linuxgizmos.com

Sims, to opensource in HealthyPi Move: An Upcoming Open-Source Smartwatch

‘Dimensions: 43 mm diameter, 16 mm thick’

How much is 16mm compared to other similar watches ?

frogmint,

PineTime 11mm

Samsung Galaxy Watch6 9mm

Apple Watch Series 9 10.7mm

Google Pixel Watch 2 12.3mm

Rolex Submariner (non-smart) 13mm

theorangeninja, to opensource in HealthyPi Move: An Upcoming Open-Source Smartwatch

How does it compare to the banglejs 2 from espruino?

csm10495, to opensource in HealthyPi Move: An Upcoming Open-Source Smartwatch
@csm10495@sh.itjust.works avatar

Seems cool. Thiccc though.

Any ideas on price?

LazaroFilm, to opensource in HealthyPi Move: An Upcoming Open-Source Smartwatch
@LazaroFilm@lemmy.world avatar

Nice but it feels like a rather thick stack for a watch.

technomad,
clothes, to opensource in HealthyPi Move: An Upcoming Open-Source Smartwatch

Looks way more capable than the PineTime, which is awesome. But there’s no way the blood pressure sensor is reliable, right?

user, to opensource in HealthyPi Move: An Upcoming Open-Source Smartwatch

Ok everybody go buy, so I can request a rectangular face lol.

JackGreenEarth, to opensource in HealthyPi Move: An Upcoming Open-Source Smartwatch

Two things In need in a smartwatch: long battery life (at least 5 days), and copious music storage space. I mean, I also need a clock, sleep and heartrate sensors, step monitoring, etc, but they’re stuff most normal smartwatches have already.

I’m currently using a Hauwei GT2 which I don’t connect to the internet except when unavoidable, such as when transferring music from my phone to the watch, but I would gladly prefer an open source solution.

delirious_owl,
@delirious_owl@discuss.online avatar

If the watch battery doesn’t last at least 12 months, count me out. I have too many things to worry about charging. The only reason I have a watch is because its a thing that tells time and sets alarms that I never have to worry about dying (OK, maybe a few times per decade)

DreadPotato,
@DreadPotato@sopuli.xyz avatar

If all you want from a watch is time and alarms, you’re obviously not even remotely in the demographic that any smartwatch is targeting.

HubertManne,
HubertManne avatar

I really don't get needing more than lasting the day. im fine recharging things overnight.

mranderson17,

If you want to monitor sleep with it charging at night isn’t possible, and remembering to charge every single day during the day is annoying in my opinion. Not everyone wants sleep monitoring though, or likes to sleep with a watch on, so I get why there’s some division on the subject.

My pebble 2 hr lasts about 5 days and I’m very happy with that frequency of charging. I think it was a bit better when new but that was a long time ago.

HubertManne,
HubertManne avatar

seems like having a removable backplate battery would fix that.

d3Xt3r,

That may be fine for ordinary gadgets, but many people wear their smartwatch at night for sleep quality and HRV tracking. With my Garmin for instance, I usually wear it almost all week for continuous health tracking, and only take it off for a short while on the weekend for charging. It would really suck going from that, to having to charge my watch every day.

HubertManne,
HubertManne avatar

seems like having a removable backplate battery would fix that.

DreadPotato,
@DreadPotato@sopuli.xyz avatar

I mean, I get a full week from my coros pace 2, with 5-6h of GPS cardio tracking (running) and 24h metrics (steps, stress, sleep, etc.) on a 310mAh battery. It takes a whopping 2h to recharge back to full, I would hate having to manage a tiny extra battery to save those 2h of not wearing my watch.

HubertManne,
HubertManne avatar

each his own. 2mins each morn to swap whats in the charger and whats on the device vs waiting 2hrs once a week. ill take the swap.

verdigris,

Every device with extra swappable batteries that I’ve used has a charging station that you can just keep the extra battery in. Not really anything to “manage”, it just effectively removes charging time from the equation.

DreadPotato,
@DreadPotato@sopuli.xyz avatar

These watches typically come with charging cables, not a docking style station that you put them in. And keeping devices at a perpetual full charge for expended periods of time is a surefire way to kill the capacity quickly.

grue,

The trouble with that is that, more so than any other electronic device (even including my smartphone), waterproofness is an essential requirement.

HubertManne,
HubertManne avatar

I don't see how that should be much of an issue. a tight seal since the connector would face each other and basically be internal or just right out induction.

grue,

As long as they can solve the waterproofness problem, I’m all for having multiple removable batteries! (Especially since that helps solve my other major concern particular to this type of device, not having gaps in the logged health data.)

JustEnoughDucks, to opensource in HealthyPi Move: An Upcoming Open-Source Smartwatch
@JustEnoughDucks@feddit.nl avatar

Nice, as someone who has done some product research for specialized smartwatches, these specs are pretty much the go-to standard for generic chinese mid-range smartwatches.

Definitely a great base for an open source smart watch. You can do a lot with that!

qaz, (edited ) to selfhosting in ZimaCube: 6-Bay HDD Personal Cloud with quad 2.5GbE

6 watt looks pretty good. I recently got a HP Microserver but haven’t started using it yet because of the energy usage. I might get this or I might just give up on raid and go with a single SSD in my SFF Lenovo which I currently use.

picnicolas, to selfhosting in ZimaCube: 6-Bay HDD Personal Cloud with quad 2.5GbE

Put in $1 for the early bird N100 version with 6w TDP. I’ve been wanting to build a server with exactly these specs to replace my work horse raspberry PI 4 with 2x10tb USB drives. This comes in a nice clean little package. I’ll probably start with 2x20gb in ZFS mirror with a spare NVME drive for cache, then add HDDS from there when it starts to fill up.

JohnWorks, to selfhosting in ZimaCube: 6-Bay HDD Personal Cloud with quad 2.5GbE

Is there any reason to go with quad 2.5gig over a single 10gig?

poVoq,
@poVoq@slrpnk.net avatar

Besides technical reasons in regards to the NIC used it is much cheaper to buy 2.5gbit switches and having multiple ports opens up additional use cases.

huskypenguin, to linuxphones in T-Display S3 Pro, a solution designed for portable applications that require multi-touch display support.

That looks amazing for smart home applications.

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