out fantastic.  Early today while doing some online training, I kept Skype open and docked on the leftmost side, with Evernote taking up the rest of the screen.

2 – The video conference in Skype worked fine, even when docked on the left. Slick.  Video was not the highest quality, but I’m not producing a National Geographic documentary over here

3 – Being able to plug in a USB keyboard when I needed to enter text quickly was a plus.  While I had the Touch Cover for data entry, I wasn’t nearly fast enough on it at the moment that I needed to add notes quickly.  I don’t blame the Touch Cover for that, it’s not a high volume keyboarding device. If I were to be keeping the Surface RT, I’d get the Type Cover and no doubt be very happy.  Of course since I was in a rush and didn’t plan ahead, I used a keyboard that’s about 5x the size of the Surface RT.

Which brings us to the minus side:

1 – It’s too big (Ha! Didn’t see that coming, did you?)  Now to be fair, I only say this as I found that the on screen keyboard was awkward to use, even in the split “thumb typing” mode.

2 – Apps open slowly, all too often.  I don’t mind so much if apps take a few seconds to load.  It even happens on the iPad.  However, it’s not just the first time loading, but the frequent “reload from scratch” that seems to happen.  On the iPad, apps get put into storage and taken back out and resuscitated almost instantly.  An app that you haven’t used for hours or days will zoom right back to life.  On the Surface RT, it is shocking how quickly apps get killed.  A perfect example is while using Skype, I switched between a bunch of apps, spent some time in one of them, and when I went to go back into Skype, it had to sign back in and repopulate everything…  Clearly the device is memory constrained if you use any of the included Office apps (I had PowerPoint open at the time with a fairly small deck loaded) but even without using desktop apps, frequent complete reloads are common.

3 – Speaking of Skype…  What a mess.  Aside from the item mentioned above, I found that messages would actually arrive out of sequence.  Amazingly, a friend and I were “chatting” online, and he would respond to something that I wrote, and it would end up *above* my message, instead of below.  I also found that sometimes a notification would come in (while the app was in the background) and when I switched to it, the actual message wouldn’t arrive for “quite” a while.  I also had it lock up several times, forcing me to learn how to kill a running Metro, Modern, Windows Store, whatever it’s called, App.

4 – Email randomly reloading.  I would open email, it would refresh and show me my messages – slower than the iPad but not horrible.  Just about the time I’d try to take an action on one of them, the list of messages would refresh again, leaving me in limbo.  These secondary refreshes would take a “long” time, probably around 10 seconds of just sitting there seeming to do nothing.  Several times, after deleting many emails, the list would refresh and those emails would re-appear.  This is pretty scary.

5 – The keyboard cover really seems necessary.  There were a couple of instances where when trying to use the on screen keyboard, the field I was trying to type into was completely obscured by the keyboard.  On the iPad this usually resolves itself with the field moving into view.  It worked most times on the RT, but not always.  This isn’t really a hugely negative thing, but can be a drag.  Unless you don’t have the keyboard, in which case you’re screwed.

6 – Apps seem just too slow.  It would take quite a while for data to come in, whether it’s the Weather app, the WSJ app, or Evernote, everything seemed to move pretty slowly.  Perhaps the ARM hardware can’t keep up?  Maybe the network stack is slow?  Here’s a perfect example.  I just woke up the Surface RT, clicked on the WSJ app, and it took 18-20 seconds for it to open and populate.  Most of that time was spent looking at the splash screen and the chasing dots.  For comparison, I killed the app on my iPad Mini, re-opened it and it took 1.5 seconds.  (Imagine a few minutes time passing at this point as I wrote other parts of this post…) I just flipped through a few apps, then ended up back at the WSJ and it did the entire reload again.  15 seconds is an *eternity*.  I think this points to memory constraints.  Again probably due to having some apps open on the desktop.

7 – Apps locked up too often.  Evernote died and popped up an error… The WSJ app locked up… Skype locked up…  Windows update locked up.

8 – When I first unboxed it, I went through the patching process.  That took about two hours.  That’s just nuts.  This is (in theory) a tablet, not a PC.

9 – Evernote – aside from the lockups, any time I simply opened and closed a note, it marked it as updated, bringing it to the top of my notes (I sort by most recently updated so the Notes I’m working on are handy). It also locked up, and it was simply way too slow to open.  It would refresh the notes, then blank them out and refresh them again. Sounds familiar, eh?

10 – The live tiles screens are nice and informative, but sometimes, too much going on is just too much going on.  I found myself struggling to find particular apps as they never looked the same.  To find the WSJ app, I would have to scan the screen to find the one with pictures, that had a small bit of text on the bottom left with the WSJ logo on it. Even the much vaunted “semantic zoom” really didn’t work.  Basically there are two icon sizes – big and tiny. 

You’ll notice that I’m not wailing about the angle of the screen with the kickstand, or the seemingly low resolution of the screen – these are all fairly well documented issues covered by many others and I was totally fine with accepting them.

There is just so much potential here that it breaks my heart that it’s just not good enough.  I think perhaps with another revision of the hardware and some more maturing of the entire software stack, they could really be on to something.  The real killer is that if it weren’t for the existence of the iPad, this would be a pretty kick ass device.  Yes, the iPad is just a glorified iPod Touch, and the main screen is a boring list of icons that don’t inform much, but it is fast, and supported by an enormous ecosystem of software and accessories.  I really want the Surface family of products to succeed, and even more importantly the Windows 8 gamble that Microsoft has taken, but right now, it’s just not ready for prime time.

As I told my wife last night as I was boxing it up – I feel okay about the Surface RT, but if someone tried to take it away from me, I wouldn’t care.  On the other hand, if you tried to take my iPad Mini away from me I would fight kicking and screaming.

Let the flames begin!

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Way to go Microsoft!

 

 

 

 

Of course, it works fine on Chrome on the Mac…

Image

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My thoughts on the Lumia 900

For a few weeks, I gave up my iPhone 4S and used a Lumia 900.  Overall, the experience was pretty good, but not good enough to keep me away from the iPhone.

On the positive side, the big screen is a real beauty.  The email application worked pretty well, and the animations were well done.  The size and shape of the phone itself was pretty good.  I figured that over time, the outline of the Lumia would replace the outline of the iPhone that seems to have ingrained itself into all of my jeans.  Syncing to a Mac was shockingly easy.

However, after the first few days, the shortcomings of the device and the Microsoft Phone operating system started to become too glaring to ignore.  Here they are in no particular order:

  • When you have headphones plugged in, but no music playing (or no call going), the normal system sounds play through the phone itself, rather than through the headphones.  This means that if you are wearing headphones that insulate your ears pretty well, and the music stops or you just want some quiet time, the other system sounds (like email being received) will blast out through the phone speaker, and not through the headphones.
  • There are no different volume settings for speaker versus headset.  On the iPhone, when you are listening to music (or more likely in my case, a podcast) through the headphones, you can adjust the volume and it only affects the volume for when you are using the headphones.  Once you unplug them, the volume through the phone speaker is where it was at when you last set it.  Plug in the headphones, and the volume changes to the last setting for the headphones.  On the Lumia 900, you had one volume setting.  This means that if you turn up the volume on the phone, so you can hear the ringer, and then you plug in headphones, you might blow your eardrums out (not literally of course… the Lynyrd Skynyrd concert did that for me.  What? WHAT? I can’t hear you!).
  • Frequently, you cannot use the headphones to start the last thing you were listening to when you turn off the device.  On the iPhone, it doesn’t matter how long you’ve been away from it, when you click the button on the headphones, the music (podcast!) resumes.  This is huge for me as I try to listen to podcasts while walking the dog, and those walks are somewhat far apart.  With the Lumia 900, I think it background kills the music app, so if its been more than five minutes since you last listened to it, you must get the phone out, find the app and relaunch it.  As I recall, this was also a problem for giving the system voice commands (you had to wake it up before it would “listen” to the headphone buttons), but I’m not 100% on that one.
  • The positioning of the phone is poor when you have to hold it to your ear.  In the unlikely event that you use the Lumia as a phone (seriously, who uses their smartphones for calls these days?), you have to move the unit very far down on your ear in order to line up the speaker hole with your ear hole.  On the iPhone it just seems much more natural.
  • BlueTooth streaming is inconsistent.  About half the time, I could get the Lumia to stream audio over Bluetooth.  The other half the time, it was a frustrating dance of trying to figure out what incantation I needed to mutter in order to make it work.  And very quickly it resulted in leaving the phone in the drink holder and just turning on satellite radio.  This is not okay as I like to listen to podcasts during my drives.  And given that most of my drives are short, spending 10 minutes dinking around with Bluetooth streaming is just too much.
  • My car doesn’t understand the Lumia 900 (related to the above). Okay, this isn’t the Lumia’s fault, but it does speak to the huge lead that Apple has.  My car understands iPhone just fine.  I plug it into the USB port in the center console and a second or two later, blammo, my podcast picks up where I last left it off, or I can easily change what I’m listening too with the car’s display.  With the Lumia, it didn’t recognize it at all.  Again, I know this isn’t the Lumia’s fault, but *everything* understands the iPhone.  This is huge in a world where sometimes just getting something to work can be a battle, and people are sick of having these technological fights.  I hate to say it, but mosttimes, Apple stuff does just work (the memory in my previous blog posting was not Apple supplied).
  • No mute switch – many phones are guilty of this, and I’m baffled by it.  Having a physical switch to toggle between muted or not is a huge feature.
  • The camera wasn’t nearly as good as the iPhone 4S’

There were a few more things I could write about, but to be honest, they don’t matter.  What brought me back to the arms of the iPhone was the fact that Apple got all of the little details right.  These are the things that eliminate friction in our lives and the way we use our gadgets.  I think this is why Apple has been so successful over the past 10 years.  Their products don’t do everything that their competitors products do, but they usually do it much more smoothly and more consistently.

So, I went back to the iPhone fold, and have been listening to my podcasts quite happily (as well as making the occasional phone call).  The bad news is that I ended up getting a 16 gig unit that we had lying around, since I didn’t want to redo a contract.  And I didn’t want to redo a contract, because the iPhone 5 is right around the corner.  It will be very interesting to see what they come up with this time around.

Thanks for reading!

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