Large companies rarely admit that they are wrong outright. Hopefully, Apple will quietly license the tech from Masimo. I used to work with their medical grade products. It's in the top two with Nellcor.Although Apple has to spend a lot of money fighting patent trolls, this is one time Apple is clearly wrong. Now in their greed they are spending lots of money fighting rather than admitting they are wrong and agreeing to a settlement. The only thing Apple understands is will it cost more to settle or to face lawsuits for disabling the O2 feature.
So after my series 9 it is finished. Thanks..I haven't heard anything recently either. It's going to have to work its way through the courts or Apple will have to purchase the rights to Masimo's patents. I don't think this one feature is so important to Apple that they see it as vital. As with most things with Apple, it'll get fixed eventually. Or quietly dropped.
Not necessarily. Apple may come up with another iteration of the oximeter. Masimo isn't the only vendor. Nellcor is still out there. They license their tech all the time.So after my series 9 it is finished. Thanks..
So after my series 9 it is finished. Thanks..
We won't see the feature on the watch again for 2-3 more years+, unless Apple pays the price of admission.
The accuracy of the unit is directly tied to the quality of the detection algorithm. That's what Masimo is trying to protect. Nellcor has one too. Masimo's edge was detection during movement. I remember the salesperson waving his hand with one of their sensors on his finger. The reading was spot on.From what I gathered, the hardware did not violate the patent, it was the software that did. I think they should be able to fix that.
I remember the salesperson waving his hand with one of their sensors on his finger. The reading was spot on.
The accuracy of the unit is directly tied to the quality of the detection algorithm. That's what Masimo is trying to protect. Nellcor has one too. Masimo's edge was detection during movement. I remember the salesperson waving his hand with one of their sensors on his finger. The reading was spot on.
We checked it against the reading when it was still. And against the Nellcor product we were using. The Masimo didn't change when he moved.Interesting! How did you know that the “reading was spot on”? What other independent device did the salesperson use to “prove” that?
Does Nelcorr not work during movement?
By the way, you're supposed to sit quietly during the oxygen reading with an Apple Watch, so Apple must not have done a very good job of stealing Masimo's algorithm and intellectual property! 😁
I agree with others — it's a valuable feature and has been validated against medical grade devices! Altjough it reads a bit lower when > 90 and a bit higher when < 90 — the opposite of what one would want. But several of the medical researchers who have studied it concluded that it was a viable way of measuring blood oxygen levels and good for health monitoring.
I'm hoping Apple redesigns the sensors for the next version of the Apple Watch. If it were just software, they would have almost certainly been able to fix it by now.We won't see the feature on the watch again for 2-3 more years+, unless Apple pays the price of admission.
The ban prohibits Apple in the USA from selling the items, not users having it, so as long as you don't buy from an Apple Store in the USA you should get a working watch that continues to functionAs an academic curiosity, if I buy 🇨🇦 Apple Watches with the O2 feature enabled and send them to my 🇺🇸 friends, will this feature be auto-disabled when they; a) pair the watch for the first time, b) gave the first software update or c) never?
I think the feature will be active until the first software update (on their US iPhone/US account, and essentially useless unless able to get 🇨🇦 updates
?? About this
Tom