As an original Pebble watch owner, I have a lot of thoughts about what I want (and don't) from a resurrected Pebble watch.
The Pebble smartwatches were among the first wearables to gain popularity in the wearable technology market. They are known ...
In 2012, a few of us at ZDNET backed the Pebble Kickstarter project, which became one of the most successfully funded projects at the time, with nearly 70,000 backers pledging more than $10 million.
Just a week after source code was released, Pebble OS is already up and running on new hardware as efforts are under way for ...
Four years after launching the (then) most lucrative crowdfunding campaign in Kickstarter’s history, smartwatch maker Pebble ...
Pebble, the smartwatch pioneer, is making a comeback and it's bringing back its e-ink smartwatch displays for good measure ...
There’s no timeline for when the new Pebble will be available. The company, now called rePebble, is assembling a wait list for the watch, but not requiring any payment. “As we get closer to production ...
While Fitbit hired many former Pebble employees, it did not release any new products using the Pebble brand or software platform. Consequently, the source code for the OS and firmware remained ...
This may seem a head-scratcher to some original Pebble owners. But Fitbit acquired Pebble assets in 2016 for $23 million, as per its 2017 financial reporting. Fitbit was then acquired by Google in ...
Pebble founder Eric Migicovsky has already adapted the open-source PebbleOS to new hardware. More details here.
The Pebble smartwatch was introduced in 2012 as part of a Kickstarter campaign and saw moderate success before the company behind it got bought out by Fitbit. Although a group of enthusiasts kept ...
Just days after Google confirmed that it was making PebbleOS open source, founder of the iconic smartwatch brand Eric ...