Pebble Kickstarter smartwatch UI video delivered

This week the folks behind the $10 million dollar Kickstarter funded smartwatch project Pebble has been updated to include a user interface video demo. This device will be released with full connectivity to iPhone and Android devices via Bluetooth and works with e-paper for easy reading and any lighting situation interactivity. You’ll be able to play music, check emails, see notifications, and check the weather and time as well.

The video you’re about to watch shows the prototype device connected with a rather large prototype logic board, showing up in an emulator as the developers show the current user interface on a larger PC nearby. There’s also a demonstration of the user interface on an iPhone which emulates the final look and interface on the screen of an iPhone.

The final release date for the Pebble smartwatch has been missed, it being September of this year originally, with “scaling issues” being claimed for the missed mark. We’re seeing the newest update take a more serious angle on the missed release date:

“Planning and scheduling a major manufacturing project is complex. We’re working hard to complete the interconnected tasks that make up the production process. For me and the hardware engineers on the project, a large percentage of our time is spent exchanging complex spreadsheets filled with components specs by email, Skyping about the dimensions of minute hardware requirements and IMing our manufacturing team and factory. Not super exciting. That’s why we’ve decided to share the more interesting stuff (photos, video and more!) in updates.” – Eric + Pebble team

Some demo images on the iPhone shown in the gallery below includes an Incoming Call, Music Control, and an Email.

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New updates in the Pebble road to the final product include their assurance that they have enough resistors – they just ordered 500,000 more than they had before! Next they note that they’re testing watch strap samples, USB charge cables, and shipping components. The developers here have a Manufacturing Text Plan in the works, and they’ve again assured that they’ll be updating their Twitter rather regularly.

Have a peek at the timeline below to get up to date on all things Pebble before the final product pops up later this year!

[via Pebble]


Pebble Kickstarter smartwatch UI video delivered is written by Chris Burns & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


Here’s A Sneak Preview Of The Pebble Smart Watch UI [Video]

Screen shot 2012-08-14 at 3.45.29 PM

Following the disappointing news that the InPulse team — the clever folks that raised over $3 million on Kickstarter in a matter of days — wouldn’t bring their e-paper Pebble smart watch to consumers by September (as promised), the company has released a video with a sneak preview of the watch’s UI.

The Pebble will be able to connect via Bluetooth to your iOS or Android smartphone, and can be set to alert you of incoming emails, texts, calls, and other alerts through an app. This isn’t necessarily unprecedented, but since the display uses e-paper technology, the battery lasts up to seven days — way longer than your average LCD display would.

In the video you’ll see that Pebble’s UI designer, Martijn, has created a custom tool to allow any graphic design work he does on his PC to be displayed on a Pebble watch prototype display in real-time.

He also shows off a demo of email, incoming calls, and the music app. All seem to be quite beautiful and functional, but feel free to confirm that for yourself below.




Pebble team posts UI preview, provides an early look at how you’ll interact with the E-Paper Watch

Pebble team posts UI preview, provides an early look at how you'll interact with the EPaper Watch

Sadly, Pebble won’t be making its way to backers by its original September estimate, but the design team wants you to know that it’s hard at work, traveling the world to source components, running shipping tests and spending time refining the user interface in order to provide a top-notch experience once you do receive your device in the mail. To that end, Martijn, the UI designer, has dropped by Vimeo to provide us with a “sneak peek” at the device’s operation, including some demos on iOS and a connected prototyping board, using a custom tool that sends designs to the Pebble screen from any graphics program in real-time (a feature that will reportedly also be available in the SDK). From what we’ve seen, there appears to be plenty of space on the screen to show incoming calls, read emails with eight lines of text at a time, view appointment details, select songs and control volume, and, of course, see the current time. Commenters seem to be quite pleased with the design so far, and we have to agree — it’s a pretty slick UI. Jump past the break to see it in action.

Continue reading Pebble team posts UI preview, provides an early look at how you’ll interact with the E-Paper Watch

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Pebble team posts UI preview, provides an early look at how you’ll interact with the E-Paper Watch originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 14 Aug 2012 12:33:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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OUYA’s millions: Kickstarter and the lure of the rumor-mill

It may not be Pebble‘s $10m, but with OUYA‘s $8m Kickstarter has its newest standard-bearer, and around sixty thousand sets of eyes turn to the mailbox for the promised early-2013 deliveries. It’s a surprising degree of patience – however ill-suffered – considering the short-shrift we give most products, software updates or even just the regular postal service if they dare to make us wait. Immediate gratification is arguably at odds with today’s trends, but there’s another angle that makes Kickstarter so appealing: it’s the rumor-mill we can buy into.

Kickstarter isn’t a regular store: you’re not “pre-ordering” products, you’re backing a project in the hope it will succeed and, since those behind the project itself would like to encourage and thank you, you usually get a free whatever-you-backed if it makes it to production. That’s a differentiator many have forgotten amid the hype, the countdown of limited backer positions, and the glossy renders. Unfortunately, unlike a failed Amazon order, there’s no refund should your Kickstarter project of choice slump before the production lines start churning.

But even with all those risks, Kickstarter remains popular. The handful of backers putting up low-figure pledges with no real freebie in return implies some cohort of people made up in part by those with altruistic “support the little guy” motivations, but for many it seems the allure of getting in at not just ground level but when a project is still practically underground proves irresistible.

Over the past years there’s been a growing appetite for rumors and leaks, to the point where hearing about a product or service before those responsible for it would like you to know is considered arguably more interesting than post-unveil. Magnitude of speculation has become the new metric for defining company success: rather than just raw sales, which we probably won’t hear about in detail until months after launch, it’s a sign of mental stickiness among consumers and early-adopters. Samsung had therefore “made it” when the hype building up to the Galaxy S III began to resemble that in advance of a new iPhone.

“It’s like Tim Cook invited you into the Apple backroom and asked for your feedback”

Kickstarter plays on that anticipation, and even allows you to buy into it – rather than having to wait for Apple, or Samsung, or whichever mainstream company puts its products onto store shelves. For the cost of a pledge you’re an early-adopter, and you even get a say in the development of the product. It’s like Tim Cook and Jony Ive invited you into the Cupertino backroom and asked for your feedback on the latest iOS gadget; you can’t give Apple a hundred bucks if you like the sound of an iPhone nano and want them to make it, but you can feel that degree of control with a credit card and Kickstarter.

Of course, many Kickstarter projects fail – even if they’re fully funded – often because they’re too ambitious or too naive. Traditional product development filters through dozens of risk-assessments, mangers, and customer research teams, the rough edges (and some of the ingenuous charm) buffed away in the process. On Kickstarter, however, it’s easy to over-promise, either intentionally or accidentally, and under-deliver, especially when outside-the-box thinking is what’s likely to get attention for your project in the first place.

OUYA has $8m and it wanted less than $1m; humble project beginnings gave way to hype and Android enthusiasm. It also has a huge list of people counting on it to be The Next Big Thing in gaming, and 7-8 months to deliver all it promised. Whether it will achieve that is yet to be seen; what’s certain is that the glossy launch has now given way to the mundanities of bringing a product to a fast-paced and difficult marketplace, one where aftersales support and product stability are key. The appeal of the start-up only lasts as long as the Kickstarter pledge payment leaves your account.


OUYA’s millions: Kickstarter and the lure of the rumor-mill is written by Chris Davies & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


Pebble smartwatch to miss its September shipping date

If you were one of the eager Kickstarter backers that pledge a donation for the Pebble smartwatch, you could be in for disappointment. According to the company, production for the smartwatch has been delayed and they do not expect to be able to start shipping the Pebble watches in September as they had previously expected. In a statement they released:

“In terms of our schedule, we’re sticking pretty closely to an aggressive timetable we put together at the end of May. While we won’t be able to start shipping Pebbles in September, our current schedule has us on track to go from manufacturing zero to 15,000 Pebbles per week as soon as possible.”

No word on when we can expect the watches to start shipping, but with pre-production units currently being tested, hopefully it won’t be too long before the watches make their way into the hands onto the wrists of customers!

By Ubergizmo. Related articles: Pebble smart watch plays nice with iOS and Android devices, FLASHr Kickstarter project offers iPhone users a more stylish LED notification,

Pebble smartwatch will miss September shipping date, blames darn popularity

Pebble smartwatch will miss September shipping date, blames darn popularity

The latest update sent to Pebble‘s Kickstarter backers (and a few Engadget editors) is a double-edged one. After announcing that the smartwatch will be available in a new orange edition, the makers admitted that the crowd-funded wrist candy won’t be shipping to its backers on schedule in September. No new date has been disclosed just yet, but the delay was attributed to the project having to abandon early plans of making just 1,000 smartwatches. The level of production has now ballooned, meaning the factories involved are aiming to hit 15,000 Pebbles per week “as soon as possible.”

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Pebble smartwatch will miss September shipping date, blames darn popularity originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 25 Jul 2012 09:03:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Pebble smartwatch won’t make September ship date

The Pebble smartwatch caused quite a stir across the internets when it was announced, breaking Kickstarter records and ultimately reaching $10.2 million in funding. The original goal was to create 1,000 Pebble watches and have them delivered to customers into September, but the company behind the watch has warned of delays thanks to the sheer demand. Full production is now planned for 85,000 watches, but ramping up for that kind of volume will mean Kickstarters will have to wait a bit longer to get their wares.

Pebble notes that watches won’t be hitting customers wrists by the original September estimate, although it remains hopeful that production will scale quickly. Taking to its Kickstarter page and issuing a manufacturing update, Pebble notes: “While we won’t be able to start shipping Pebbles in September, our current schedule has us on track to go from manufacturing zero to 15,000 Pebbles per week as soon as possible.”

It’s not all bad news, though: the company unveiled the color of the Voter’s Choice Pebble watch, showing off a funky orange hue. Other color options for the watch include black, red, and white. As for where the project is right now, Pebble say the watch is in Engineering Verification stage. The team is making sure everything is perfect with the design before the necessary tooling can be created for mass production. The team has thrown up some images of samples for your perusal in the meantime, which may or may not help ease the pain of a delayed watch.

[via The Verge]


Pebble smartwatch won’t make September ship date is written by Ben Kersey & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


Pebble smartwatch outs SDK preview at Google I/O, gives developers a kickstart on apps

pebble-smartwatch-sdk-preview-google-i-o

If you invested in the Pebble e-paper smartwatch — and who didn’t? — you’ll be happy to hear that the firm has unleashed a preview of the Kickstarter darling’s SDK at Google I/O this week. That’ll give developers a head start on creating apps for the ARM-powered e-paper device, allowing them to learn exactly how it receives data from Mountain View’s robot OS. The company said the new kit supports multiple program languages to boot, allowing developers of all skill levels to create Pebble-enabled apps. The document is still a work in progress, of course, but advances like this should help keep it from getting trampled by the cavalcade of smart wrist devices now coming out. Check the source link if you want to grab it.

Pebble smartwatch outs SDK preview at Google I/O, gives developers a kickstart on apps originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 30 Jun 2012 15:56:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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