I know you've left 9 BARO. Can you update watch face for consolation?
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@Kraisun-Tunta said in I know you’ve left 9 BARO. Can you update watch face for consolation?:
@zhang965 I think SUUNTO has left 9BARO. Until I get a new watchface It’s probably snowing in Bangkok, Thailand.
To remember : S9 was released in 2018 and was still updated last june. 5 years of updates considering the tech evolutions during the past 5 years is quit decent !
(and some “recent” updates like guides were pretty big steps ; also I would not bet that there won’t be a “last” update to correct issues).
Seems pretty “normal” at that point that dev priorities are on the latest HW watches. -
@Tieutieu Yes, but I also remember that S9P is three years „younger“ than S9B…
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@DF130 said in I know you’ve left 9 BARO. Can you update watch face for consolation?:
@Tieutieu Yes, but I also remember that S9P is three years „younger“ than S9B…
S9p didn’t introduced huge internal HW changes. It was mostly a size/design/materials innovation. But you’re right.
No manufacturer can/would take the chance to promise any kind of update warranty. Tech and HW evolutions go too fast.
But, again, if Suunto has still corrections/updates possibles for s9b or S9p, I bet the will do it. But I also bet it won’t be a huge update then. -
@Tieutieu It seems watchface to be a big topic for suunto . Different from other band watchface can be easily changed and there are many Download and customize .
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@Kraisun-Tunta true. On that point, Suunto is Suunto and has his own strategy. Often discussed on this forum : each manufacturer has is own strategy. I’m glad Suunto is not Garmin. So, we know for a long time that Suunto won’t/can’t follow what every challenger do. For somenone who absolutly wants to deeply personnalize watchfaces, Suunto is not the brand to go to. At least it is so for now. But I don’t know if there is so much differences on that point with Coros or Polar ?
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From a company that says it is very committed to environment care, Suunto should update the basics to each surviving watch model - my until now fully working Ambit 3 Peak - FOREVER it lasts as a decent company. Programmed obsolescence must not be at all a part of it´s strategy. Why so many models with so little difference between them? On the other side: Why do you need to buy each one of them? Do you think of what this attitude is causing to the environment? Or do you prefer to think that you are only just exercising your free will, your right to buy anything you want?
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@TiagoSPM there’d be no electronics company if that was the market.
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@TiagoSPM I don’t need more updates on my A3P or my S9B that both still work very well. Programmed obsolescence would have been to make them unusable ! That’s is not the case
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@Tieutieu said in I know you’ve left 9 BARO. Can you update watch face for consolation?:
@DF130 said in I know you’ve left 9 BARO. Can you update watch face for consolation?:
@Tieutieu Yes, but I also remember that S9P is three years „younger“ than S9B…
S9p didn’t introduced huge internal HW changes. It was mostly a size/design/materials innovation. But you’re right.
No manufacturer can/would take the chance to promise any kind of update warranty. Tech and HW evolutions go too fast.
But, again, if Suunto has still corrections/updates possibles for s9b or S9p, I bet the will do it. But I also bet it won’t be a huge update then.When s9p was launched , at least regarding the communication that it was done and all that was written in this forum it seemed like a big step for Suunto. Far from “not huge internal he changes “.
As old costumer, when the movescount fiasco/ambit support was done, I thought it was “one time only”. Seeing the the discussion about the s9p, specially with justification of how good the support was for s9b was , guess it will happen again. A little more than two years ago this device in ti form was a little less than 700eur.
For sure they work, and no function was taken compared to when it was sold, but I guess it is a bit too little updates for such a device (I only write because I had one and it is still sold).
Honestly it has been years that we ear that Suunto has no resources, guess with new owner and new watch wouldn’t hurt they do something for the older watches to clean a bit their image. (But maybe it’s just me). -
@André-Faria still the S9P is a very good watch. The question could be : what update that could be pushed on it has not !?
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@André-Faria Basically, I buy a watch and hopefully get what I pay for on a feature basis.
Everything that is added later on, is a gift for free and I don’t expect this to happen at all.The bi-weekly feature update has been a marketing claim made by Hammerhead for their Karroo2, but not by Suunto for their watches.
At least I have not seen such a claim… -
Egika said in I know you’ve left 9 BARO. Can you update watch face for consolation?:
Basically, I buy a watch and hopefully get what I pay for on a feature basis.
Everything that is added later on, is a gift for free and I don’t expect this to happen at allAre we living in 2023 or something similar?
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@zhang965 so what?
Here’s what has been added to S9P since it had been launched.
All for free - but of course everyone is welcome to always expect more:starting from June 20th, 2023
Strava live segments on the watch
Readability improvement through font color changes and backlight improvementsstarting from November 30th, 2022
SuuntoPlusTM sport apps external device connections, e.g. Activelook and Core
SuuntoPlusTM sport apps can now store and show graphs in Suunto app
New Gravel cycling sport modestarting from March 29th, 2022
SuuntoPlusTM Guides support (see more details here)
Wrist detection for heart rate measurement. The watch can detect whether it is on or off wrist and will not measure the heart rate if no wrist is detected. This functionality work both during exercising and daily activity tracking.starting from January 27th, 2022
SuuntoPlusTM features are added to and removed from watch in Suunto app
Possibility to measure blood oxygen during sleep tracking
Possibility to start exercise from navigation viewstarting from September 28th, 2021
Media controls on the watch
SuuntoPlusTM Burner shows the amount of fat and carbs burned during exercise
Send predefined replies to incoming messages from watch (Android only)
A new watch face
Improved sync speed with Suunto appstarting from June 10, 2021
Blood oxygen saturation spot measurement
SuuntoPlusTM Ghost runner
Snap to route running for accurate track, distance and pace
Tour battery mode for 170h of trekking with GPS
New watch face familiar from Suunto 3
Suunto app pairing and time sync as part of first use wizard
Raise to wake backlight
Padel added as new sport -
@Egika in principle I agree with you. But a company, in my opinion, has two choices: let the users create their own expectations or provide transparency.
For example, if I am a user who likes SW updates because they keep my watch feeling new, adding new functionality, etc - I am more likely to buy a watch that is supported longer. Now I can have a look at the products the company released in the past and notice that their last flagship was supported for several years and therefore assume that their current product will be supported about as long. If that was, at least partially, influential to my buying decision, I would be disappointed to realise that my watch has received only a few major updates before it became obsolete.
Notice, I’ve said “assume” intentionally, because if the company would make any claims as to how long it intends to support the said device, my assumptions might have been much more accurate. For example, one could state ‘the watch would be supported for at least 2 years, recieving 2-4 SW updates with features/stability per year and obtaining further functionality via SA for at least 3 year’. Number could be less or more, that doesn’t really matter. Likewise it must not meant that said device won’t be supported afterwards, just that this period is ‘guaranteed’. I would say that seeing this statement and looking at competition would help me make a better decision as a potential buyer. And in this way the company ‘channels’ buyers expectations regarding support instead of letting them have their own, perhaps unrealistic, expectations.In principle, I agree with you saying that updates are just free extra. But regardless of it being true or not, if the company doesn’t meet users expectation, the user might buy their next product from a different brand instead of staying loyal, in addition perhaps creating a ‘bad reputation’.
Again, I don’t think it matters much, whether the reasons are valid or not, it’s rather whether the company is willing to prevent these kind of things by being more transparent or if it’s for one or another reason not on top of it’s priorities list (not saying that it necessarily should be). -
@DMytro fully agree with you.
Now looking at the update history of for example S9P above, we see, that up to June 2023 it has been receiving updates and new features for around 2 years.
So from history, as you suggest, it makes sense to assume a 2 years update-flow.
There will always come the point, where economically it makes no sense to adapt things into old hardware - sometimes it might just be impossible. And it is probably not easy to predict what the situation will be in 2 years from now… -
@Egika for the people buying a new suunto now - yes. But for the people that were buying s9p, they’ve looked at s9B update cycle. In addition, update schedule became slightly more spread out in the times of s9p compared to s9B and even Spartans I think.
I guess, assuming 2 years is a safer option.
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2 years? Is this reasonable? Or normal? In which world do you guys live? All that assumptions may have lots of coherence, but you seem to live floating in some kind of paralel reality and not on this earth with deep environment problems…
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@TiagoSPM
no one forces customers to buy new watches after 2 years. the watches are still working.
the expectation obviously is that customers buy a product and get all the new features from successor devices even after couple of years and that is not guaranteed or self explanatory at all.
bug fixing yes, but every added feature that exceeds specs at release is a free gift from the company. -
@TiagoSPM I’m not saying 2 years is good or bad. I’m saying it would be nice to be transparent about the update duration, just like smartphone market currently does that.
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@Tieutieu said in I know you’ve left 9 BARO. Can you update watch face for consolation?:
@André-Faria still the S9P is a very good watch. The question could be : what update that could be pushed on it has not !?
Resources that work at 100%
Sleep tracking that work at 100%
Step counting that work at 100% and not when arms are moving
And Suunto knows this from first day otherwise they wouldn’t also have worked on new algos and implemented it in the race.@Egika i totally agree with you.
And to be transparent, I am not complaining, I had the s9p ti when launched and sold it not long after.
I am sharing what is my vision of how a device that costs almost 700eur should be supported, and for sure Suunto has the right to not do as I would like, but I think it is useful for them to know that clients think it is not cool and go to other brands because of that (and other stuff).
As others said, when you buy a watch from a brand you see what they did in the past in terms of support, and in Suunto case the s9b was a good example, guess it didn’t last long.And yes I know that other clients come to Suunto also