▲ | bronlund 17 hours ago | |||||||
I too was part of the initial Kickstarter and I had both the first and the second version. When FitBit bought Pebble in 2016, some may argue that this was a good thing, the development of the watch and the OS just stopped - it was dead. FitBit had no intention of keeping the Pebble and just wanted to implement the software into it's own ecosystem. Google bought FitBit in 2019 and released the source code for PebbleOS this year - but that is kind of late now, isn't it? | ||||||||
▲ | platelminto 17 hours ago | parent | next [-] | |||||||
> some may argue that this was a good thing I don't think anyone was arguing this - Pebble simply went bankrupt. FitBit just bought some of their IP/assets I think. There was no expectation of them buying it and continuing support or development. | ||||||||
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▲ | potatolicious 17 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | |||||||
I remember that part too, I just don't feel like any of it was particularly egregious. Disappointing sure, but I suppose I disagree that anything about it was untoward. I'm generally pretty hostile to companies being acquired and breaking their past customers' products. Shutting down various required cloud services, making software undownloadable, etc. But I don't think that happened? The roadmap simply ended, but every watch that was out there kept working as-advertised for a good long while? | ||||||||
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