This article was published on May 24, 2016

Pebble introduces new clip-on device and adds heart-rate tracking to 2 refreshed smartwatches


Pebble introduces new clip-on device and adds heart-rate tracking to 2 refreshed smartwatches

Pebble is updating two of its smartwatches with heart-rate sensors and introducing a new clip-on wearable aimed at those who want to listen to music (but leave their phones at home). There’s also some new software that Pebble fans might really like.

Pebble 2

First, Pebble is updating its original timepiece with heart-rate tracking sensors. Those sensors will automatically measure the beat of your internal drum every 10 minutes, and can recognize when you start an activity for more frequent monitoring (measuring in seconds, not minutes).

It still has the same form factor, and keeps its black-and-white e-paper screen.

To be more accurate, Pebble has been benchmarking its heart-rate sensors against chest straps many runners wear. CEO Eric Migicovsky told TNW that his company considers those the gold standard of heart-rate wearables, and wants Pebble’s own sensors to be as accurate to them as possible.

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Pebble Time 2

Currently, there are three Time wearables: Time, Time Steel and Time Round. To streamline its product lineup, Pebble is merging Time and Steel into one wearable, and adding 50 percent more screen.

Pebble Time 2 has the same heart-rate sensors as the new Pebble 2, and its larger screen has 80 percent more pixels for “twice the text.”

Pebble Core

From out of left field comes Core; technically a wearable, Core is a GPS-enabled clip-on that natively works with Spotify for those who want to listen to music on the go.

The small square clip-on has two buttons. The larger of the two accesses Spotify by default, which Pebble partnered with for the launch of Core.

The second button is programmable. You can choose to have it hail a Lyft ride, send a default text to a contact or — well, anything. Migicovsky told TNW consuers should think of the buttons like IFTTT recipes; anything you want from them can likely be programmed.

The Pebble app will be serve as the back-end for Core, which can charge wirelessly (Qi) or via an included cable. It uses a SIM card for cellular 3G access, and lasts “up to nine hours” while playing music.

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Software

Pebble smartwatches are also getting a few new features that will help them launch apps faster and see what events they’ve got coming up.

With a future software/firmware update (Migicovsky wasn’t able to say exactly when we may see it, only that it would likely arrive in beta form before being stable), Pebble smartwatches will cleverly add pop-up notifications to your watch face if a new event is coming up.

The aim is contextual notifications without constantly buzzing your wrist. If you’ve got a meeting at the top of the hour, it may display towards the bottom of your watch face while the rest of the screen resizes to accommodate the banner.

Launching apps is also a bit faster with this new software. Instead of funneling you into a proper app, Pebble will have what it calls ‘Actions.’

Those Actions let you perform similar functions to the Core. A long-press on the top button will display a list of Actions, which can be scrolled through. Selecting one launches the programmed Action.

Like a Core, Actions on a smartwatch can be anything you like. Migicovsky said Actions were created as a response to slow app launch times, as Pebble noticed most users perform the same cursory functions like messaging the same person or simply calling an Uber.

Now, you can simply launch an Action and have an Uber come straight to your location. Actions even take into account things like who you messaged last or which type of Uber or Lyft you typically take.

Kickstarter

All three hardware products will naturally launch via Kickstarter.

Core will sell for $69, and start shipping in January. The Pebble 2 is hitting Kickstarter for $99 for an August arrival, and the Pebble Time 2 will start at $129 and hit backers starting in November.

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