diff --git a/articles/f91w/index.html b/articles/f91w/index.html index 6974c64..82c37b6 100644 --- a/articles/f91w/index.html +++ b/articles/f91w/index.html @@ -172,11 +172,12 @@

some time back I was browsing Crowd Supply when I came across the Sensor -Watch project by Joey Castillo. I had wanted some kind of "hackable" watch for a while, and had -looked at things like Watchy, but this -project hit the sweet spot for me. I love my existing F91-W, and this project was a good -combination of open source with community software support. one key feature that was important to -me is battery life - the Sensor Watch battery life in an average usage scenario is so long that +Watch project by Joey Castillo. I had wanted some +kind of "hackable" watch for a while, and had looked at things like +Watchy, but this project hit the sweet spot +for me. I love my existing F91-W, and this project was a good combination of open source with +community software support. one key feature that was important to me is battery life - the Sensor +Watch battery life in an average usage scenario is so long that Joey's is still going strong!

@@ -186,7 +187,9 @@ was availability - the delivery date for Crowd Supply orders was summer 2023 (I being delivered sooner than this, not sure). on top of this, shipping and import fees made it pretty prohibitively expensive. I've always found this to be an issue with Crowd Supply as someone based in the UK, even some things designed in the UK are very expensive from Crowd Supply as they -are assembled in/shipped from the US. so I decided to build one myself! +are assembled in/shipped from the US. so I decided to build one myself! of course, this is more +expensive than just buying it, but this was a learning experience and +knowledge is power!

component acquisition

@@ -388,11 +391,6 @@ running my code :)!

epilogue

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some summary thoughts:

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