Outback Adventure (Vertical 2) watchface is public
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@segi_pn Not exactly sure what you mean, but the dusk and dawn times have a different resolution in active or standby state for MIP devices.
This is most likely to save energy (like seconds not shown in standby state) -
@segi_pn Trnava

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@Egika I’ve noticed that too. I don’t think it’s the resolution. It just shifts significantly when it wakes up. It looks like it’s in standby mode about an hour ahead.
The color of the temperature graph also differs when it wakes up. -
@Egika
That’s pretty weird behavior. So in standby mode, the graph is enlarged, and when switching from one mode to another, the graph flickers because it zooms out and then zooms back in? -
Now it’s easier to see.

and after switching to standby mode, it will return back
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@segi_pn I guess is an issue related to the color depth, when the luminosity decreased the fainter segment seems to disappear
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@Stefano-M64 No it’s nothing about the colors. I can confirm this issue.
The bars shift and updates when you press a button. Also the weather location isn’t updated unless you press a button. -
@Egika said in Outback Adventure (Vertical 2) watchface is public:
Not exactly sure what you mean, but the dusk and dawn times have a different resolution in active or standby state for MIP devices
They don’t have different resolution. The whole sunrise time shifts. It is clearly visible looking at the BT connection icon next to it. Sunset time in further pictures below, shows the same thing. Super easy to see looking at the triangle at 12 o’clock. Not everyone has an attention to detail, and there is nothing wrong with that, different people have different skills. This is clearly a bug in the watch face design and should be reported and promptly fixed as such.
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@Stefano-M64 No, it’s not about colour depth because it doesn’t change the number of shaded segments.
This morning I photographed the state of affairs at dawn.

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@segi_pn Yes, 16 minutes to sunrise, so clearly the waked-up state right picture (with seconds) is correctly represented. Stand-by display on the left (no seconds), the analog gauge is shifted counterclockwise as if it’s already about ~30 minutes past sunrise. This should be trivial to fix.