Suunto 7 Successor
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@g-q said in Suunto 7 Successor:
@olymay said in Suunto 7 Successor:
The default map area it downloads is a 54km square centred on your location, so pretty wide
I was reading the thread and my right eye focused on that number: 54km.
I am unable to select an area greater than 42km. Why?That’s odd, mine defaults at 54km.
Where are you looking to get this?
I go into the following:
Open Suunto App with top right button
Scroll down to ‘Map Options’
Scroll down to ‘Offline Map’ (under this in grey text it says ‘Tap to define’)
This next screen shows my local map with a 54km square. Using the top and bottom buttons on the right hand side of the watch I can zoom in to a minimum of 3km to a maximum of 10,872km (HUGE!). The middle button confirms the selction.
You can also use the touchscreen to pan the map around as well as pinch to zoom in and out.Hopefully this works for you.
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@olymay said in Suunto 7 Successor:
Where are you looking to get this?
directly on the watch, probably that’s the reason
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@g-q said in Suunto 7 Successor:
@olymay said in Suunto 7 Successor:
Where are you looking to get this?
directly on the watch, probably that’s the reason
Yes, this is all done on the watch
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@olymay believe or not, it does not work.
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@g-q said in Suunto 7 Successor:
@olymay believe or not, it does not work.
Very odd. In that case, I would suggest contacting Suunto Support.
One last thought…
Is your watch storage full? maybe it is limited on how much storage is left?
I have no music or third party apps installed, so have loads of free space. -
@olymay said in Suunto 7 Successor:
Very odd. In that case
yep
One last thought…
Is your watch storage full? maybe it is limited on how much storage is left?
I have no music or third party apps installed, so have loads of free space.me too, no other apps or anything else installed
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@g-q Are you able to share a screenshot? or a photo of the watch?
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@olymay said in Suunto 7 Successor:
You can also use the touchscreen to pan the map around as well as pinch to zoom in and out.
Just out of curiosity if you pinch to zoom out to say 20km and then you use the ± buttons are you able to restore your old default i.e. 54km?
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@olymay not now, I’ll do this evening. thanks!
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@olymay @lexterm77 @Jamie-BG @cosme-costa @ChrisA @isazi @suzzlo Let’s continue this conversation on topic.
https://forum.suunto.com/topic/7333/hrv-training-meta-analysis -
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5kruuner predictions
https://the5krunner.com/2021/11/28/2022-sports-watch-update/?amp=1 -
@davorp said in Suunto 7 Successor:
5kruuner predictions
https://the5krunner.com/2021/11/28/2022-sports-watch-update/?amp=1hahahahahahaha
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Would it be too much to hope for a Suunto 7 successor to come this year and be powered by one of these?
Please Suunto… This could easily be the WearOS champ!!
(although it would need to be priced more competitively than the S7 was at launch!) -
I had a look in the German Suunto online store. Almost all of the non titanium Suunto 7 versions are currently not available.
Maybe this is a hint that a successor is around the corner.
It was the same with Suunto 5 a few weeks ago. -
@harry08 said in Suunto 7 Successor:
I had a look in the German Suunto online store. Almost all of the non titanium Suunto 7 versions are currently not available.
Maybe this is a hint that a successor is around the corner.
It was the same with Suunto 5 a few weeks ago.Maybe. Could also simply be that they are emptying stock due to low sales. Let’s be positive, while at the same time tempering expectations .
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Personally, I think it is a bit cheeky of Suunto to continue selling the Suunto 7 knowing it is running extremely outdated hardware and will receive no more updates (last update received April 2021!).
Don’t get me wrong, it’s a stunning watch and I love mine. I am really very happy with it and glad I bought it.
Bout would I recommend to someone that they spend £259 for regular or £329 for titanium version? Not a chance! Half that price and maybe, but only maybe.
Sadly the Suunto 7 was always overpriced and it seriously hurt it’s sales. I saw countless comments about how much people wanted to buy one but it was too expensive.
Most of us on this forum understand the quality of Suunto and the work they put into their devices, so can understand (to a point) the prices.
However WearOS is different and to break into that market a device needs to be priced competitively.Someone will buy a Suunto (or a Garmin, Coros, Polar, etc) with the expectation of it lasting 3, 4, 5, 6, years etc…
WearOS devices are more like phones and would be expected to last 2-3 years (maybe 4 at a push).If Suunto release a new S7 running cutting edge hardware, give it everything users have been asking for (sensor support, auto pause, more advanced modes, etc) AND launch at a sensible price, then it could easily take a big share of the WearOS market and provide a real boost to the Suunto brand. It would likely be a great introduction to the brand to many people (I had never used Suunto before my S7, and only vaguely knew of the brand as a company that made dive watches, purely because a friend has one) but now I love Suunto.
Get the devices out there, get brand awareness, and the money will flow.But then again, this is just my opinion and what do it know
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@olymay but if suunto can’t both put in great hardware/quality materials/manufacturing in Finland and sell it at the price point of a regular wear os watch - I think there’s a reason why suunto watches cost this much.
But I agree with you that wear os watches date quicker, just don’t see the way around it. -
@dmytro the 7 is made in China…
But I don’t agree that the hardware is extremely outdated.
My S7 does what it is made for extremely well. It is neither slow nor limited in functionality.
I don’t like the idea of running through gadgets at high speed. My iPhone 6S is still going strong as well. But this is a personal thing. -
@dmytro I may be wrong, but using in house factories to make watches will up the cost (economy of scale etc).
As the S7 is made in China and uses mostly off the shelf hardware, this should bring the costs down significantly.
The main expenses to Suunto would be in the design and the software (which with regards to the current S7 are simply incredible!)
I’m not against paying more for a Suunto 7 replacement, as it is clearly a step up from a typical WearOS watch (for example a fragile Fossil that breaks simply by charging it!).
Right now, even the most expensive Samsung Galaxy Watch 4 Classic 4G (46mm) costs £409.
Samsung are a well known brand in the smartwatch game and are also known for being expensive. (it is also the only device running WearOS 3 so is charging a premium for that right now).The most expensive Fossil Gen 6 is £299.
If the S7 successor came in around the £300 price point it has a very real change of becoming a best seller.
Google tried to sell their Pixels at a premium price thinking that customers associate high price with high quality. They do, but only to a point. As a result, they never sold very well.
Their current Pixel 6 is a premium phone that competes with the best of the best, yet undercuts all others of similar spec. And surprise surprise it’s the best selling Google phone ever and has stolen back a chink of market share (yes it has a long way to go to sell as many as Apple and Samsung, but it’s a start).Suunto could (and I think needs to) do the same. Premium top end hardware with class leading fitness software at a competitive price = big sales.
(again, all my opinion. but i have been following the tech industry for decades and have a fair bit of confidence in what i say)
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Premium top end hardware with class leading software at a competitive price
I think you can sell everything in big numbers if you follow this advice. Everything.