+0.18 We're bringing Pebble back (repebble.com S:+0.22 )
2843 points by erohead 398 days ago | 738 comments on HN | Mild positive Landing Page · v3.7 · 2026-02-28 10:10:23 0
Summary Digital Autonomy & Open Culture Advocates
Repebble.com presents a smartwatch platform designed around user customization, developer participation, and open source transparency. Core engagement centers on Articles 19 (expression through app creation), 26 (developer education access), 27 (cultural participation via 15,000 user-created items), and implicitly 23 and 28 (independent, anti-exploitative business model). The company actively advocates for digital autonomy, community-driven development, and alternatives to venture-capital-driven tech through both editorial framing and structural choices (open source, low-barrier tools, community forums).
Article Heatmap
Preamble: 0.00 — Preamble P Article 1: ND — Freedom, Equality, Brotherhood Article 1: No Data — Freedom, Equality, Brotherhood 1 Article 2: ND — Non-Discrimination Article 2: No Data — Non-Discrimination 2 Article 3: ND — Life, Liberty, Security Article 3: No Data — Life, Liberty, Security 3 Article 4: ND — No Slavery Article 4: No Data — No Slavery 4 Article 5: ND — No Torture Article 5: No Data — No Torture 5 Article 6: ND — Legal Personhood Article 6: No Data — Legal Personhood 6 Article 7: ND — Equality Before Law Article 7: No Data — Equality Before Law 7 Article 8: ND — Right to Remedy Article 8: No Data — Right to Remedy 8 Article 9: ND — No Arbitrary Detention Article 9: No Data — No Arbitrary Detention 9 Article 10: ND — Fair Hearing Article 10: No Data — Fair Hearing 10 Article 11: ND — Presumption of Innocence Article 11: No Data — Presumption of Innocence 11 Article 12: +0.14 — Privacy 12 Article 13: ND — Freedom of Movement Article 13: No Data — Freedom of Movement 13 Article 14: ND — Asylum Article 14: No Data — Asylum 14 Article 15: ND — Nationality Article 15: No Data — Nationality 15 Article 16: ND — Marriage & Family Article 16: No Data — Marriage & Family 16 Article 17: ND — Property Article 17: No Data — Property 17 Article 18: ND — Freedom of Thought Article 18: No Data — Freedom of Thought 18 Article 19: +0.35 — Freedom of Expression 19 Article 20: +0.18 — Assembly & Association 20 Article 21: ND — Political Participation Article 21: No Data — Political Participation 21 Article 22: ND — Social Security Article 22: No Data — Social Security 22 Article 23: +0.13 — Work & Equal Pay 23 Article 24: ND — Rest & Leisure Article 24: No Data — Rest & Leisure 24 Article 25: ND — Standard of Living Article 25: No Data — Standard of Living 25 Article 26: +0.35 — Education 26 Article 27: +0.42 — Cultural Participation 27 Article 28: +0.10 — Social & International Order 28 Article 29: +0.18 — Duties to Community 29 Article 30: ND — No Destruction of Rights Article 30: No Data — No Destruction of Rights 30
Negative Neutral Positive No Data
Aggregates
Editorial Mean +0.18 Structural Mean +0.22
Weighted Mean +0.24 Unweighted Mean +0.21
Max +0.42 Article 27 Min 0.00 Preamble
Signal 9 No Data 22
Volatility 0.13 (Medium)
Negative 0 Channels E: 0.6 S: 0.4
SETL -0.08 Structural-dominant
FW Ratio 55% 27 facts · 22 inferences
Evidence 10% coverage
3M 6L 22 ND
Theme Radar
Foundation Security Legal Privacy & Movement Personal Expression Economic & Social Cultural Order & Duties Foundation: 0.00 (1 articles) Security: 0.00 (0 articles) Legal: 0.00 (0 articles) Privacy & Movement: 0.14 (1 articles) Personal: 0.00 (0 articles) Expression: 0.27 (2 articles) Economic & Social: 0.13 (1 articles) Cultural: 0.39 (2 articles) Order & Duties: 0.14 (2 articles)
HN Discussion 20 top-level · 30 replies
billybuckwheat 2025-01-27 20:37 UTC link
Excited (cautiously) about this. Loved my Pebble Time and was gutted when 1) Pebble bit the dust, and 2) my Pebble vanished down that black hole things like small devices and the other sock invariably go down. If this happens, I hope they can keep the revived Pebbles just smart enough and rebuild the app ecosystem. Best of luck, folks. I'm cheering you on from the sidelines!
girvo 2025-01-27 20:47 UTC link
My Pebble Time Round is still the single best piece of tech I have ever owned and used, and I miss it every day.

If it can be brought back, I’d pay whatever is necessary, and I’d love to contribute now that I’ve spent many years doing embedded firmware development professionally!

vermarish 2025-01-27 20:56 UTC link
I love the animation when you click "No" on "Do you want a new Pebble?". So extra.
mrinterweb 2025-01-27 20:57 UTC link
I noticed my mouth had been hanging agape for a while while reading this. This is huge news. I feel like Pebble is the smartwatch that got it right the first time. So many smartwatches try to replace the phone instead of being an extension of the phone. Pebble seemed to better understand what is important than most smartwatches by being the extension of the phone, a focus on battery life and always on displays.
solarkraft 2025-01-27 20:58 UTC link
I’m wearing my Pebble Time Steel right now and the biggest issue I have with it (maintaining the app) is arguably mostly Apple’s fault.

I was originally pissed that Pebble never sold replacement parts (actually I still am), but at least this hardware has been holding up extremely well.

AiAi 2025-01-27 21:00 UTC link
This guy is now behind two of the products that I wish the most: the Small Android Phone and the Pebble watch. I hope they succeed! :)
minimalengineer 2025-01-27 21:01 UTC link
Great device — lasted 4 years, woke me at 5 AM without disturbing my kids, and handled notifications well. Battery life was about a week, and it was swim-proof. That said, it was cheap... I hope this new version isn’t part of the “dumb” device trend where people spend $500 just to detox, thinking the price will force commitment.
xnx 2025-01-27 21:02 UTC link
Pebble and Basis Peak (https://www.engadget.com/2016-08-09-basis-peak-obituary.html) are the two biggest smartwatch losses, and probably top 10 gadget losses of all time. Glad to see one of them might have a future.
brk 2025-01-27 21:08 UTC link
Looking forward to checking it out!

I still have this email in my inbox from 2011, after a posting here on HN about your launch:

Subject: You bought the first one! BODY: Congratulations...

Great to see this happening again, best of luck!

mazambazz 2025-01-27 21:32 UTC link
Even though I haven't used one in a really long time, the Pebble Time still stands out to me as something I wish I still had.

It's an absolutely shame that Pebble was so innovative and functional, but couldn't reach mass market. But, I am extremely excited and happy that the Pebble team can start it again. I don't like Google for many things, but, I am grateful that the open-sourced PebbleOS. What a joyous day!

ata_aman 2025-01-27 22:01 UTC link
I lost mine somewhere in SF while visiting years ago but I absolutely loved it. I won it at a hackathon after making a tiny Pebble app where you could keep score during a soccer game as a referee by pressing the side buttons. App development and publishing was extremely easy on their app store.
thoop 2025-01-27 22:03 UTC link
Love this!

After my Pebble I tried an e-ink "Watchy" from SQFMI (https://watchy.sqfmi.com/) thinking that the battery life would be great but the battery only lasted a few days.

I've been wearing a Bangle 2 (https://www.espruino.com/Bangle.js2) which feels closest to recreating my Pebble. It has super long battery life and feels a lot like my Pebble did, but doesn't have the polish of the pebble UI and animations.

Can't wait to get a new Pebble!

tomaskafka 2025-01-27 22:55 UTC link
Awesome! The first Pebble absolutely fascinated me by having a hackable, C-running watch on my wrist.

I vividly remember spending days fine tuning the heuristics of a simple step detection algorithm in the first watchface where I thought “seeing your daily step count next to time sure is awesome”. And later, tens of thousands of people thought so as well - this was one of the signs what the health-tracking wrist device is about to become.

It was incredible that even the first model allowed you to run a 30 samples per second accelerometer sampling and classifying the movement, 24/7, and still lasted days. No other watch offers a similar level of hackability.

And as the time progressed, Pebble became the first platform to get Weathergraph - my graphical weather watchface.

Weathergraph was then ported to Garmin (as Pebble shut down), and then to Apple Watch widget (as it became a capable platform with the introduction of standalone watch-apps in watchOS 6), and then to iOS app & widget, where it now lets me live a life of indie developer, after a serie of corporate design/PM/dev jobs.

Thank you for that, Eric & Pebble team.

I still keep the developer edition Pebble with my name printed on the back (great touch!) in my shelf and heart, and will always remember Jon Barlow, one of the best and most helpful developer advocates I ever encountered.

And kudos to the whole dev team. The watch and companion app was rock stable, always staying connected, the calendar always being in sync, watch apps installed quickly and reliably - the things that 10x larger companies struggled with for years were nailed here almost from day one.

Godspeed!

PS: What a mishap to shut the company down shortly after a release of Pebble 2. It nailed the experience of a lightweight watch, with the most contrasty BW reflective screen I have seen, and buttery smooth animations (while Garmin still renders menus in like 8-10 fps on their MIP screens 10 years later). So small and lightweight, I’d love everyone to try it on, and compare with 2024 smartwatches.

MortyWaves 2025-01-27 23:18 UTC link
I haven't used a Pebble, but I wanted to mention something I have seen praised a lot on HN and elsewhere. Apparently, the Bluetooth stack on a Pebble is absolutely legendary: reliable, dependable, robust, you name it. It still works reliably today seemingly thanks to their very diligent software design.

I hope that element of it will continue to exist as-is on these new ones? I mention this because Bluetooth is still generally speaking very meh.

scottydelta 2025-01-27 23:22 UTC link
This is great news. In the last few years, I have upgraded my apple watch couple of times hoping to accept even marginal improvements to battery life and hackability but every time I stop using it seeing how it's still not what I am looking for.

I tried keeping my pebble alive for so long even after it's demise, I bought 2 Pebble Time when a few were still available on ebay.

I remember writing my first integration from scratch to control room lamp using my Pebble watch. I hacked it together by getting a wifi socket and programming a web-server hosted on my raspberry-pi.

Here is the DEMO video I made 8 years ago: https://vikashbajaj.com/pebble.mp4

My pebble watch would call an app on my phone, in turn the app would make a request to the webserver and the webserver would then make a query to the wifi socket to toggle it.

It lagged a bit but it got the job done. I could connect anything to these wifi sockets and control any appliance with my Pebble time. This was before hackable smart hubs were a thing.

wvenable 2025-01-27 23:41 UTC link
Developing the for the Pebble was a lot of fun. There was a Pebble hack-a-thon recently (recent being 2 years ago) and I finally got around to finishing a project that I started a decade earlier:

https://github.com/codaris/pebble-cpp

It might even become relevant again!

Pebble had an ingenious design for its watch apps. Despite the watch having a limited processor and even more limited RAM, it could accommodate several apps, each boasting a lot of capability.

Each Pebble app was comprised of two components: one that resided on the watch and another on the phone. Users could install these apps from Pebble's dedicated app store, and the same app was compatible with both iOS and Android. Pebble brilliantly bypassed Apple's app install restrictions and cross-platform compatibility challenges by executing the on-phone portion within the platform's JavaScript engine.

If you wanted to create a weather application, the phone component of the app would be written in JavaScript and retrieve weather updates from the Internet, which would then be conveyed to the watch's C-based app for display. Watch apps could also have a settings page that was implemented in HTML.

I have always been impressed by of the cleverness and simplicity of this design.

rzazueta 2025-01-28 02:23 UTC link
I LOVE My Pebble and even got Rebble working on it not long ago to revive it.

However...

If you want to make it TRULY HACKABLE as you claim, you will not encumber it with cloud dependencies like you did last time. Let ME self host my own Pebble server if I choose. Go ahead and default to your servers and sell services and whatever, but let me host my own and switch the base URL to my own domain, preferably with open source software and simple APIs, without requiring me to go through your servers.

That way, even if this attempt also doesn't pan out, those of us willing to do the work will at least still have the functionality we want. I get the whole VC "lock them into required cloud services for life so we can make endless subscription revenue" model, but it's absolutely corrupt.

And, Eric, I know you know that - you have a hacker's heart. Please listen to it.

m-p-3 2025-01-28 04:56 UTC link
I owned the Pebble OG, the Pebble Steel and the Pebble Time Steel and despite all my attempts, I couldn't fill the void the Pebble left. I tried the Amazfit Bip, The BangleJS 2 (that one got pretty close IMO) and now rocking a Casio watch that does bluetooth but still work on a CR2032 (GBD-200), and more than a year on the same battery, which is quite a feat when you think about it.

The software UX of the Pebble was on point, and the animations surprisingly smooth for such a device. I'm still convinced that after all there years, the Timeline UI is unrivaled.

I'm eager to see what you'll come out with :)

xvfLJfx9 2025-01-28 08:54 UTC link
Looks very interesting to me. There are a couple of features that are especially important to me.

- Good accuracy sleep tracking

- GPS ( I know this uses up a lot of battery but could be off by default)

- Self-hostable servers. (I'm a very privacy conscious person, and also I don't want to be bound to an ecosystem that might disappear one day)

I'm gonna keep an eye on this project. It really looks very interesting. I hope it gets far.

nym3r0s 2025-01-28 11:39 UTC link
The primary use for a smartwatch for myself (and many of my family, friends) is fitness and health tracking. Card payments, notifications, WatchFaces etc. are all secondary.

Basically what Whoop is doing with their strap - but minus the subscription model. I know a ton of people who tried the whoop but felt it was extremely pricey and didn't have the accuracy of an apple watch.

I would be happy to pay ~$400-500 up front for hardware that integrates with Apple Health and provides solid, reliable health tracking without a need for a subscription.

And by health/fitness - features expected would be sleep tracking, activity (gps), heart rate, Sp02, skin temperature sensors, fall detection. Then secondarily - additional things like ECG/EKG, apnea, AFib detection

The in-accuracy of some of the devices in the market is why I still choose to remain with my Apple Watch.

This youtube channel may help understand a consumer's perspective on health accuracy - https://www.youtube.com/@TheQuantifiedScientist

soxocx 2025-01-27 20:59 UTC link
On the iPhone I get redirected to the Apple Store page for the Apple Watch. Nice humor.
insane_dreamer 2025-01-27 21:13 UTC link
Never heard of Basis Peak, but I've heard of Pebble for over 10 years.
ctkhn 2025-01-27 21:13 UTC link
Gotta be honest I feel like Garmin is the perfect balance of pebble vs apple watch
gonzo41 2025-01-27 21:14 UTC link
You should have a look at he Garmin instinct 2x. They've nailed it.
trescenzi 2025-01-27 21:19 UTC link
The Basis was incredible. It had heath monitoring features Apple is just getting to. I get why it died though. Their V2 exploded on people’s wrists…
insane_dreamer 2025-01-27 21:19 UTC link
The Withings ScanWatch was the right fit for me. Unfortunately the HR sensor stopped working recently and the water resistant seal broke, and it's out of warranty, so it's in a drawer. But IMO that was the right idea: analog time, discrete notifications, ppg/ekg sensors, 2-week battery life.
xanderlewis 2025-01-27 21:32 UTC link
That’s really cool.
xattt 2025-01-27 21:32 UTC link
In an alternate timeline, we are all wearing Pebbles synced to our Palm Prēs.
echelon 2025-01-27 21:34 UTC link
Feels a little bit salty to send customers to Google's competitor given the fact that Google provided the exit and also liberated the code. They didn't have to do that.

A better "thank you" to Google would be to direct people to Fitbit.

BlueTemplar 2025-01-27 21:47 UTC link
I'm still using it, in fact to the point that it's probably the biggest factor why I have been procrastinating on still staying on Android rather than trying alternatives like PinePhone.

That the OS has been open sourced is great news (though it's sad it was on GitHub... and hopefully other communities around Pebble will spring up outside of platforms (article only mentions Discord and Reddit)).

TeMPOraL 2025-01-27 21:52 UTC link
> It's an absolutely shame that Pebble was so innovative and functional, but couldn't reach mass market.

I think trying to reach "mass market" - or specifically, the market of people who are into fitness and sportsball - is largely what killed them. I'd like to believe that they could've catered to existing userbase a bit longer, grew a little more slowly but sustainably by doubling down on an idea of an ergonomic, battery-efficient, programmable smartwatch extension - a tool, not a toy.

Alas, maybe the whole thing was over once Apple, and Samsung got their marketing wheels spinning.

bigiain 2025-01-27 21:59 UTC link
Also cautious. Extremely cautions.

I got rug pulled by "the pebble team" the first time, leaving me with 3 watches they effectively bricked.. Not gonna sign up for that again.

(I got a refund on my last Pebble order. When the money showed up I drunk-ebayed a 2nd hand ~40 year old mechanical watch. I now have about 20 wind up or mechanical auto winding watches. I do have a few chinese ~$40 "smart watches" that do an OK job of notifications on my wrist, and a somewhat questionable job of heartrate and blood pressure monitoring, and one that produces totally random numbers for blood glucose reading whether it's on my wrist or not. I almost never wear any of those. I've got a Watchy kit, and open source epaper ESP32 watch, but I've had it maybe a year and haven't found the enthusiasm to assemble it.)

xavdid 2025-01-27 22:27 UTC link
Whoa, I loved that app! I used to track scores for intramural games in college. the UI was so clean and simple!
zokier 2025-01-27 22:27 UTC link
Pebble Time (Steel) Kickstarter is the only crowdfunding I truly regret missing out on. I remember seeing it at the time, but I think the reward levels I wanted were sold out or something.

Even in retrospect it seems weird that it failed the way it did.

eloisant 2025-01-27 22:38 UTC link
The feature I use the most on my smartwatch is paying.

So if they can bring contactless payments to their new Pebble they have my attention, otherwise it's useless to me.

edarchis 2025-01-27 22:47 UTC link
The amount of us who clicked no is amazing. I loved my Pebble Time but I'm going to give money to yet another Kickstarter and have it be killed shortly after.
dev_snd 2025-01-27 23:04 UTC link
I've never worn a pebble, but I also have a banglejs 2 and I really love the watch for it's hackability.

I've written my own watchface and a couple of other apps and made changes to a number of existing apps, it's really simple because you can always test your code changes live on the watch while keeping it on your wrist. There's an IDE that connects to it using Bluetooth and the code can be modified during runtime

Lthere's also a great community of hackers and tinkerers that steadily improve the watch.

It might not have the same polish as the pebble had, but it makes it up in hackability. I can only recommend getting a banglejs2 (battery life is also pretty great, I get about 10 days with regular use)

erohead 2025-01-27 23:10 UTC link
Thanks for being there at the beginning!
edwintorok 2025-01-27 23:14 UTC link
Do you have a link to the 'Small Android Phone'?
screaminghawk 2025-01-27 23:21 UTC link
Which phone is this? I recently got a Unihertz Jelly Star 2 as it was the only decent "small Android" option I found while researching.
Vampiero 2025-01-27 23:23 UTC link
I literally just bought a LTE watch because I hate phones, I never use mine, and I keep forgetting it anyway. I'd rather have a watch with an eSIM
xyst 2025-01-27 23:41 UTC link
The Apple Watch Ultra has worked wonders for me in terms of battery life and “always on display”.

My only wish is for an easily serviceable battery.

tomaskafka 2025-01-27 23:57 UTC link
Oh, my memory is hazy here, but if I remember right, at the beginning Apple didn’t let them download executable code (companion js) to the app, so they just took a javascript code from every app in the pebble store, bundled it into Pebble iOS app, and updated it every few days with a fresh code.

Can anyone confirm?

eiiot 2025-01-28 00:52 UTC link
I still use my PTR daily! See https://rebble.io/ :)
modeless 2025-01-28 02:24 UTC link
I am convinced that there must be Pebble fans on the Android team that keep a Pebble in CI and ensure it keeps working with each new release. Otherwise its continued extended working lifespan is inexplicable given the amount of churn in Android in general and the Bluetooth stack in particular.
jakecopp 2025-01-28 02:35 UTC link
> Weathergraph was then ported to Garmin (as Pebble shut down), and then to Apple Watch widget

I don't think I was a particularly early user of Weathergraph - but when I finally had to retire my Pebble Time I only considered platforms that had your watchface.

Thanks very much for the attention to detail!

NoahKAndrews 2025-01-28 02:56 UTC link
Pretty much all of the cloud stuff has been reimplemented with open-source code by the community! See rebble.org.
ClassyJacket 2025-01-28 03:36 UTC link
I second this. I'll be very hesitant to buy in if it's locked to a cloud service. And people are waking up to this, with the Bambu controversy and all. Please don't make this mistake.
lolinder 2025-01-28 04:15 UTC link
So much this. Learn from Framework: Sell the hardware at a price point that makes your business sustainable without needing a cloud component to push you over into profitability.

Yes, it will lock out people for whom that price is unacceptable, but now more than ever your real customer is serious hackers, and we are collectively more than fed up with the cloud and subscriptions. Framework and Nabu Casa need to be your models here, because your customers are overwhelmingly their customers.

erohead 2025-01-28 05:55 UTC link
I'm 100% with you! No VCs this time...no mandatory cloud subscription. But I'm not really sure that this fear is grounded - before we sold to Fitbit we 'unlocked' the Pebble mobile app so you could use it with any cloud you wanted, including self hosted. So...it already meets your definition
Editorial Channel
What the content says
+0.35
Article 27 Cultural Participation
Medium Advocacy Framing Practice
Editorial
+0.35
SETL
-0.21

Product explicitly positioned as cultural platform. 'Beautiful watchfaces and watchapps' emphasizes aesthetic/cultural dimension; customization framed as creative expression.

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Article 19 Freedom of Expression
Medium Advocacy Framing Practice
Editorial
+0.25
SETL
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Repeatedly frames product around user customization ('easy to customize') and creative expression. Appstore with 15,000 user-created watchfaces/apps demonstrates commitment to enabling user voice.

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Article 26 Education
Medium Advocacy Framing Practice
Editorial
+0.25
SETL
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Page emphasizes education accessibility through 'Developer Info,' 'tutorials,' and 'documentation.' Framing of open source as learning resource ('read tutorials') demonstrates commitment to educational access.

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Article 23 Work & Equal Pay
Low Advocacy Framing
Editorial
+0.20
SETL
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Philosophy explicitly rejects investor-driven model ('no investors') and emphasizes independent, autonomous work ('we just dream up new devices that we'd like to use'). This implies freedom from exploitative labor models.

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Article 28 Social & International Order
Low Advocacy Framing
Editorial
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SETL
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Philosophy explicitly rejects extractive capitalism ('no investors,' 'not trying to take over the world') and prioritizes human use-value over exchange-value ('dream up devices we'd like to use'). Anti-monopoly framing suggests commitment to just social order.

+0.15
Article 20 Assembly & Association
Low Advocacy Practice
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Company mission emphasizes community-driven development; describes itself as serving 'like-minded folks.'

+0.15
Article 29 Duties to Community
Low Advocacy Practice
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Company emphasizes open source commitment as duty to broader community. Provides tools and infrastructure for community participation.

+0.10
Article 12 Privacy
Low Framing Practice
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Company mission emphasizes open source software; no explicit privacy advocacy but transparency philosophy implies privacy consciousness.

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Preamble Preamble
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No reference to human dignity, equal rights, or freedom as foundational principles.

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Article 1 Freedom, Equality, Brotherhood

No observable content addressing equal rights or dignity.

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Article 2 Non-Discrimination

No content addressing discrimination.

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Article 3 Life, Liberty, Security

No content addressing life, liberty, or security.

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Article 4 No Slavery

No content addressing slavery or forced labor.

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Article 5 No Torture

No content addressing torture or cruel treatment.

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Article 6 Legal Personhood

No content addressing legal personhood.

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Article 7 Equality Before Law

No content addressing equal protection under law.

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Article 8 Right to Remedy

No content addressing judicial remedy.

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Article 9 No Arbitrary Detention

No content addressing arbitrary arrest.

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Article 10 Fair Hearing

No content addressing fair trial.

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Article 11 Presumption of Innocence

No content addressing presumption of innocence.

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Article 13 Freedom of Movement

No content addressing freedom of movement.

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Article 14 Asylum

No content addressing asylum.

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Article 15 Nationality

No content addressing nationality.

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Article 16 Marriage & Family

No content addressing marriage and family.

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Article 17 Property

No content addressing property rights.

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Article 18 Freedom of Thought

No content addressing freedom of thought or conscience.

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Article 21 Political Participation

No content addressing political participation.

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No content addressing social security.

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Article 24 Rest & Leisure

No content addressing rest and leisure.

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Article 25 Standard of Living

No content addressing standard of living.

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Article 30 No Destruction of Rights

No content addressing restrictions on rights.

Structural Channel
What the site does
+0.45
Article 27 Cultural Participation
Medium Advocacy Framing Practice
Structural
+0.45
Context Modifier
ND
SETL
-0.21

15,000-item appstore demonstrates platform infrastructure for user cultural production; customization and open source enable derivative cultural works; developer tools enable creative participation.

+0.40
Article 19 Freedom of Expression
Medium Advocacy Framing Practice
Structural
+0.40
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GitHub repository enables code-level expression; CloudPebble browser tool lowers barrier to digital creation; developer forums provide platforms for expression and knowledge sharing.

+0.40
Article 26 Education
Medium Advocacy Framing Practice
Structural
+0.40
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SDK available for free download; CloudPebble provides browser-based development without installation barrier; open source code accessible as educational resource.

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Article 20 Assembly & Association
Low Advocacy Practice
Structural
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Discussion forum infrastructure provided; community described as active participant; appstore enables collective cultural production.

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Article 29 Duties to Community
Low Advocacy Practice
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Open source code publication; GitHub access; community forums and development infrastructure enable reciprocal community contribution.

+0.15
Article 12 Privacy
Low Framing Practice
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SETL
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Footer includes Privacy policy link; open source code publishing demonstrates commitment to transparency over hidden data practices.

+0.10
Article 23 Work & Equal Pay
Low Advocacy Framing
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Company independence apparent through business model transparency; no indicators of worker exploitation visible.

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Article 28 Social & International Order
Low Advocacy Framing
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Business model independence provides some structural insulation from exploitative practices, though company still operates in market economy.

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Product marketing site; no structural commitment to UDHR preamble values evident.

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Article 1 Freedom, Equality, Brotherhood

No structural signals.

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Article 4 No Slavery

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ND
Article 17 Property

No structural signals.

ND
Article 18 Freedom of Thought

No structural signals.

ND
Article 21 Political Participation

No structural signals.

ND
Article 22 Social Security

No structural signals.

ND
Article 24 Rest & Leisure

No structural signals.

ND
Article 25 Standard of Living

No structural signals.

ND
Article 30 No Destruction of Rights

No structural signals.

Supplementary Signals
How this content communicates, beyond directional lean. Learn more
Epistemic Quality
How well-sourced and evidence-based is this content?
0.26 high claims
Sources
0.3
Evidence
0.2
Uncertainty
0.1
Purpose
0.7
Propaganda Flags
4 manipulative rhetoric techniques found
4 techniques detected
loaded language
The Finest In Wearable Gadgets, most stylish, beautiful watchfaces, beautiful apps
bandwagon
15,000 beautiful watchfaces and watchapps, Pebble community, back after 9 years — implies popular demand
slogans
Pebble is back! repeated; Our goal is simple reused across sections
appeal to authority
the most stylish Pebble watch ever — superlative claim without evidence
Emotional Tone
Emotional character: positive/negative, intensity, authority
hopeful
Valence
+0.7
Arousal
0.6
Dominance
0.7
Transparency
Does the content identify its author and disclose interests?
0.55
✗ Author ✓ Funding
More signals: context, framing & audience
Solution Orientation
Does this content offer solutions or only describe problems?
0.61 solution oriented
Reader Agency
0.6
Stakeholder Voice
Whose perspectives are represented in this content?
0.38 2 perspectives
Speaks: institution
About: individualsdeveloperscommunity
Temporal Framing
Is this content looking backward, at the present, or forward?
mixed medium term
Geographic Scope
What geographic area does this content cover?
global
Complexity
How accessible is this content to a general audience?
accessible low jargon general
Longitudinal · 5 evals
+1 0 −1 HN
Audit Trail 21 entries
2026-02-28 10:10 eval Evaluated by claude-haiku-4-5-20251001: +0.24 (Mild positive)
2026-02-28 01:40 dlq Dead-lettered after 1 attempts: We're bringing Pebble back - -
2026-02-28 01:38 rate_limit OpenRouter rate limited (429) model=llama-3.3-70b - -
2026-02-28 01:37 rate_limit OpenRouter rate limited (429) model=llama-3.3-70b - -
2026-02-28 01:36 dlq_replay DLQ message 97680 replayed to LLAMA_QUEUE: We're bringing Pebble back - -
2026-02-28 00:21 eval_success Light evaluated: Neutral (0.00) - -
2026-02-28 00:21 eval Evaluated by llama-3.3-70b-wai: 0.00 (Neutral)
2026-02-27 21:10 dlq Dead-lettered after 1 attempts: We're bringing Pebble back - -
2026-02-27 21:07 rate_limit OpenRouter rate limited (429) model=llama-3.3-70b - -
2026-02-27 21:06 rate_limit OpenRouter rate limited (429) model=llama-3.3-70b - -
2026-02-27 21:05 rate_limit OpenRouter rate limited (429) model=llama-3.3-70b - -
2026-02-27 21:04 dlq_auto_replay DLQ auto-replay: message 97560 re-enqueued - -
2026-02-27 16:33 eval_success Light evaluated: Neutral (0.00) - -
2026-02-27 16:33 eval Evaluated by llama-4-scout-wai: 0.00 (Neutral)
2026-02-27 12:54 eval_success Evaluated: Neutral (0.03) - -
2026-02-27 12:54 eval Evaluated by deepseek-v3.2: +0.03 (Neutral) 15,302 tokens
2026-02-27 12:40 dlq Dead-lettered after 1 attempts: We're bringing Pebble back - -
2026-02-27 12:38 rate_limit OpenRouter rate limited (429) model=llama-3.3-70b - -
2026-02-27 12:36 rate_limit OpenRouter rate limited (429) model=llama-3.3-70b - -
2026-02-27 12:35 rate_limit OpenRouter rate limited (429) model=llama-3.3-70b - -
2026-02-27 12:30 eval Evaluated by claude-haiku-4-5: 0.00 (Neutral)