Suunto 7
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@Bulkan He never did, let’s be honest about it. And his Hail Mary opening kind of hints at the narrative he’s taking.
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@NickK spot on
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@Saketo-Nemo Yes, I think you, @Brad_Olwin and I agree where this watch falls, audience wise.
My only gripe is that had Suunto included things like sensors, running power, and the like, it wouldn’t have stopped a casual user, but would have tipped the balance for some who have to choose between S7 and S5/S9.
But then, it’s too early in this experiment. Heart rate and many other things can easily be added in the update.
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@Luís-Pinto said in Suunto 7:
My concern with S7 sucess is price. I really don’ t know if a casual sport guy or girl will buy this watch with so many choices in market.
This!
I think Suunto really dropped the ball on price. I understand premium design and materials. I get standard, easy to replace bands. Even S7 name itself, conveniently stuck smack in the middle of serious sports watches range and hinting at similar chops… But your packaging and marketing can only take you so far. This should have been $399 tops. Maybe even $349 to undercut Garmin Venu and Apple Watch and be within the range of regular WearOS smartwatches.
Unless… Unless Suunto never intended for S7 to be Apple Watch or Garmin Fenix killer out of the gate! But is actually using the watch to test the waters and develop a sports smartwatch foundation and services. So, when Qualcomm finally gives us a decent smartwatch SoC after some yelling and kicking from Google, and Google incorporates Fitbit/Pebble low-power aspects into WearOS, Suunto can deliver something entirely new, but already having recouped their prior investments into WearOS and gained expertise from the first iteration.
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@NickK I disagree. Basically Ray is very critical in every review, and bashes at every vendor (check the post/rant on Garmin bugs and development of months ago), plus he’s focused on triathlon and this is not a good watch for triathletes. I believe we should read reviews always in the context of the reviewer’s background. And I remember the review of Suunto 9 and 5 being good, except the software/platform side, but apparently most users of this forum agree with that
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@NickK said in Suunto 7:
Unless Suunto never intended for S7 to be Apple Watch or Garmin Fenix killer out of the gate! But is actually using the watch to test the waters and develop a sports smartwatch foundation and services.
@NickK A bit like the step change of the Spartan from the Ambit? But better developed on launch, possibly due to the immediate need to play nice with others.
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@isazi I’ve been reading Ray for a long-long time. Every now and then he has some choice words for Garmin. But most of the time, his approval is a foregone conclusion. Had Suunto done solar charging, I assure you Ray would have called this a senseless gimmick. Had Suunto done RacePro plans, Ray would have pointed out all their limitations, from inability to build a loop route with multiple laps, to better handling of inclines, to inability to manually pace tight spots, to no accounting for headwind, and so on… That is: Ray is a fantastic reviewer, but he has his blind spots and considerably more doubt in brands that aren’t Garmin.
And yes, his triathlon focus means he sees far less value in features that aren’t directly tied to running or bikes.
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@NickK A bit like the step change of the Spartan from the Ambit? But better developed on launch, possibly due to the immediate need to play nice with others.
I hope not! I don’t think S5/S9 platform is going anywhere. In fact, I’d imagine over time pure sport and pure smartwatch aspects could converge. But given competition and saturation in sports segment, you need a market where significant growth is possible. Most of the world outside the US and Western Europe is Android. So, WearOS is perfect for them. Unfortunately, most of the world outside US won’t be paying $499 for a smartwatch. So, prices would have to come down.
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@NickK said in Suunto 7:
And if ultra guys like @Brad_Olwin can use it for a few recovery runs during a week, that’s even better!
Only if Suunto App could seamlessly support multiple watches, which it can’t. It is in Suunto interests to enable the app to sync with multiple watches. I don’t get why they don’t put more efforts into that.
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@NickK I meant that the Spartan might be seen as technology demonstrator/market tester/unannounced beta program for the colour, touch-screen, etc., S-Series. So the S7 is a first foot in new WearOS waters before, as you suggest, something comes for the rest of the world.
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@silentvoyager said in Suunto 7:
Only if Suunto App could seamlessly support multiple watches, which it can’t. It is in Suunto interests to enable the app to sync with multiple watches. I don’t get why they don’t put more efforts into that.
Oh, I’d love that! Have asked for that. Hopefully they get around to do it. Doesn’t strike me like a big feature.
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@silentvoyager I think that after the s7 publicity this is becoming #1 request
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@NickK Wild Guessing but Suunto may have learned from the Spartan’s problems. They may be more in “Don’t Frighten the Punters” mode. Rather than calling attention to a departure from their norm, they are leveraging their “hard-core” solidity in the stable S-series for the less ultra crowd. The Spartan was more of a get-the-sporty-folk-to-wear-a-fashionable-Suunto-everywhere. This is more get-the-fashionable-crowd-a-Suunto (but not lose the sportsters).
And the LetterDigit format has worked OK for car manufacturers. Looking at you, BMW, in particular.
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@NickK The Spartan was more of a get-the-sporty-folk-to-wear-a-fashionable-Suunto-everywhere. This is more get-the-fashionable-crowd-a-Suunto (but not lose the sportsters).
If @Dimitrios-Kanellopoulos is correct about most often requested feature now, I think Suunto is also selling S7 to every S9 owner. Not a bad strategy to seed the market.
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You know me. I am a Suunto guy. I was given many other smartwatches (Android wear) before I used the S7
A friend asked why S7 over other Android wear and yes the price looks high imo.
Here is what I replied
1. More battery life. Only the Suunto watch (currently uses the low sport mode processor from qualcomm) 2. Better build quality. I can drop my suunto (ask for video) from the 1st floor and will be ok 3. Better OHR. Suunto has the leading OHR here, with even proximity sensor 4. Suunto app integration and analysis + partners. Tell me if the Xiaomi sends data to Training peaks or relive 5. Waterproof to 50m 6. Swimming support as your spartan does 7. Global company + support + service (not china and distributors) 8. Updates that most manufactures dont bring (remember it's Google + Suunto + Qualcomm not only Suunto) 9. Secure Gpay via proximity sensor and skin detection sensors (you dont need to unlock use pin if you wear the watch) 10. Barometer + tons of sensors 11. Better display 12. Design 13. Suunto watch-faces that work all the time showing even seconds without battery drop! (also use the special processor) 14. An ecosystem of watches, if you uprgade your watch you go to s9 etc 15. Always on low power full color Amoled screen. - Maps maps map for free! And automatically downloaded!
That are my pros.
Cons: Battery life
I use personally all the time the powesaving on. This way I can get about 7 days of usage but nothing on the watch else than just the time. Literally nothing else.
And hey. I am opinionated here. Don’t trust the devil.
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@Dimitrios-Kanellopoulos Looks very much like the list I create when I need to persuade myself to drop $499 on yet another watch
I think for a full blown smartwatch that does full notifications, email app integration, and all, on 1.4" high-res screen that fires up to 1000 nits I can definitely live with charge every day or two scenario. So, battery life isn’t an issue for me. I’d even cry a bit, cut my Starbucks card in half, and eat the price. But sensors… sport mode customization… running power… FirstBeat bits…
I have S9 and understand I can swap the watches, but I’d rather minimize it.
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@NickK said in Suunto 7:
Assomiglia molto all’elenco che creo quando devo convincermi a perdere $ 499 su un altro orologio
I know something !
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@Dimitrios-Kanellopoulos Given your list and the solidity/capability/aesthetics blend of the device, I feel that this is the sort of watch Bond might be issued to replace the Omega. The Suunto 007. Get to it, Suunto product placers.
(There are battery issues, yes, but charging comes from the same magic place as spare ammo. And music.)
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@Fenr1r
from body heat transformed into electric power