View attachment 433371 View attachment 433372 View attachment 433371 Here are a few pics from the show.
Thank you for the pics tridacna. Nice post.
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View attachment 433371 View attachment 433372 View attachment 433371 Here are a few pics from the show.
Looks like Mk2 will be a killer product. At least, for those of us who prefer smaller, watch-sized dive computers. If my experience with Garmin is any indicator, they will throw AI in as a new version feature at no or little extra cost. Maybe even release a sub-$250 pressure transmitter of their own. Seeing other Garmin accessories are usually priced fairly competitively compared to the field (looking at you, Adidas!), reliability aside, this would be a dream come true!I asked about AI and both reps said that it was in the works..
Ah, so they figured an accelerator-based gestures too without touch-sensitive screen! I'm wondering how good it is at distinguishing a finger tap vs slamming a watch against a rock or equipment. Still pretty sweet for when you simply want to flick through screens/modes and don't want to fiddle with buttons. Kind of addresses "thick mittens" dilemma a bit.In DC mode, you tap the screen lightly to flip to the compass. Super easy..
Maybe even release a sub-$250 pressure transmitter of their own. Seeing other Garmin accessories are usually priced fairly competitively compared to the field (looking at you, Adidas!), reliability aside, this would be a dream come true!
Garmin has always been pretty good playing with others within ANT+ standard, for example. I have been using Wahoo Tickr heart rate strap and Scosche Rhythm+ arm band with their watches for years. And now they are opening up to Bluetooth too. Polar H10 works just fine with Fenix 5. So, if there's an emerging AI standard within the dive industry I'm sure Garmin would follow it.But, only if they use the same transmitter as Shearwater, Oceanic, AquaLung, etc.. If they do their own transmitter, that would probably stop me from buying one. I want my stuff to work together, even if it's different brands.
My understanding is that Mk1 size follows Fenix 5X, which is a bit thicker but otherwise equivalent to Fenix 3 (Fenix 5 is actually smaller than 3). I still have Fenix 3 in the drawer, wanna a pic of that?What I would like to see now is pictures of the Descent on someone's arm, to see kind of how big it is.
I talked to Garmin reps about Mk1 since I had some concerns about how it would handle non-diving functions. Their response:Can you find out if it has any capability to pair with an Android phone and work with Google Maps for navigation? ... It would be cool if the Descent "smart" capability extended to showing the directions coming from Google Maps on my phone.
Which means three things:It is essentially a fenix 5 but with diving features
My understanding is that Mk1 size follows Fenix 5X, which is a bit thicker but otherwise equivalent to Fenix 3 (Fenix 5 is actually smaller than 3). I still have Fenix 3 in the drawer, wanna a pic of that?
I talked to Garmin reps about Mk1 since I had some concerns about how it would handle non-diving functions. Their response:
Which means three things:
- Unless somebody builds a ConnectIQ app talking to Google Maps service (and I'm not even sure ConnectIQ SDK allows for such connected apps), this sadly won't work. Android Wear this isn't.
- Garmin would very much prefer you pay them $60 to buy their maps than to use free Google Maps
- No routing around traffic, alas
Am I the only one that thinks this computer is cheap for what you get. I've shelled out a lot more money on a lot less when it comes to scuba. At the end of the day, this is an amazing Gen 1 product, but everyone has their biases and preferences. My liquivisions and Aeris dive computers are completely out of warranty, so I doubt they will last long enough for Garmin to come out with AI (I've had all my dive computers replaced under warranty twice (ie: 6 dive computers in 2 years), and two of them have failed again out of warranty). So my bar isn't very high; I just want a computer that lasts more than 50 dives before needing replacement and has AI.
ditto, my bar is way higher than that. We dive cheapo Suunto Gekkos and Vypers and I have no idea how old any of them are at this point, but probably mostly 10-20 years. I dove with some early Suuntos 20-25 years ago that I only upgraded for features, not failures. I wouldn't be surprised if they're still out there someplace working fine.I dive an Oceanic VT3 that is 7 1/2 years old, nearly 1000 dives, way over 1000 hours, that works absolutely perfectly. This is what I expect from my dive computer.