photo of a Pebble smartwatch placed on top of pebbles - 1
  • OG smartwatch company Pebble is back from the dead courtesy of Google.
  • The brains of Pebble Watches, PebbleOS, was open-sourced by Google at the request of Pebble’s founder Eric Migicovsky.
  • Eric posted that he and his small team have already started working on the next Pebble smartwatch.

The early-to-mid 2010s saw a rise in Pebble smartwatches, a brand that almost instantly gained a cult following. However, it was acquired by Fitbit, which was itself bought by Google . Fast-forward, the hype around Pebble watches still lives, albeit as tiny remaining embers. Well, those embers will soon convert into fire as PebbleOS has been resurrected from the dead, meaning Pebble watches are making a comeback.

Over the last year, Pebble’s founder Eric Migicovsky asked Google if they could open-source PebbleOS, and they did. The source code of the OS is now available on GitHub. PebbleOS was the heart of Pebble smartwatches, and Google making it open-source means Pebble is back from the dead.

Eric shared a blog post stating that he and his small team have already started working on the next Pebble smartwatch and shared a feature set the watch will come with. This includes an Always-on e-paper screen, longer battery life, and dedicated buttons to control music.

Eric expressed his gratitude by saying:

I can’t stress how thankful I am to Rebble and Google, in general and to a few Googlers specifically, for putting in tremendous effort over the last year to make this happen. You’ve helped keep the dream alive by making it possible for anyone to use, fork and improve PebbleOS.

Eric also highlighted how most modern smartwatches aren’t hackable enough, and the firm’s willing to retain the hack-ability aspect of PebbleOS. While the release timeline of the next Pebble watch is still unknown, we should see an official announcement about the same in the next few months.

Abubakar covers Tech at Beebom, with his passion for technology tracing back to 2011 when he received a Dell Inspiron 5100 as a gift. He’s also a passionate advocate for the right-to-repair movement, believing in empowering users to maintain and extend the life of their devices. Outside the tech world, he enjoys watching anime and exploring his newfound enthusiasm for Japanese cars. In his free time, you’ll often find him immersed in Genshin Impact or researching his next gadget purchase. Before joining Beebom, he contributed to leading publications like Android Police, How-To Geek, and Fossbytes.

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