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Timex Datalink

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The model 150 with steel bracelet (model 69737) in PC-communication mode. The optical sensor is clearly visible at 12 o' clock on the face of the watch. The Microsoft logo is also visible. The wave pattern below the Microsoft logo indicates that the watch is water resistant. The leather strap version of the watch (model 69721) was worn by commander William Shepherd during Expedition 1 and cosmonaut Mikhail Tyurin, Expedition 14, on the ISS.

Timex Datalink or Timex Data Link is a line of early smartwatches manufactured by Timex and is considered a wristwatch computer.[1] It is the first watch capable of downloading information wirelessly from a computer.[2][3] As the name implies, datalink watches are capable of data transfer through linking with a computer.[4] The Datalink line was introduced in 1994 and it was co-developed with Microsoft as a wearable alternative to mainstream PDAs with additional attributes such as water resistance, that PDAs lacked, and easy programmability.[5] The watch was demonstrated by Bill Gates on 21 June 1994 in a presentation where he downloaded information from a computer monitor using bars of light and then showed to the audience the downloaded appointments and other data.[6] The early models included models 50, 70, 150 and model 150s (small size).[5] The model numbers indicated the approximate number of phone numbers that could be stored in the watch memory.[7] These early models were, at the time of their introduction, the only watches to bear the Microsoft logo.[8][9] The watches have been certified by NASA for space travel and have been used by astronauts and cosmonauts in space missions. There had been an evolution over the years as to the number and type of entries that can be stored in the various watch models as well as the mode of data transfer between computer and watch. At the time of its introduction the watch was considered high-tech.[10]

There is also the Timex Beepwear Datalink series, featuring wearable pagers using the Timex datalink platform which also function as electronic organisers.[4][11][12][13][14][15]

Wireless data transfer mode

The evolution of the Datalink line shown with metal bands for easy comparison (left to right in order of chronological appearance): Datalink model 50 (1994), Ironman Triathlon, with the Ironman Triathlon logo on the upper part of the face (1997) and Datalink USB sports edition (2003). The small lens is seen on both model 50 and the Ironman. Note also the inverted circular arch digital display frame design on the model 50, compared to the frame design of the other two models. The Microsoft logo appears at the top, while the Datalink logo appears at the bottom for model 50. The lower button arrangement and platform is the same for both model 50 and Ironman triathlon, but Ironman sports an additional start/split button on its face, indicating its additional chronograph functions. All three models are water resistant to 100 m. The model 50 (Timex models 70502/70518) was worn by astronaut James H. Newman on STS-88.

Although there are other watches capable of storing all kinds of data, most had either a small keyboard[16] or buttons,[17] which could be used to input data. The keyboard was tiny, and the buttons had to be pressed repeatedly to select letters from the alphabet, making data input difficult and tedious and decreasing the toughness and water resistance of the watch.[18] In most cases data was lost when the battery expired.[19]

The Timex Datalink watches downloaded data wirelessly by illuminating a computer screen with a changing display encoding information to transfer, which was detected by the watch's sensor.[5][18] Data on the watch was always copied from the computer; when the battery expired the data could be re-downloaded after battery replacement.[19]

The data files were accessible via the Timex-Microsoft co-developed special Datalink interface that resided in the computer. The absence of a data input interface made the watch compact, and reduced points of possible water entry.

Optical sensor

The watch had a small lens at the top of its face used for data transmission by visible light.[5][20] Data was transmitted from the CRT of the computer through a series of pulsating horizontal bars,[21][22] that were focused by the lens and written to the watch EEPROM memory through an optoelectronic transducer operating in the visible light spectrum and employing optical scanning technology.[23][24]

The CRT synchronization was possible only for systems operating on Windows 95 and Windows 98. The watch was compatible with Microsoft's Schedule+ time management software. For the Datalink 70 model, the time needed to download seventy phone numbers was about twenty seconds.[21][25]

Encoded message

Timex Datalink 50 model 70518 and resin strap of model 70301 with binary ASCII code translating as: "Listen To The Light If You Can See"

On the resin strap of the Timex Datalink 50 model 70301, there is a print with binary numbers which are actually ASCII. The numbers on one half of the strap encode, including capitalization, the text 'Listen To The Light'.[26] The numbers on other half of the strap encode the text 'If You [ASCII-24] See', which, given that ASCII-24 is the 'Cancel' character or just 'CAN', makes the complete message 'Listen To The Light If You Can See'.

The earlier models were the Datalink 50, Datalink 70, Datalink 150 and Datalink 150s, where the "s" was for small and it was intended to be a lady's watch.[5][27] The 150 and 150s models are essentially the same, except that the 150s, having a smaller display, has different display addresses from the 150, and thus it needs its own programming code.[27]

The programming code is provided in the Timex Datalink software v 2.1 for all models.[27] These watches were programmed using the same software and computer GUI. To download the settings to these early models, the user was prompted to choose the relevant watch model number.[28]

Astronaut James H. Newman (right) wears the Timex Datalink 50 model 70502 on STS-88

The menu choices were the same for all models.[28] The only differences were the amount of available memory in the watches, and the quantity of phone numbers, appointments, lists etc. which could be downloaded to each model.[29]

At the time of their introduction, these watches were known as "PIM" watches, i.e. personal information managers.[30] Bill Gates was known as an owner of one,[30] and had also shown the capabilities of the watch on television.[31] The Datalink 150 was also offered as a mail-in gift upon purchase of Office 95.[3]

The model number indicated the maximum number of phone numbers that could be downloaded to the watch. For example, the model 150 could store a maximum of 150 phone numbers if nothing else was stored.[28] Available storage was shared by phone numbers, appointments, anniversaries, lists, wristapps and watch sounds.[28] These models lacked countdown timers or chronographs, but a simple chronograph could be added as an external application also known as a wristapp.[28] The wristapps also included a notepad capable of storing forty words.[32]

Digital display and time zones

The time and date parts of the digital display of the Datalink watches consisted of two main rows of seven segment displays, while the lower portion was a dot matrix display with scrolling capabilities. In time display mode, the dot matrix portion of the display showed the day of the week to the left, and the time zone to the right. The default time zone was indicated as TZ1 (time zone 1), and was fully user customizable to designate any city in the world, usually using IATA naming conventions. The earlier Datalink models featured dual time zone settings.[28] The secondary time zone had the option to become the local (primary) time by pressing and holding a button until the changeover was effected.[28] All Datalink models had the Indiglo night light.[10]

Timex Ironman Triathlon Datalink model 78401 worn by astronaut Daniel T. Barry on the STS-72 Space Shuttle Endeavour and cosmonaut Sergei K. Krikalev, Expedition 1, on the ISS, Maksim Surayev during Expedition 22, and others.
Cosmonaut Maksim Surayev wearing the Timex Ironman Triathlon Datalink model 78041 during Expedition 22 21 January 2010

The earlier models included many PDA-type functions such as anniversaries, appointments and phone directory, but did not have functions such as stopwatch and countdown timer. They had five alarms.[28]

To add functionality, in 1997 Timex introduced the Ironman Triathlon Datalink series with features of the Ironman series, such as a choice of timers, multi-lap stopwatches, and customisable display appearance. The number of alarms increased to 10 in the new series.[33] Messages could be displayed during an alarm, and they could be downloaded to the watch or input manually through scrolling characters, activated by two forward/reverse buttons.[33]

Cosmonaut Sergei Krikalev wearing the Timex Ironman Triathlon Datalink model 78041 during a visit aboard the Space Shuttle Endeavour.

The new features came at the expense of some older ones. For example, the "Anniversary" and "Appointment" modes of the previous Datalink models were no longer available, and the number of phone entries for the Ironman Datalink was reduced to 38, from a maximum of 150 of the older Datalink model 150.[28][33] The "Make a List" function of the Datalink 150 model was also gone. This feature enabled the user to create short lists for various tasks, and import wristapps, special programs with custom applications which could be added to the watch.[28][33]

The optical sensor and the method of data transfer were retained. The display of the new series had the same architecture as that of the older models. As with the earlier models, the Triathlon Datalink included dual time zones with local time selectability. Its battery life was approximately three years under normal use.[28][33]

Notebook adapter

Timex Datalink Notebook Adapters in white and black. The red LED can program the watch by blinking and is visible on the saucer portion of the adapter to the right of the serial port connector

With the advent of portable computers which use active matrix LCD screens which did not refresh like CRT monitors and therefore could not be used for data transfer,[22] in 1997, Timex introduced a notebook adapter that incorporated a red LED and connected with the laptop through the serial port. During download, the LED flashed and the flashing programmed the watch much like the horizontal bars of the CRT.

In addition, systems running on Windows versions other than Windows 95 or Windows 98, such as Windows NT,[33] no longer offered the option of CRT synchronization, making the use of the adapter a requirement even for desktop computers. In addition for systems without a serial port, a USB to serial adapter can be used to connect the Timex adapter to a USB port.

Datalink USB dress edition with a WristApp installed to display time in analog digital format

The Datalink USB was introduced in 2003. It included the Timex Ironman Datalink USB (sport edition) and the Timex Datalink USB (dress edition) models. Apart from their external appearance, and the fact that the sport edition is water-resistant to 100 metres, while the dress edition is water resistant to 30 metres, the two models had identical specifications.

Astronaut Daniel Tani wearing two Datalink USB watches during Expedition 16

Although initially a mild disappointment for the wireless datalink purists, it gained widespread acceptance, because, although now tethered to the computer through the USB port during data transfer, the new watch featured greatly improved data transfer rates, greatly increased memory capacity and many additional and customizable modes of operation, as well as two way communication between the watch and computer.[34]

Its modes are user customizable, with hundreds of phone numbers, alarms and timer settings.[35][36] It also features three time zones,[36] each of which can be chosen as the primary time display with the press of a button.[34] The Datalink USB also introduced data protection through the use of a user generated password,[36] a feature that the earlier models did not offer.[33][34] The USB models also feature a rotating crown known as the Timex i-control.[34]

Wrist apps

Datalink USB Dress edition with Invasion video game wrist app. (Three lives remaining). The watch crown (i-control) can be used to move the defender left to right and the fire control is the Start/Split button on the lower side of face of the watch at 6 o' clock. The pixels of the invaders appear slightly blurred upon picture magnification because of the animation of the aliens. The faint pixels diagonally to the left of the defender block are pixel traces of alien missiles.

The Datalink USB supports software programs developed specifically for the watch similar to its predecessors.[37] These programs are called wrist applications or wrist apps for short, and they are created by independent software developers.[37] Timex has developed an application called WristApp SDK Installer. This application can facilitate the import of any independently developed wrist app into the Datalink USB computer interface, and thus make it part of the downloadable program menu in the GUI of the watch.[37]

Unlike its predecessors, the display of the USB series features full dot matrix architecture with no seven segment display sections. Only a small section at the top right corner uses a nine-segment display layout.[37] Many programs have been developed, and their applications include video games, screen savers, golf score keepers, watch display contrast and scrolling speed adjustment, as well as analog watch displays, phase of the moon calculations and associated display graphics and others.[37] The wristapps are written in assembly language.[38]

Games

Invasion is an example of a game developed specifically for the watch.[37] It is designed along the lines of Space Invaders, created by Jordi Perez.[39] The game has been developed to showcase API instructions for primitive pixel displays such as the one used in the watch.[37] The term primitive refers to displays of low resolution where one can discern the individual pixels.

Screen saver

Among the many programs and utilities which have been developed for the watch, such as football schedules, weather reports and others, there is also a screen saver which blanks out the display of the watch on the minute or the hour, appropriately called Screen Saver – Blank.[37]

Antikythera

Another application called Antikythera emulates some of the functions of the Antikythera mechanism by calculating the phase of the moon. It is accurate to within one day in 500 years. In the future, it will also be able to calculate the sun's position in the zodiac and upcoming eclipses.[40]

Wrist app examples

Space

Timex Datalink is flight certified by NASA for space missions and is one of four watches qualified by NASA for space travel.[42][43][44] The various Datalink models are used both by cosmonauts and astronauts. For instance during Expedition 1 the crew log for January mentions:

Astronaut James H. Newman wears the Timex Datalink model 70502 on STS-88
Expedition 1 commander William Shepherd wears the Timex Datalink 150 on his left wrist

We have been working with the Timex software. Many thanks to the folks who got this up to us. It seems we each have a different version of the datalink watch, and of course, the software is different with each. Yuri and Sergei are able to load up a day's worth of alarms, but Shep has the Datalink 150, and this has a 5 alarm limit. So 2/3 of the crew are now happy. All this is a pretty good argument for training like you are going to fly-we should have caught this one ourselves in our training work on the ground.[45]

In another part of the January log it is mentioned:

Missed a whole comm. pass over White Sands . We need to get the timex watches working so we don't overlook these calls.

while in another segment of the same log:

Cosmonaut Mikhail Tyurin, Expedition 14 flight engineer with the Test of Reaction and Adaptation Capabilities (TRAC) experiment in the Destiny laboratory of the International Space Station wearing Datalink 150 model 69721 in January 2007
Cosmonaut Yuri Gidzenko, Expedition One Soyuz commander wearing Datalink 150 model 69931

As 5A is now delayed, we would like to request the "timex" watch software if it is available on the ground-a file that can be uplinked to us. This will help us manage our day as we can load comm. passes into the watches.

and from the February and March crew log of Expedition 1:

We copy the request from Houston on the timex watches. We will keep using the ones we have onboard-there are some workarounds we can apply that will help the limited "alarm" situation. We don't request any more watches be sent up on 5A, but thanks to all the crew equipment folks for asking. As a heads-up to Exp 2, any plans to use the timex download capability should include more laptop IR transmitters. We have 1 onboard, but more will be required if the next crew wants to fully use this capability.[46]

The laptop IR transmitter mentioned in the February and March crew log is the Timex notebook adapter. "Exp 2" refers to Expedition 2, and the log mentions they may need more notebook adapters for the upcoming expedition.

Ironman Datalink with velcro strap

Due to its unique features and long tradition of innovation and utility, the Datalink watch line has achieved cult-like status among technically minded people. In addition, many websites are dedicated to the programming and information exchange among its many fans. Yahoo groups also exist for fans and software developers alike, especially for the latest Datalink USB series.[47][48]

The early Datalink 50/150 models received a tongue in cheek "[dis]honorable" mention in PC World's "25 Worst Tech Products of All Time" list in 2006 and were inducted in "the high tech hall of shame", with the rationale that "It looked like a Casio on steroids" and "To download data to it, you held it in front of your CRT monitor while the monitor displayed a pattern of flashing black-and-white stripes (which, incidentally, also turned you into the Manchurian Candidate)", referring to the earlier, flashing CRT method of data transfer, adding that "Depending on your point of view, it was either seriously cool or deeply disturbing".[49]

Timex Datalink watches are referred to as "classics" and as "worn by astronauts to the moon" in Jeffery Deaver's crime thriller novel The Burning Wire.[50]

They are also featured at the online exhibit of the National Museum of American History.[51]

Awards

  • Popular Science's Best of What's New Award (1995) (Watch award).[5]
  • Design and Engineering Award from Popular Mechanics (1995) (Watch award).[5][23]
  • Innovations '97 awards (Awarded to both the Data Link Notebook Adapter and the Timex Data Link 150S watch).[5]
  • Byte Magazine Best of Comdex award.[44]
  • R&D Magazine Top 100 Products.[44]
  • Windows Magazine Outstanding Technology Award.[44]
Timex Datalink Beepwear Pro

The Timex Beepwear Datalink series features wearable pagers, using the Timex datalink platform. These watches also function as electronic organisers.[4][11][12][13][14][15][52] The Beepware series is patented and was the product of a joint Timex-Motorola effort which resulted in a new company called Beepwear Paging Products.[53][54][55][56] The Beepwear marketing motto was: "One beeping great watch".[57] It was the first watch/pager able to receive alphanumeric messages.[58][59] It operates in the 900 MHz band.[60] Beepware also featured FLEXtime which, if supported by the service provider, could synchronise the time of the watch with that of the network.[14] It could also automatically adjust to the time zone of the wearer.[58]

Cited references

  1. ^ Lyle M. Spencer (30 August 1995). Reengineering Human Resources: Achieving Radical Increases in Service Quality--with 50% to 90% Cost and Head Count Reductions. Wiley. p. 39. ISBN 978-0-471-01535-2. Retrieved 18 November 2012. A wristwatch computer with wireless communication abilities, the Timex Data-Link, is already being sold by a joint venture of Timex and Microsoft. Beyond wristwatch computers are computer chips implanted directly into human bodies.
  2. ^ Richard B. McKenzie (11 April 2001). Trust on Trial: How the Microsoft Case Is Reforming the Rules of Competition. Basic Books. p. 137. ISBN 978-0-7382-0481-9. Retrieved 18 November 2012. First business-productivity application to incorporate multimedia 1991 Word 2.0 for Windows: First major word processor to offer drag- and-drop 1 993 IntelliSense: First "intelligent" user-assistance technology 1994 Microsoft-Timex DataLink First watch to accept information from a computer.
  3. ^ a b Tim Ellis (14 April 2015). "Apple Watch? Whatever. Reviewing the Timex Datalink, the world's first smartwatch". geekwire.com. Released in 1994, the Timex Datalink was the first watch to synchronize personal data from a computer. Yes, I have one, and that's my wrist pictured above.
  4. ^ a b c David W. Conklin (20 July 2005). Cases in the Environment of Business: International Perspectives. SAGE. p. 63. ISBN 978-1-4129-1436-9. Retrieved 17 November 2012.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h "Timex Corporation History". Funding Universe. Disqus. 1999. Retrieved 15 July 2013. The following year, Timex debuted the 150S, a smaller model of the Timex Data Link. This updated version, featuring a software program developed in conjunction with Microsoft, included WristApps, an application capable of downloading data.
  6. ^ "BUSINESS TECHNOLOGY; Timex and Microsoft Team Up on a Watch". The New York Times. 22 June 1994.
  7. ^ Mademoiselle. Condé Nast Publications. 1999. Retrieved 17 November 2012. Timex Data Link system downloads and stores up to 150 names and numbers. See at www.beepwear.com.
  8. ^ Personal Computing History: ...incidentally the only watch that bears the name of Microsoft on its front panel (via Internet Archive)
  9. ^ Slashdot: ...the Timex-Microsoft watch PDA...Microsoft and Timex introduced one of the first consumer PDAs
  10. ^ a b Hearst Magazines (November 1994). Popular Mechanics. Hearst Magazines. p. 44. ISSN 0032-4558. Retrieved 18 November 2012. among the more high-tech entries is Timex's Data Link. Developed in conjunction with software giant Microsoft and chip-maker Motorola, the Data Link allows you to easily transfer information from your computer to your watch. Specifically, you ...
  11. ^ a b Fred Fishkin with Bootcamp (February 11, 2009). "Pager & Organizer Built Into a Watch". CBS News. Retrieved 18 November 2012.
  12. ^ a b "beepwear". Timex.com.
  13. ^ a b Bonnier Corporation (April 1998). Popular Science. Bonnier Corporation. p. 20. ISSN 0161-7370. Retrieved 17 November 2012.
  14. ^ a b c Hearst Magazines (May 2000). Popular Mechanics. Hearst Magazines. p. 90. ISSN 0032-4558. Retrieved 17 November 2012.
  15. ^ a b Woodrow Barfield; Woodrow Barfield Thomas Caudell (2001). Fundamentals of Wearable Computers and Augmented Reality. Psychology Press. p. 500. ISBN 978-0-8058-2902-0. Retrieved 17 November 2012.
  16. ^ Manual for Casio watch module 2888, typical databank watch with keyboard input
  17. ^ Manual for Casio watch module 2747, typical databank watch with button input
  18. ^ a b Kiplinger Washington Editors, Inc. (June 1996). Kiplinger's Personal Finance. Kiplinger Washington Editors, Inc. p. 120. ISSN 1528-9729. Retrieved 18 November 2012. SCHEDULING AT THE FLICK OF YOUR WRIST Wrist-based organizers that store data banks of phone numbers, schedule appointments and manage to-do lists have been around for a while. The difference with the Timex Data Link ($130) is how you get all this minutiae into the watch. ... Instead of fiddling with pinpoint-size buttons on a postage- stamp keyboard, you simply point the watch at your personal-computer screen. {{cite book}}: |author= has generic name (help)
  19. ^ a b Edwards, Benj (April 15, 2012). "The Digital Watch: A Brief History". Retrieved 18 November 2012. Watches with built-in database functionality first appeared on the market in the 1980s, but they weren't very useful without a way to transfer the data to and from a more permanent medium like a computer (otherwise, the watches would lose their data if the batteries died). Timex solved this problem in an innovative way, with the Data Link 150, which allowed the user to transfer information from a PC to the watch via an optical sensor on the watch's face.94) Watches with built-in database functionality first appeared on the market in the 1980s, but they weren't very useful without a way to transfer the data to and from a more permanent medium like a computer (otherwise, the watches would lose their data if the batteries died). Timex solved this problem in an innovative way, with the Data Link 150,
  20. ^ IDG Enterprise (16 December 1996). Computerworld. IDG Enterprise. p. 104. ISSN 0010-4841. Retrieved 18 November 2012. TIMEX DATALINK WATCH When I first got Timex Corp. 's watch (www.timex.com), I ea My wasn't sure why I would want to use it. But after I had the $130 watch in my office for a few days, it was clear to me that this is a timepiece to lust after.
  21. ^ a b Bonnier Corporation (October 1994). Popular Science. Bonnier Corporation. p. 14. ISSN 0161-7370. Retrieved 18 November 2012. Timex and Microsoft hove teamed up on the Timex Data Link, a watch that downloads data by light pulses when it's pointed at a personal information manager's calendar, phone book, or ttxlo list on a desktop computer screen. In about 20 ...
  22. ^ a b Hearst Magazines (January 1995). Popular Mechanics. Hearst Magazines. p. 41. ISSN 0032-4558. Retrieved 18 November 2012. DATA LINK WATCH Tlmex Corp. Wristwatches are telling much more than time these days. Timex's Data Link uses optical scanning technology and built-in programming software to easily transfer information — appointments, phone numbers, ...
  23. ^ New York Media, LLC (20 March 1995). New York Magazine. New York Media, LLC. p. 58. ISSN 0028-7369. Retrieved 18 November 2012. S. FELDMAN HOUSEWARES/ 1304 Madison Avenue, near 92nd Street/289- It's All in the Timex You don't necessarily have to throw away your Filofax or your Sony Magic Link, but once you have a Timex Data-Link watch on your wrist, your...
  24. ^ Kiplinger Washington Editors, Inc. (October 1996). Kiplinger's Personal Finance. Kiplinger Washington Editors, Inc. p. 108. ISSN 1528-9729. Retrieved 18 November 2012. to the Timex Data Link personal-organizer wrist watch (see "Technology," June). It also comes with tools to organize your life along the lines of Stephen Covey's The Seven Habits of Highly Effective People. One disadvantage of Schedule + ... {{cite book}}: |author= has generic name (help)
  25. ^ Picture of model 70301 with resin strap (Including capitalization the visible code in the picture reads: "Listen T")
  26. ^ a b c Datalink 150 Open Source Development Tools Developer website
  27. ^ InfoWorld Media Group, Inc. (16 December 1996). InfoWorld. InfoWorld Media Group, Inc. p. 93. ISSN 0199-6649. Retrieved 17 November 2012. PIM WATCH Timex Data Link 1 50 I he latest entry in Timex's combination watch and personal information manager (PIM) lineup is the Timex Data Link 150. A thorough redesign of the original, the Data Link 150 has twice as much storage...
  28. ^ a b CXO Media (May 1997). CIO. CXO Media, Inc. p. 110. ISSN 0894-9301. Retrieved 18 November 2012. Even Bill Gates has one: a personal information manager designed to look like a wristwatch. The Timex Data Link Watch, the product of a collaboration between Microsoft Corp. and Timex Corp., not only shows you how much time you have...
  29. ^ Elizabeth Olson (1996). Microsoft Exchange Plain and Simple. Sybex. p. 267. ISBN 978-0-7821-1873-5. Suppose you bought the Timex Data Link watch Bill Gates demonstrated so dramatically on television.
  30. ^ IDG Enterprise (15 July 1996). Computerworld. IDG Enterprise. p. 135. ISSN 0010-4841. Retrieved 18 November 2012. Timex in Middlebury, Conn., has upgraded the Timex Data Link watch, which uses wireless technology to download info-nuggets such as telephone numbers and appointment dates from a PC to the watch. Anew version provides more
  31. ^ CIO. 1 December 2005. p. 28. Retrieved 18 November 2012. The Times of Your Life The Ironman Datalink watch from Timex doubles as a personal organizer. A USB link connects the ... A bonus for frequent travelers: The watch keeps track of three different time zones. Find additional details at ...
  32. ^ a b c Timex Datalink USB product specs
  33. ^ Wristapp details
  34. ^ Jordi Pérez (Freelance developer of entertainment software) Archived 2011-09-03 at the Wayback Machine
  35. ^ Antikythera app message 8838 in Timex Datalink USB Yahoo Group (signup as group member required for viewing)
  36. ^ Wrist app development site
  37. ^ NASA Explores.com from Internet archive Article 5-8 Quote: "Astronauts have a choice of four watches that are certified to fly in space, says Stephanie Walker, subsystem manager for flight crew equipment at Johnson Space Center. These watches are off-the-shelf models that can be purchased at retail stores. "The certification process assures that they can perform and not self-destruct in the vacuum of space. With pressure variances and temperature extremes, watch components may expand, rupture, or crack, causing a potential hazard to the crew." and "The new watch for astronauts is the Timex Ironman. This cutting-edge timepiece sells for less than $100. It has a light-emitting diode (LED) port to synchronize up to 10 alarms to the calendar of a personal computer, stores 38 telephone numbers, identifies messages, displays the time in two different time zones, and comes close to serving as a wrist computer, Walker says." Courtesy of NASA's Space Operations Mission Directorate Published by NASAexplores: May 2, 2002 Retrieved 21 June 2008
  38. ^ NASA Explores Article 9-12 Quote: "Astronauts are permitted to check the watches out before launch, take them home to familiarize themselves with a watch's operation, and in the case of the Ironman, program data into the memory." Courtesy of NASA's Space Operations Mission Directorate Published by NASAexplores: May 2, 2002 Retrieved 14 Oct 2009 via Internet Archive
  39. ^ a b c d Assorted pictures of Datalink including model 50 in space missions (Including the model 78401 worn by astronaut Daniel T. Barry on the STS-72 Space Shuttle Endeavour launched January 11, 1996)
  40. ^ Expedition One January Crew Log
  41. ^ Expedition One February and March Crew Log
    February and March Crew Log in pdf form
  42. ^ Timex Developer Yahoo Group
  43. ^ PC World's The 25 Worst Tech Products of All Time Archived 2008-07-03 at the Wayback Machine
  44. ^ Jeffery Deaver (1 June 2010). The Burning Wire: A Lincoln Rhyme Novel. Simon and Schuster. p. 372. ISBN 978-1-4391-5633-9. Retrieved 18 November 2012. The date, the phases of the moon, the equinox, chimes." Logan was surprised. Rhyme added, "Oh, I've studied watchmaking too." Close to you . . . "The Timex Data Link. You know it?" "No", Rhyme said. "They are classics now-wristwatches that link to your computer. Telling the time is only one of a hundred things they can do. Astronauts have worn them to the moon."
  45. ^ "Organizing Time". National Museum of American History. Retrieved 8 December 2012. Electronic personal organizer, 1990s; a Data Link watch by Timex Corp., Waterbury, Connecticut, in collaboration with Microsoft Corp., Redmond, Washington; combining a timekeeper with a scheduling database that users download from their personal computers
  46. ^ U.S. News & World Report. U.S. News Publishing Corporation. 1999. Retrieved 17 November 2012. PERSONAL TECH Beepwear PRO ($159), made by Timex and Motorola, is going mainstream. The watch combines the functions of wireless pager and palmtop computer on your wrist for less than the price of a Palm organizer. The slightly
  47. ^ Henry Assael (2004). Consumer behavior: a strategic approach. Houghton Mifflin. ISBN 978-0-618-22215-5. Retrieved 17 November 2012. In 1998, Timex entered a joint arrangement with Motorola and introduced "Beepwear" functionality for its executive technology watches.2 This is yet another example of Timex introducing a watch based on a consumption situation
  48. ^ Computer Buyer's Guide and Handbook. Computer Information Pub. 1999. Retrieved 17 November 2012. Motorola and Timex have formed a new company, Beepwear Paging Products, and taken a step toward revolutionizing the wristwatch. The group's new line of pagers, Beepwear, is short on aesthetics but long on handiness. As a watch, the...
  49. ^ Corporate Report. Corporate Report Inc. 1998. Retrieved 17 November 2012. Beepwear from Timex and Motorola combines a watch and an alphanumeric pager that receives both phone numbers and short text messages
  50. ^ Official Gazette of the United States Patent and Trademark Office: Trademarks. U.S. Department of Commerce, Patent and Trademark Office. 1997. Retrieved 17 November 2012.
  51. ^ Adweek: Western advertising news. A/S/M Communications. 1998. Retrieved 17 November 2012. Small type at the bottom delivers the news: "Timex and Motorola introduce the first full-text message pager in a watch." Do you immediately ... of the watch face? Meanwhile, the coy vulgarity of beepwear's motto — "One beeping great watch"
  52. ^ a b Newsweek. Newsweek. 1999. Retrieved 17 November 2012. Wristwatches are getting more wired. Timex and Motorola's new Beepwear Pro pager/ watch (www. beepwear .com) is the first to accept text messages in addition to numeric ones. It can even automatically adjust to the time zone you're in.
  53. ^ Bottom Line, Personal. Boardroom Reports. January 2000. Retrieved 17 November 2012. Timex, this watch stores phone numbers and your calendar... and sends and receives alphanumeric pages using SkyTel's nationwide network. Watchface diameter:
  54. ^ Vibe Media Group (February 1998). Vibe. Vibe Media Group. p. 114. ISSN 1070-4701. Retrieved 17 November 2012. With Beepwear, Motorola and Timex have conspired to bring you the coolest watch this side 1 of a G-Shock. A 2 watch pager to * savor, Beepwear V ($129) can be ^. activated in all parts of the United States, courtesy of its gooMhzband. Plus ...