Entelligence: Whatever happened to SPOT?
Entelligence is a column by technology strategist and author Michael Gartenberg, a man whose desire for a delicious cup of coffee and a quality New York bagel is dwarfed only by his passion for tech. In these articles, he'll explore where our industry is and where it's going -- on both micro and macro levels -- with the unique wit and insight only he can provide.

Sadly, the first SPOT watches from companies like Fossil and Suunto never really caught on and are no longer available, and although SPOT's core connection technology still lives in some GPS devices as MSN Direct, it seems Microsoft has largely abandoned the effort. That's a shame: even though the first implementations were less than stellar, there's much Microsoft could have done to have ultimately made this a success.
In order to understand SPOT, it's important to note where it fits in to the consumer device form factor taxonomy. Unlike devices that go into your laptop bag or even your pocket, SPOT broke new ground and transcended into the "invisible" space, where items like wallets and keys reside. The invisible space is one of the most critical areas for vendors to target, since there's a gigantic market for devices that are ubiquitous, critical and free up room for you to carry something else. While some cell phones might be considered part of the invisible space, SPOT was one of the first digital devices that made the leap by design.
The SPOT watch had every regular watch feature you might have wanted -- alarms, timers, chronographs -- but it was also a "smart watch": an integrated radio allowed the watch to receive information over the FM band. After you configured your feeds online, SPOT automatically updated to display local weather, news headlines, stock information (with trends and graphs), MSN instant messages, movie times, sports scores and other data. Users could send messages directly to your watch, Outlook would sync your calendar so SPOT could automatically remind you of appointments ahead, and there no need to re-set SPOT for daylight savings time or when traveling to a new city, since the watch picked up the local times automatically. SPOT also had some very cool custom watch faces, which ranged from the whimsical to the cute to the downright cool. In short, Microsoft took the concept of watch and turned it into watch plus. Does it work? Yes. Did it succeed? No. Here's why.
SPOT demonstrated software's ability to transform already useful objects into devices that alter our everyday lives. |
Overall, SPOT was an amazing concept that demonstrated software's ability to transform already useful objects into devices that alter our everyday lives. There was clearly a lot of thought put into SPOT's functional design, but sadly Microsoft missed the forest for the trees. It would be great for Microsoft to re-think its overall design goals and re-integrate SPOT's design philosophy back into other products, like Windows Mobile. (Microsoft had actually created beta prototype of SPOT functionality running under Windows Mobile, but I haven't heard much about it in a very long time). The invisible space is a key attribute of mobile computing and it's a shame to let such valuable property go undeveloped. It's time for someone to recapture what was good about the SPOT philosophy and bring back the power of the glanceable and the invisible.
Michael Gartenberg is vice president of strategy and analysis at Interpret, LLC. His weblog can be found at gartenblog.net, and he can be emailed at gartenberg AT gmail DOT com. Views expressed here are his own.





















Just to add to that , you can also pay 10 bucks a month and get ALL of that + outlook and messaging interoperability.
My thoughts on spot so far.
It's been really a godsend, I am also recommending it to all of our staff here in the office, Instead of having to lug around a brick of a phone you just have your watch which does everything you need during the coarse of the day. , You never have to worry about loosing a signal or anything like that. It works off of a signal that is constant and available EVERYWHERE (not just in a few places that cell towers can not reach) , I don't have to worry about security issues because SPOT is only one way technology , and never have to worry about charging the watch because it can be charged using my SOLIO solar charger or my usb car charger.
I just wish MS would come out with an API for the spot(MSDrct) service so we all could write application for it.
You also never have to worry about loosing it either because its their and on your wrist all day long.
Thank you mike for your article I hope it creates some hype and maybe a API would be available after all.
blah ... Applications *
I'm a watch uber-geek (had early casio watch-calculators in 1986, the very elusive Casio scientific watch calculator, the Pac-Man watch, and I probably wore every version of a Casio data-bank watch with buttons and/or touch screen. Before SPOT, there were Timex Data Link (wireless!data!transmit!) that worked with Win95-98 (The 150) but died when XP didn't support a full version of DOS and CRT monitors gave way to flat ones. (you needed a dongle if you didn't have a CRT) They cost around $75.
I had The Timex-Pager-DataLink and it HAD everything the SPOT watches had... for free! News feeds, Stock feeds, Weather, Sports Team calendars, had some apps for Golf players, changed time automatically in every time zone, battery life was decent (needed new batteries 2 times a year) had phone numbers and scheduled dates from your outlook calendar and (obviously) had a pager!
It was as bulky as it was awesome. So while naturally I would've gone for a SPOT watch when they came out, I didn't. Why would I? I was already getting more than SPOT would deliver upon launch. My current watch is the 2003 released USB Data Link that works with Outlook. (However, does NOT work with Vista and any later versions of Outlook) Before I had a WinMo phone, I kept my calendar/alerts/phones in my watch. SPOT would've been nice if one COULD add data to it and have it update wirelessly. But not sorry to see this one go. Even being a watch geek.
Ever seen the solar system watch ?
Now that was some messed up goodness !
Wt...
That watch doesn't operate off of anykind of wireless technology ? , If you call IR wireless technology. I think you need to readup son.
"The Timex-Pager-DataLink and it HAD everything the SPOT watches had... for free! News feeds, Stock feeds, Weather, Sports Team calendars, had some apps for Golf players, changed time automatically in every time zone"
sounds like an iPod shuffle with a watch-sized screen & SPOT-like receiver could make an interesting product. Put in BT to connect to an earpiece and you're good to go?
I actually still wear mine everyday! I replaced the watch band but it still works great. I have the Sunnto N3i.
Same here and I have a n6hr i that I haven't setup yet , but plan to for my son so i can send him messages while he's away on business , he loves the workout features and loves the outlook features even more.
Well, they laid off a huge chunk (all?) of the team doing this work. I think it's on life support to service contractual obligations and that's it. It was a cool service once it moved beyond those silly watches, but in typical MSFT myopic stupidity they were unable to capitalize a good idea.
The hope is that they will release a API or hand it off to a team that actually can mold it into something more.
I would like to actually see the MSDrct service in the upcoming zune HD, rumor has it , it already has the hardware necessary for it.
@gfar
Its actually still around mate, and you can still purchase a subscription , either 10 bucks a month or a measly 50 bucks a year.
Maybe soon they will have a lifetime certificate (guaranteed for 6 years) available for the watches as well.
People might think the service is a little out of touch, but I personally think its excellent, who the frig wants to lug around a phone the rest of their life ? , Ever hear of radiation ? Or brain cancer ? or What if i loose my phone ? , I don't have to worry about jack shit with the service. cmon MS open up this baby with a API !
I love(d) my SPOT watch, i didn't have a problem with recharging it or the fee, the coverage in Canada sucks however, I'm not in the biggest city ever but it isn't the smallest ever. Getting news, weather, scores etc. was pretty sweet. now i have a htc black slab i.e. fuze which gets texts of the same info mostly but if i didn't have to pull it out every time that'd be nice. MS should have actually done more advertising and increased the coverage then maybe more people would've found out about it and signed up.
Did Bill Gates have an original thought?
Oops! There's your answer.
Three comments:
This is like the Peek mobile email device, it's function has been co-opted and outpaced by smart-phones whose monthly cost per feature is that much more cost effective. All the features of this technology are basically widgets. I don't know who would pay $50 a month for the full features. I guess the consortium didn't either, and they found out the hard way. Sometimes it costs to be a trail blazer. I still think the Palm Folio is a device that 5 years from now, people will have a paradigm shift in their opinion of it, but that's another story.
Second, if they wanted to cut down on charging, they could of used Citizen's solar cell technology which charges a capacitor. But that would of cost money and I imagine that this whole business venture was based upon cheap technology, and smart information. I have a Citizen watch with the solar/capacitor feature, and estimated charge life to replace the back up battery is on the order of 25 years. I have had it for 4 years and no problems yet.
Lastly, Gartenberg, you're still a MS apologist and hack. I have to wonder how much money it takes to shiv a corporation (though you do it well):
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael_Gartenberg
I have two Suunto's. One bought early in the program and the other a gift for early adopters. They both still work fine but I need to find a replacement band for one. Suunto doesn't sell the models or parts anymore, and they are a little non-standard. I have found them quit handy for the updates they provide without having to handle anything, just look at my watch. The SPOT service is really now a part of MSN Direct. Actually always was. SPOT was applied more to the receiver technology. Is a shame it died off, and I think the reason was largely a combination of the 'large' watches and the subscription price. $10 a month is a bit high compared to $20 a month for data plans when this was out. Even $5 a month if you bought a whole year might have been a bit though to swallow. Maybe lower pricing would have spurred adoption, which might have encouraged greater innovation in the hardware. Who knows. Wear them every day.
all i know if i have one of those watched sitting on my desk collecting dust, what a gimmick...
I purchased one about a year ago for $20.00.
I am NOT paying the subscription fee, so all I get is weather news, and time updates.
i use to own the swatch paparazzi which cost me about $70 it was huge but still cool and it did every thing a normal watch would do and more. As give me weather, traffic reports, stocks, messages, sport scores, news headlines, movie times at theaters of my choice. Then msn said hey we will upgrade your watch to a suunto N3i which just made everything sweeter. The watch was thinner battery lasted 7 days on one charge and even looked way way better and classier. I still wear mines as i have it on right now that im typing this i still receive weather info and daylight savings times also the watch sets itself to whatever timezone your in but all the other goodies naw that doesn't happen anymore the watch is still amazing i cant wait for lg's take on that smart phone watch to become cheaper i would love to call people and see them on my wrist GO TEAM VENTURE!
That picture tells a thousands words.
Why is the guy on the left wearing two watches?
He has one huge nose.
Why does he insists on linking arms with the fit girl?
Ok thats ones a bit clear, he seems obsessed with her.
They've all been told to look at the camera, Bill being bill he wants the best for MS and does the looking.
Fit model girl has been paid to look at camera and she be doing just that.
Other man who i assume has some importance (Paul Allen in disguise?) just wants to shag her brains out and the girl is like ''get the hell away from me freak, cameras that way'' but still trying to smile cos she is getting paid yo'. Note how she is closer to bill than paul.
and i just staggered in half drunk from a night out and managed to write this.goodbye.
I bought into the SPOT tech when it came out and still wear my watch to this day. I like getting important updates, messages and i have yet to be late to a meeting. Please bring back SPOT.
It's funny the first thing I saw when looking at this article where the watches in the picture. It just so happens that I own three different versions of that particular watch (a orange/blue *pictured*, a red/black *pictured*, and a blue/tan one.) All used the spot tech which I must say was quite amazing. You hit it right on the nail when you stated "...first implementations were less than stellar." My watches has signal pretty much anywhere I went in the States as well as Canada. Checking news, and stocks on the go was quite convenient and discrete (when reading mail during a boring lecture or a slow moving meeting). Cost was not an issue. The things that made the watches harder to use where 1.) battery life and 2.) size. The battery just about died every three or four days if you where in the city. Out in the country side you would expect to have it die in a much sorter time (that is if you don't turn off the syncing device). The watches where quite big too when matched up against others. Due to the antenna tech of the day. I went from a smaller metal Swatch watch, to this newer SPOT enabled watch and at times it got in the way quite often. I had to take it off more and more in fear of it scratching or getting in the way. Eventually after about a year of good use, I shoved it in a drawer full of older watches and am now sporting a G-Shock Casio watch that is truly amazing for my use. I do miss the news and syncing e-mail. It was revolutionary, and I would like to see it come back to another watch I own in the future.
Four strikes against SPOT watches:
1) Too large. The watches were too big and bulky. They didn't need to be tiny, but small enough not to attract attention or get in the way.
2) Short battery life. You needed to set these on a special charger every night; if you didn't the typical SPOT watch battery charge would only last a few days of usage. Battery life should be measured in months, not days.
3) Spotty SPOT coverage. The MSN Direct data service was a low bandwidth digital data signal riding on existing FM radio station broadcasts. Before the SPOT watches were discontinued, there were only slightly more than 100 FM stations carrying the MSN Direct signal. That covered the biggest markets in the USA and Canada, but it was nowhere near enough coverage for a truly national service in North America. Too many areas had no coverage.
4) Subscription. Most people don't want yet another subscription for services they can easily get elsewhere for no extra cost. Though nice, there was nothing compelling about the services MSN Direct offered and it took them forever to come up with service and software updates, which frustrated their early adopters.
I had a SPOT watch for a couple of years; I moved from one area to another within the greater Boston area and now no longer have MSN Direct coverage, so I couldn't use my SPOT watch now, even if I wanted to.
I had the old Timex pager watch with Skytel paging service. It was a lot smaller than the SPOT watches, and its batteries lasted from six months to a year or so before they needed to be replaced (they were cheap zinc-air batteries that you can pick up at Radio Shack).
I've moved on to the Casio G-Shock Waveceptor Tough Solar line of watches. These are smaller and much tougher than the SPOT watches, battery life is indefinite (I've had several of these watches over the past four years without any problems), and you get the time updated automatically over the air from the atomic clock in Colorado. You don't get automatic Daylight Savings time changes and the watch doesn't know when you have changed time zones; these are things about the SPOT watches and the Timex/Skytel pager watch that I do miss.
I have to disagree with people who say it is too cumbersome to carry their cell phone around with them. Really? That's the whole point of having a cell phone: you carry it with you everywhere so you have it when you really need it. My Palm Pre is tiny compared to past cell phones I have had; it is not hard to carry it around with me, and it does everything my SPOT watch did, and does it much better, without adding on extra subscriptions I have to pay. A cell phone is much more of a necessity than a watch is, so if forced to chose I'd carry a cell phone instead of a watch. I like watches, but in order to be really useful to me a watch should be as small and unobtrusive as possible, work indefinitely without my having to think about it (ie, no recharges, no software updates, etc), and be incredibly tough and rugged. The SPOT watches were none of these things.
The SPOT watch/MSN Direct idea was an interesting idea, but it was, as usual, half-@ssed by Microsoft. If Microsoft was serious about it they would have had hundreds more FM stations broadcasting MSN Direct data, covering all population centers and major highways in North America, and they would have kept at it until the watches got smaller and their battery life got longer until the SPOT watch was a practical device - and they would have pushed MSN Direct into more and more devices (not just GPS and weather stations, but car radios, smartphones and PDAs (Windows Mobile, etc), PMPs (Zune, etc), wall clocks, alarm clocks/radios, etc. In other words into the kinds of "background" devices where the MSN Direct low-bandwidth data service makes sense.
It's an idea that still might make sense, but Microsoft seems to have given up on it for now.
I'm gonna admit, I have one in a closet somewhere.
This is Microsoft at its best. Coming up with incredibly stupid ideas.
I wouldn't mind seeing her spot... ;)
i'd hit that.
I went through two difference SPOT watches. In their day, they were pretty cool- but as smartphones came out, the need for a $70/year subscription to the service became less sensible.
What did I get on a SPOT watch? Weather, Movie times, Traffic reports, Calendar, MSN Instant Messages, Alerts and Sport scores.
When I moved to a Trep 700p, I could get all of these- plus internet access.
Since then, Widows Mobile, iPhone, Android, Blackbery and most other phones have adopted most of these items as standard features. How many smartphones are there being sold today cannot sync their calendar with Google Calendar/Exchange/MobileMe/iCal
SPOT was great in its day (2004-ish?), but technology has advanced and this system just isn't flexible enough to adapt/compete.
Bill Gates tit punch (other dude kills unborn child)
BILL GATES is GOD!
Is a Mischa Barton-gone-crazy joke inappropriate..?
I still wear my SPOT watch (Suunto N6HR) daily and wish it was still being actively developed and supported. The biggest problem was the limited coverage area. Even in Chicagoland, I frequently encounter areas without a signal.
Why is Bill Gates punching that poor girl in the boobs?
I have a spot watch. one day it mysteriously stopped receiving updates from the network. now it only tells time :-(
I had a SPOT watch and really found the Outlook integration quite nice. Simple reminder right on the timepiece that makes complete sense.
There was a survey that was sent out a few month prior to closing the service that would have made for much better service. The survey hinted at a Bluetooth option to not only ID calls, but sync and share data. This would have helped with the coverage issues.
This was the first watch I wore in years and haven't put another one on since.
First mistake: using Mischa Barton as your promotions celeb. Apparently this technology has followed the same direction as Bartons career path.......a shame for both.
This is the kind of technology that I expected would be free after buying the device. I don't know what makes people think that a subscription for everything will catch on; I certainly don't feel like paying to make my watch work after I buy it. (I know it would have worked after that but hopefully others will "get" the idea>)