this post was submitted on 14 Jan 2024
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Fitbit Clock Face (programming.dev)
submitted 10 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago) by JPDev@programming.dev to c/programmer_humor@programming.dev
 
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[–] InFerNo@lemmy.ml 1 points 10 months ago (1 children)

I agree with the stopwatch.

I don't understand your second point.

I checked gadgetbridge, the app I use with the pinetime, and it shows a history of my heart rate and steps and tries to determine if I was "active". Apparently it does keep track of HR intervals, but it only checks my rate when the watch has the screen active (so whenever checking time, notifications,etc) so random intervals rather than fixed.

I think it's reliable though. It does what I want out of it and it's open source, which to me is the main attraction for that price. Idk why they had to make it more expensive for the EU market though. Triple the USD cost, but still. I don't know if there's other smart watches that do more or cost less that are also open source and similarly usable?

[–] drndramrndra@lemmygrad.ml 1 points 10 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago)

I don’t understand your second point.

If it's dismissed on one device, it should also be dismissed on the other. Besides that, answering 5 calls shouldn't leave you with 5 "Incoming call" notifications, especially so if you answered them from the watch.

Apparently it does keep track of HR intervals

No, it's either measuring or not, it can't do intervals nor save the data. The gaps you're seeing is just data not getting synced because the screen needs to be active for it to maybe decide to sync at some point when it feels like it.

I think it’s reliable though.

The Osama Casio costs 23$, is also water resistant, the battery lasts ~7 years and can be easily replaced when it runs out, it has a working stopwatch, and a timer that can go for over 24h. Meanwhile with the pinetime you have to chose between risking it dying when you wash your hands, or throwing it away in a few years when the battery dies and you can't replace it. What reliability are you talking about?

I don’t know if there’s other smart watches that do more or cost less that are also open source and similarly usable?

Lilygo ones have a really crappy battery life but the models have a combination of WIFI, IR, LORA, GPS, and mic + speaker. So, they're much better as programmer toys, but even worse as watches.

Banglejs 2 costs about as much as the EU version, but the device is so much better it's not even funny. I'm pretty sure a lot of programmable Aliexpress watches are also running espruino, and it's got community ports for other watches.

TLDR

It's crap, and I'm still salty because the person ordering it for me (of course the EU store won't ship to non-EU European countries) got scammed without checking in with me whether there's something off about paying 3 times as much as what's shown in the link that I sent them...