Microsoft SPOT Watches 175
Octagon Most writes "PocketPCThoughts has a report from a graphic designer who worked on wristwatches using Microsoft's SPOT. Tons of design images here and a soon-to-ship model from Suunto here. Data plans from MSN Direct will be USD$9.95 per month. This is the coolest vapor from Microsoft in a long time. It's geeky _and_ stylish!" Our older story about the watches also notes that since it's a proprietary service, when the service provider decides to stop providing it, the device becomes useless.
Stock is down! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Stock is down! (Score:2)
"Design Photos" (Score:1)
When Rolex or Citizen makes one, I'll think about it.
Re:"Design Photos" (Score:2)
Realistic Images (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Realistic Images (Score:1)
Microsoft STOP Watches (Score:3, Funny)
Imagine a beowulf cluster of those!!! (shoot me)
But sheesh, do we really need any more inaccurate stopwatches? I already incorrectly measured gravitational acceleration as 3.1415 M/S^2 thanks to my piece of crud watch... Give me Timex any day.
Re:Microsoft STOP Watches (Score:2)
And, (Score:2, Troll)
Re:And, (Score:5, Insightful)
The SPOT watches use FM as the method of data transmission. FM. Like FM Radio. The watches are one way. You can get info on weather, IMs, stocks, etc, but you cannot send any data out. Any perception of "asking" for data is faked- the watch simply filters out data that doesn't apply to it.
Unless you think MS will start including 10kW FM radio transmiters in these watches and GPS recieves. MS SPOT watches: now with a big ass generator in every box!
The only thing close to MS having the ability to track is your geographical region. The MSN Direct stuff sends out data depending on your location; the local radio station will send out weather data for that area. There is a chance that if someone wanted to IM your watch, you would have to select the region first- otherwise, the IM would be sent to every MSN Direct station there is. But then again, there's probably just as much of a chance (or perhaps higher) that they will do that.
Frankly, if MS wanted to know what state I was in, they could've figured that out already by a number of means. I would be uncomfortable with MS or any other company tracking my relatively exact position, GPS or even something more coarse.
Re:And, (Score:2)
> transmission. FM. Like FM Radio. The watches are
> one way. You can get info on weather, IMs, stocks,
> etc, but you cannot send any data out. Any
> perception of "asking" for data is faked- the
> watch simply filters out data that doesn't apply
> to it.
Yep, just like that big Russian TV I've got in the loungeroom. Funny thing though: I still like it's watching me...
Re:And, (Score:2)
Re:And, (Score:2)
Re:And, (Score:3, Funny)
Well, I hope they do a better job than they do tracking email. I'm STILL waiting for Bill to send me some rich stuff.
New Twist to Old Joke (Score:5, Funny)
Re:New Twist to Old Joke (Score:5, Funny)
C:\>SPOT\RUN
RUN SPOT RUN
Bad command or file name.
Stylish? What? (Score:2)
Remind me again why we need a watch that does twenty million things? I was fine when my watch just told me what time it was.
Yes... But... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Yes... But... (Score:2)
Re:Yes... But... (Score:2)
Re:Yes... But... (Score:2)
A watch that can do... (Score:2)
Re:A watch that can do... (Score:1)
Re:A watch that can do... (Score:2)
"Useless" watches (Score:1)
True, true... that is, until the hardware hackers port Linux to the watches and write their own software for them.
Re:"Useless" watches (Score:2)
Then again, something like this- a watch which recieves FM data- is pretty useless without a lot of money and stations backing it. What good would it do if we had an open protocol? As soon as the company provi
WTF? (Score:3, Funny)
10$ for weather ? (Score:3, Insightful)
seeing as these watches are no more than glorified pagers 10$ a month seems a bit steep just to recieve very trivial information, hell i can get a mobile phone with free minutes for 10$ a month, even my mobile GPS is free
why not build the price into the watch instead of _another_ monthly subscription, are our lives desending into a rental culture ? where i spend cash but never actually own anything and when i stop the investment i have made in the device it instantly becomes worthless as the device ceases to function without the constant input of $
whatever happened to buying shit that is MINE, is that concept to hard to grasp !
Re:10$ for weather ? (Score:2)
Service vs. Goods (Score:4, Insightful)
Here's why we're seeing more services vs. goods. Services allow the company a continuous revenue that is flexible with what people can/will afford. If X cellphone company needs more money, they'll do a CBA to see if it's better to raise rates or raise advertising or something to attract new customers. Also, services allow you as the consumer to be more flexible (in theory). Say you're leasing a car, but you don't like the way it rides. Turn it in, get another one, no big deal. You rent an apartment, but the neighbours upstairs have very loud sex (I speak from experience...), you can move out.
If you owned a car and you didn't like it's styling, too bad -- unless you want to sell it permanantly, which takes time and then you have to buy another car (meanwhile, losing thousands of dollars in value).
We're becoming a very fluid society in which change is the very essense of who we are. Therefore, services instead of goods is to be expected -- I mean, do you want to pay $5000 for a cellphone and then never pay for minutes? What if you break yours, another 5 grand? Or a new model comes out?
Re:Service vs. Goods (Score:2)
plus companies like a nice, recurring revenue stream. And selling high-price, one-time purchase (e.g., your $5000 no-minutes cell phone
Re:10$ for weather ? (Score:2)
As for subscription services... it's ok, as long as you get value from it. Most electronic gadgets are better off with their initial sale than a monthly subscription because once the gee-wiz factor wears off, people realize they can live without it, and avoid spending the
Re:10$ for weather ? (Score:2)
Re:10$ for weather ? (Score:2)
Still, for not much more than $10 you could get a T-shirt printed and be done with it.
serveral issues (Score:2)
Re:serveral issues (Score:3, Funny)
he hs a watch that you need a service provider for, what did you expect? at least pock protectors are ^H^H^H were practical and usefull.
K.I.T.T. (Score:3, Funny)
Re:K.I.T.T. (Score:2, Funny)
For those who don't remember, this was the first prototype, K.I.T.T's "older" brother.
Mmmm 80's tv, -5 lame
Heh (Score:2, Insightful)
A proprietary service is the ONLY means of pulling something like this off. Open Source does not have the time, resources, or coordination necessary to produce the hardware, software, and services required. But you forgot to mention that.
Re:Heh (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Heh (Score:3, Funny)
Yeah. And just as easily, L33T H@X0R from down the street could broadcast "pirate" signals to hack the time, stock quotes, weather settings...
Though I do figure it would be funny if someone hacked the MSFT stock ticker to "+100" while displaying the weather in Hell, MI as 27/snowy
Re:Heh (Score:2)
If I set my iTrip to 102.7, I have trouble getting the station in my own CAR due to interference from a radio station 200 miles away in Vermont.
It sucks to hafta use FM...but I'll bet MSOFT got a good deal with those ClearChannel fucks.
Re:Heh (Score:2)
Re:Heh (Score:1)
where are the PICTURES? (Score:1)
So pessimistic... (Score:1, Interesting)
Don't worry. Some contingent of hackers will figure out how to:
So, don't be so pessimistic. There's [panix.com] no [cexx.org] way [sourceforge.net] a hardware devi
well.... (Score:1)
Re:well.... (Score:1)
Who needs a watch? (Score:2)
As far as I'm concerned, wristwatches are obsolete. At least until wrist-cellphones become popular.
No Color Screen? (Score:1)
Fossil Watch (Score:5, Informative)
Click here [fossil.com] to see it.
Re:Fossil Watch from 1978 (Score:2)
Microsoft hired the wrong dude (Score:1, Offtopic)
photoshop contest? (Score:2)
looks cool (Score:2)
shouldn't this rather be a STAIN? (Score:1)
Is Microsoft SPOT... (Score:2, Funny)
Their main use... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Their main use... (Score:2)
And exactly HOW do you enter data into this? (Score:1, Redundant)
Its a pager (Score:2)
BTW: Did anyone notice that the snow report was for packed powder but he was riding 2 ft of fresh?
And 9.95 a month? i would only pay 9.95 a year!
Re:And exactly HOW do you enter data into this? (Score:2)
Re:And exactly HOW do you enter data into this? (Score:2)
Re:And exactly HOW do you enter data into this? (Score:2)
Microsoft's poor choice of quotes (Score:5, Funny)
"This is the next evolutionary step in personal computing."
- Bill Mitchell
Corp Vice President,
Microsoft
No ? Really ? Messrs Microsoft, you should at least find someone who doesn't work for you to praise your products. We're certain Bill Mitchell is genuinely impressed by SPOT, from the bottom of his heart, but in any case it's not like he's ever going to say SPOT sucks toilet water as long as he's one of your employees. This quote is so useless it makes you wonder about the rest of the product
Re:Microsoft's poor choice of quotes (Score:2)
The last time they tried that, it was the Valerie Mallinson "Switch" campaign. Oops! She worked for M$ (indirectly) also. At least now they admit it when the kudos come from their own people.
How is this any different? (Score:5, Insightful)
How is this any different from Windows XP? (I'm specifically thinking of product activation here)
Re:How is this any different? (Score:2)
Not true. (Score:2)
"How is this any different from Windows XP? (I'm specifically thinking of product activation here)"
Actually, product activation resets itself after 6 months. That is, if you install and activate XP, and then do it again on a different computer after 6 months have passed, it won't complain.
Also, there are plenty of ways to get around activation if you really want to (and install SP1 as well.) You can also use Windows 2
Wonderful- (Score:3, Funny)
All geeked up? (Score:2, Insightful)
A laptop while docked - and a PDA while in a meeting, or on the plane...
I still don't have one
And I don't wear a watch, my mobile phone can tell time, messages, surf sites, play games, remind me of date/times, yay.
blah blah blah
The picture they don't want you to see.. (Score:5, Funny)
Re:The picture they don't want you to see.. (Score:2)
Re:The picture they don't want you to see.. (Score:2)
Re:The picture they don't want you to see.. (Score:2)
Remember the seiko receptor? (Score:3, Interesting)
A bit before they discontinued the service a document was floating around detailing a way to cheat the service. All you had to do is subscribe to everything, and they would send a message to your watch to tell it to start reciving particular messages.
Then all you had to do is turn off your watch and cancel everything. When you turned your watch on in the next day or two, it would of missed the unsubscribe signal and continue to get everything it thought you were supposed to.
I wonder if they thought of that this time around.
Re:Remember the seiko receptor? (Score:2)
Fossil article (Score:2)
hrm (Score:2)
Re:hrm (Score:2)
Coverage... (Score:5, Funny)
Outside of these areas? Sorry. Stuck in the subway or the Lincoln Tunnel where FM signals can't reach? Too bad. Should have brought a back-up watch just in case SPOT can't latch on to a signal, maybe one of those $1.99 LCD Toy Story II watches you get with purchase of a Happy Meal and a medium beverage.
On the other hand, there's the possibility of some real fun for someone who has the know-how to cobble together a low power FM transmitter that can broadcast on the SPOT sideband.
"Hang on, I've got to check my mess...Holy Mother of Goatse.cx!"
Damn. Now I hope these things really take off.
k.
Re:Coverage... (Score:2)
Do you really think a SPOT watch won't be able to tell time when out of range? I'm sure the watch has its own clock, which gets sync'd to the broadcast time signal only periodically (every few hours or whenever computationally convenient).
And the broadcast signal is probably encrypted, too. So you could probably jam it, but not broadcast your own content. And after the X-Box fiasco, I bet the secret key is NOT on the watch itself. If Microsoft used public/private key encryption, the watch would only have t
Re:Coverage... (Score:2)
More useless crap (Score:2, Insightful)
Mine got fucked up one day when I had to change a tire and I received the third page in fifteen minutes... felt fucking fantastic to throw the POS off that overpass.
Is today Microsoft day? (Score:2)
Where do you want to viral market today?
SPOT MS-BOB! (Score:2)
design bad (Score:2, Insightful)
Am I supposed to believe that Microsoft just hired someone from a forum/enthusiast site, and asked them to come up with new designs?
When are they going to realize that if you want to create lifestyle products, design/looks has to be a number one concern? I really don't see it reflected in the current protoype images. I've seen better simulated clockfaces on my 3Com Palm III!!!
MS needs to buy a clue from the Mac design team... become u
Bleh (Score:5, Insightful)
If I want to walk around with access to stock reports and weather, I'll get a wireless PDA or something.
I mean, how useful can the information be when filtered through a watch? I can't web browse, I can't type or read emails, I can't even tell it what kind of food I want to eat for it to send me to an appropriate restaraunt (assuming it knows where I am).
The whole problem with watches comes down to user input: there isn't one. This make communication decidedly one-way. So with this in mind, the only real input the user has (assuming they're not beaming IR to it from their PDA in which case why not just use a cellular internet connection), is their location in the real world. Context sensitive help has come a long way, but it's not going to let me control a watch by walking down the street in a certain pattern.
Microsoft has an endless stream of content... (Score:2, Funny)
Just another thing to keep track of.... (Score:2, Interesting)
Another addition to my collection... (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Another addition to my collection... (Score:2)
I've been wearing mine every day for the past 8 or so years. I can no longer update it (the communication mode doesn't work on NT/2K/XP, no direct access to video or something like that), but most of the data in there is still good.
Now I need a replacement...
Re:Another addition to my collection... (Score:2)
Ah, the datalink. There's a serial port thingy you can get, that will produce the flashes. I believe it was originally marketed as the 'notebook adaptor,' as an LCD can't produce the flashes either, but they note that you also need it under NT/2000/XP for the reasons you cite.
Mirror site etis rorriM (Score:2)
I predict (Score:2)
WAP anyone? (Score:2)
WAP failed because users couldn't chose their content: their phone operator chose it for them and put it "online". This is the exact same thing, as far as I understand.
This is important (Score:2)
If I wanted to buy those little gizmos for my home, I would like to distribute content from my internal network (e.g. bluetooth, 802.11). I can even imagine an optional imode-like subscription service for when you are away from home. But without open standards and withou
Yeah, uh-huh. These are just like... (Score:2)
(and I personally don't think that these watches are all that great looking)
Spot Service Pack 1 (Score:2)
Open source enthusiasts responded: "this is yet another case of microsoft taking an open standard and mostly complying with it, but then perverting it enough to become incompatible with the rest of the world. They are clea
Re:Why all the analog simulation? (Score:2)
I believe (and a real design person can correct me) that analog displays are more easily interpreted by people than digital displays. This is the same reasons guages in planes and sports cars are analog and not just numbers.
Even in cars with numbers there is usually a bar graph [chevrolet.com] or some other picture representation of the amount.