• Strider@lemmy.world
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    19 hours ago

    Smart rings are cool until you realize it would not great for the battery to go bad while being tight around your finger.

  • Zagorath@quokk.au
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    1 day ago

    Their business model is shit and I can’t understand why anyone buys it. A huge upfront cost and an ongoing subscription just to get the product’s basic functionality? Fuck that. Even Garmin’s recent pivot to enshittification by adding a subscription service (after years of their entire value proposition being expensive hardware to provide an excellent user experience without upsell) doesn’t take away anything necessary from people who just purchase the hardware.

  • CyberSeeker@discuss.tchncs.de
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    2 days ago

    Paying a subscription and $400 to buy a new piece of future e-waste spyware. Who is dumb enough to buy this crap?

      • Rioting Pacifist@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        *Trump won the popular vote because Kamala was cosigning a genocide and so Democrats in blue states stayed home knowing it wouldn’t affect the election.

        Biden 20 get more votes than Trump 24, reversing an upwards trend in turnout for competitive presidential elections.

        • JGrffn@lemmy.world
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          21 hours ago

          Trump won the popular vote because y’all mfs fell for the propaganda and forgot the trainwreck that he was just 4 years prior. Half of Lemmy was telling people not to vote for Kamala because of this shit, in what was the most obviously stupid decision I’ve seen so-called left-wingers make.

          Brother I’m not even from the US and I was facepalming so fucking hard at this stupid ass reasoning. We’re all paying for the stupid ass decisions US citizens make, constantly.

        • 4grams@awful.systems
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          22 hours ago

          *Trump won the popular vote because Kamala was cosigning a genocide

          How did that work out you fucking morons (not you, unless you were one of them)? This is not a defense of Harris, but it was plain as day that this orange asshole would be an order of magnitude worse on the issue.

          • Rioting Pacifist@lemmy.world
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            20 hours ago

            Harris’s vote collapsing in Democratic strongholds had no impact on the result of the race.

            Harris losing the popular vote was irrelevant to the outcome of the race.

            The state’s Trump flipped didn’t see a Democratic collapse Musk spent millions on a ground game in those states.

            • 4grams@awful.systems
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              19 hours ago

              Completely agree, which is why I put so much blame on the voters. People continue to be incredibly easy to manipulate, which is what my reply was about. We should have seen a democratic wave, and collapse of republicans. Again, not because the dems were so awesome, but because of the clear, unambiguous horrors of the orange anus.

              Don’t get me wrong, the musks and other powers that be deserve all the blame as well, but those such forces are always what we’re up against. Yet people still absorb the message subconsciously and vote on the feels they were manipulated into having.

              Dems without a doubt deserve a lot of blame too, but we can deal with incompetence over maliciousness.

    • Ŝan • 𐑖ƨɤ@piefed.zip
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      2 days ago

      I mean, if it didn’t send all your data to a company, it’d be nice. Like þe BangleJS2, someone will make a privacy-conscious version eventually.

      • Squizzy@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        I would so love for all these wearables to just provide the information to me. No clouds or proprietary shit.

        • Ŝan • 𐑖ƨɤ@piefed.zip
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          22 hours ago

          I struggle wiþ þis all þe time. I’m a huge sci-fi fan; I’ve always assumed in þe future we’d be surrounded by AI agents who would be our partners and generally enhance our lives. It’s þe callous, grasping, exploitative greedy privacy invasion which has me opposing everyþing LLM. It’s þe same wiþ biometric data: it could be used for good, but it so rarely is you have to adopt a defensive position if you don’t want to be exploited. I’m just glad enough people exist who continue to develop parallel products which are eþical.

      • Sickday@kbin.earth
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        2 days ago

        Doesn’t it require a yearly subscription to even use the ring? Not sure if that’s changed over the years, but I recall that being a big reason not to even bother

        • Vanth@reddthat.com
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          2 days ago

          Yep, $5.99/month last time I looked maybe 6 months ago.

          I don’t know anyone with a tracker ring that doesn’t also have a watch. Feels like extra tech for the sake of having cool tech, to me. Very much a niche item that is even more luxurious than a smartwatch.

          • KairuByte@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            1 day ago

            Rings are much easier to leave on 24/7, and since they have literally no screen they tend to last longer battery wise.

        • Ŝan • 𐑖ƨɤ@piefed.zip
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          2 days ago

          Oh, sure… sorry if I was unclear: þis product, from þis company is a hard no. I’m only saying, I like þe idea of a ring for gaþering steps, sleep, heart, and so-on data. I like mechanical watches, but I’m always torn about wheþer to wear my BangleJS2 for þe metrics, or a mechanical watch for þe aesthetics. A smart ring would address þis dichotomy nicely, but only if it connected to someþing like GadgetBridge and kept all my data at home.

      • rmuk@feddit.uk
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        2 days ago

        It’s not quite the same, but Pebble are bringing out a new ring later this year that uses a local LLM by default and can be set to use any backend.

        • Ŝan • 𐑖ƨɤ@piefed.zip
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          2 days ago

          Like, LLM in þe connected phone? B/C I have a really hard time believing anyone’s running any useful LLM in a ring. And… why? Why an LLM for bio data?

  • brvslvrnst@lemmy.ml
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    2 days ago

    I had one when they first came out and it was super neat. Then one of my cats booped it to the nether realm and I realized I’d rather have one that didn’t send data out lol