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dingaling 3 hours ago

Sounds like the perfect use-case for big-small processors. A power-sipper for routine 99.99% of operations and a more powerful beast for the CPU intensive ops.

microtonal 2 hours ago | parent | next [-]

It's mostly because Garmin wants to maximize profits by sticking to old CPUs. The Coros watches (from what I've heard, the same applies to Suunto and Polar) are fast.

This has been an issue across the whole Garmin product line. E.g. the Garmin eTrex 32x from 2019 still used the same CPU as the eTrex 30 from 2011. 8 years without a CPU update. And the eTrex was already had miserably slow map rendering in 2011 with maps from that year.

kccqzy a few seconds ago | parent | next [-]

[delayed]

lostlogin an hour ago | parent | prev [-]

> It's mostly because Garmin wants to maximize profits

I see people riding bikes worth tens of thousands regularly. They should try a top tier models and see what happens.

justinator 43 minutes ago | parent [-]

One of the benefits of these old eTrex models is that they run on AA's, so they're used for things like long distance cycling (across countries).

I don't know if there are top tier models that run on replaceable batteries you can get at any gas station.

lostlogin 38 minutes ago | parent [-]

They have solar ones, but judging by reviews, they get about 10 minutes extra battery life per hour in the sun.

tadfisher 2 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

Yes, this ships in basically every smartwatch since the Snapdragon Wear 3100 launched in 2018.