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1PineTime - A promising open-source smartwatch and my experience
2
3## A PineWhatNow?
4
5[PineTime](https://www.pine64.org/pinetime/) is a open-source smartwatch built by Pine64
6and the community. It rocks a 1.3 inch IPS capacitive touchscreen and boasts a week long
7(yet to verify, but seems likely!) battery life and it communicates over BLE and Bluetooth 5.
8It has the typical features of your usual smartwatch such as step counting and heart rate
9sensor, ability to control your music and view notifications - all that on very low specs.
10It runs on a nRF52832 SoC with a 64MHz ARM Cortex-M4F CPU coupled with 512KB Flash and 64KB
11of RAM. It also has additional SPI NOR 4MB Flash which community software has recently taken
12advantage of.
13
14Now that you know fundamentally what a PineTime is, what sets this apart is the openness
15of device, you can replace the firmware and bootloader with anything of your choice. You
16do not have to use the preinstalled [InfiniTime](https://github.com/JF002/InfiniTime) and
17can install a firmware of your own choice such as [WaspOS](https://github.com/daniel-thompson/wasp-os).
18Other smartwatches often depend on sending telemetry or constant feed of your data to a
19centralised server - it is convenient for sure, but it comes with a large invasion of your
20privacy. You are in charge of your own data, you do not need to send your data anywhere in
21order to access it, you can simply use open-source companion apps that only keep track of data
22offline.
23
24## Ok, but how nice is it to actually use?
25
26My experience with PineTime is rather recent, I got my hands on it on July 22th, 2021.
27It shipped with InfiniTime 1.2.0 and MCUBoot 1.0.0 which was the most recent at the time.
28Setting it up was very simple, all I needed was GadgetBridge on my phone and connect it
29over Bluetooth. Time and date synced immediately after making a connection without a hitch.
30I was also pleasantly surprised with how easily the menu was navigatable - so UI/UX gets
31another point from me. The step counter on PineTime is also surprisingly good for a device
32that retails only for $26.99 - I had zero false positives when in any moving vehicle, my last
33smartwatch (regrettably, Garmin) got a ton of false positives constantly. The music program
34also worked very nicely with my phone which runs clean Android 11, found it really intuitive
35to use. There are a few shortcomings, though - for one, touch registering currently works via
36constant polling, so single taps may not exactly register or get delayed quite a bit - fortunately,
37[this is being addressed](https://github.com/JF002/InfiniTime/issues/471). The next issue I
38had only once, woke up one morning to the watch being unpaired from my phone, rebooting the watch
39fixed it at cost of losing all the steps I had gotten during my morning routine - and at the time
40of the issue occuring, InfiniTime 1.2.0 had issues with keeping settings saved. This has been
41addressed by InfiniTime 1.3.0 with introduction of LittleFS.
42
43Overall, it's been a solid experience - as of the time of writing, I am running InfiniTime 1.3.0
44with PineTimeStyle watchface ([+ color picker PR applied](https://github.com/JF002/InfiniTime/pull/458))
45and I am very much satisfied. [This is how the PineTime looks like](https://based.quest/img/pinetime_review_pic.jpg).
46
47Thanks for reading
48- Cernodile
49
50;tags:pine64 smartwatch opensource review
51;description:PineTime is a open-source smartwtch built by Pine64 and the community on the budget. Does it hold up to Cernodile's standards - is he satisifed, is it any good or a fail? Find out in this blog post!
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