What do you expect from the next update?
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@Frederick-Rochette oh poor us, a free firmware update is a few days late, let’s find out pitchforks and burn down Suunto
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@isazi That would be very short sighted… we would then lose out on our free firmware updates moving forward.
Well that, and I am a fan of random (good) surprises so I am good with WHENEVER timeframe. I’ll sit and play the long game on this one
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@isazi said in What do you expect from the next update?:
@Frederick-Rochette oh poor us, a free firmware update is a few days late, let’s find out pitchforks and burn down Suunto
free is 100% marketing bs, you should know that
manufacturing a watch is cheap, support, hosting and maintenance are the costs
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@isazi It’s not free, because for the price of a watch (the top-of-the-range SUUNTO) at 800€, you can expect regular updates so you can benefit from new features for 2 years. We still don’t have all the SUUNTO Race ones, for example.
I’ve been a fan of SUUNTO watches since the Spartan, which was a disaster with nothing inside, and I’ve been patient because I’ve bought (with my wife) all the top-of-the-range models that have come out so far, with the SV and the SR for my wife. What we like most is the design of the watches and the fact that it’s a European company, because in terms of software, there’s a lot of catching up to do. SUUNTO has been chasing its tail for 8 years now, finally producing a finished watch, and the pace has quickened since the company was taken over by a Chinese group. It’s a shame, but the
consumer benefits. However, some interesting features are still missing, such as on-board music (consistent with SUUNTO headphones) or NFC and complete sleep tracking.
This is a step in the right direction, but unfortunately without clear and reliable communication, which can lead to frustration.
I remain a SUUNTO fan, but more clarity would be welcome. -
@Frederick-Rochette you should actually not buy a product with the expectation of it to one day become what you like it to be. Better buy what you want today, and regard every feature update as a free gift.
If you need music playback in your watch, better get one that has it.
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@Frederick-Rochette said in What do you expect from the next update?:
@isazi
Too late for Q2… and now it’ll be Q3, or not… you never know with SUUNTO as there’s no official communication, only rumors.Perhaps there is a reason for the delay and no one promised you a firmware update on a specific date. A lot of folks work very hard behind the scenes to deliver firmware that is as bug free as possible with as many features as possible. I suppose you would rather have a partially finished update with known bugs??? Or, you cannot go on a vacation you already paid for until you fix a bug? Your family can go but you cannot? BTW, one of the field test engineers was very recently let go among the employees you may have heard were terminated. Perhaps that alters timelines…
My understanding ( I am not a Suunto employee) is that Suunto does not communicate dates or descriptions of upcoming updates. -
@Egika said in What do you expect from the next update?:
@Frederick-Rochette you should actually not buy a product with the expectation of it to one day become what you like it to be. Better buy what you want today, and regard every feature update as a free gift.
If you need music playback in your watch, better get one that has it.
This is a bit naive and short-sighted. There is no denying that Suunto watches are still far behind the market leaders.
Most people who buy Suunto watches give some time to the manufacturer to add some missing functions or improve the poorly designed/implemented ones.
If Suunto stops releasing improvements, it will lose the trust of even those who buy Suunto watches out of sentiment.I am leaving aside such obvious things as fixing many still unresolved problems with watches that have been on the market for over a year i. e. Vertical.
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@maszop my Vertical was the watch I wanted on day 1, that’s the reason I bought it. Everything else that came after is just a bonus. If you believe you can buy a product and wait for it to become something else, well, look naive in the dictionary.
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@Frederick-Rochette for the price of a watch you can expect a watch, and you got one. You probably even had a month under EU law to send it back for a full refund if you didn’t like it. If you wanted something else, why did you buy it? Luckily for you the market is full of watch manufacturers.
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@Frederick-Rochette I’ve never seen “2 years free updates” on any watch…so unfortunatly you’re expectations are not part of the inital deal. But most of recent suunto watches have received updates during more than 2 years.
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@Egika I totally agree. I want a sports watch band not stereo system.
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@maszop to be honest, putting ”improvements” in the watch is what’s making it more unreliable and less stable. Do we really need all these “improvements” or just wants them?
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@isazi said in What do you expect from the next update?:
@maszop my Vertical was the watch I wanted on day 1, that’s the reason I bought it. Everything else that came after is just a bonus. If you believe you can buy a product and wait for it to become something else, well, look naive in the dictionary.
It’s not naivety but experience. At least some Suunto customers (those who buy watches with their money) know that Suunto has always improved its watches over the years by releasing new software versions that add a lot of new functions. If Suunto stops doing this, many people will probably not buy a new Suunto watch.
Watch a random test on YouTube, e.g. Suunto Vertical from the time of its premiere. The software of this watch was terrible.
If it weren’t for the knowledge that Suunto will significantly improve it over time, probably only a few would buy it. -
I think there’s a few people in this forum that want a Suunto watch with Garmin functionality. Firstly, that may not be in Suuntos’ strategy at all, so buying the former and believing that it should (must?) become the latter is a misjudged purchase. Secondly, if Garmin functionality is required, then a better solution is to probably just buy the Garmin.
I have no axe to grind here: I have Polar, Suunto and Garmin and I like different aspects of each one. For me, there is no ‘perfect’ watch, so I’ll mix and match as required.
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@maszop first, I bought the watch with my own money, not sure what you’re implying but whatever.
Second, the Vertical was great on release day, and that the reason I bought it. Not need a reviewer to tell me what I should think, I’m old enough for that. -
@isazi I suggested a YouTube test so that everyone could remember how “great” the watch was during its premiere
especially its smooth interface and a lot of annoying problems solved over time
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I think there’s a difference between bug fixes and new features. I agree you should buy a watch that promises to deliver what you need at the time you buy it rather than hoping for the features you need to appear in the future. But if a watch promises features that then don’t quite work I think it entirely fair to expect the bugs to be fixed.
I also agree there’s no perfect watch and so any choice is going to be a compromise / trade off. So it may be best to say many Suunto owners buy their choice of watch because it covers all of their needs and many of their wants and then they are hopeful the remaining wants - the ones they compromised on - will be fulfilled in magical future updates
But, seriously, don’t buy any product that doesn’t cover your needs with the hope the missing functionality might appear in future - that way lies disappointment.
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@far-blue For this to happen, you need to offer optimal software on the day of release. Suunto can’t do this. Great hardware is accompanied by poor software that takes months or even years to improve (as in the case of Vertical).
Moreover, I will repeat once again, when someone buys a watch for their own money, they do not exchange it every now and then for another new model. He usually skips one or several newer models before buying a new one again.
Therefore, it is in the manufacturer’s interest to provide support for these few years before the customer decides to buy a new model again.
This is how loyalty and trust in the brand are built. This applies to the entire market, not just watches -
This is a good discussion, with insights on both sides of the argument. If I were to exaggerate one side of the argument- yes it is wrong to expect that Suunto will deliver functionality to get to the Garmin level over the lifetime of Vertical. Probably not happening, and music playback is likely a good example of a feature that will not ship (my personal opinion - I am sorry @Frederick-Rochette )
On the other hand, over the air updates exist in the industry and have two big benefits for the company: they can ship (stable but) partially finished software and start realizing revenue earlier. And two, continuous updates further create loyalty with customers that are less likely to switch watches during lifetime of those updates.
One example I want to contribute to the discussion is HRV measurement - if I remember correctly 9PP, Vertical and Race shipped with HRV capable sensor and it was clearly communicated in the specs of those watches, while the functionality to measure HRV was added in software later. Yes there were no hard promises, but the expectation was communicated well, understood by customers and Suunto delivered it via software later. I think this is example of what people talk about, not the music playback.
Another one that I’m personally stuck on is contour lines above 500m to realize potential of Vertical as an adventure watch, which is a regression and was promised to be fixed in a future update. Again, I reasonably trust and expect it will
With all that said, being happy and grateful for what we have and taking future updates as a positive surprise is definitely the best approach for living a happy life!!!
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@isazi said in What do you expect from the next update?:
@Frederick-Rochette oh poor us, a free firmware update is a few days late, let’s find out pitchforks and burn down Suunto
@Tieutieu said in What do you expect from the next update?:
@Frederick-Rochette I’ve never seen “2 years free updates” on any watch…so unfortunatly you’re expectations are not part of the inital deal. But most of recent suunto watches have received updates during more than 2 years.
Maybe I’m wrong, but in the last 10 years I’m pretty sure that I’ve never heard of firmware updates only under payment for something that is considered commercial…
So, what’s the point about highlighting that the update is free? As someone has said, as for now, it is expected that within the price of any device (smartphones, smartwatches, TV sets, etc.) some updates will be delivered. Otherwise, do we have to consider our watches as disposal? Ok, then every company should reduce the devices price since polymer moulding, CNC machining, GPS technology, electronics, etc. are nowadays mature technology.
I’m aware that the context is pretty different but, for example, Apple has released iOS 17 in 2023 and even 2018 Iphones were supported, without hailing as a miracle.