#DexcomG7

2026-02-06

Eversense 365: the first two weeks Last week I published my experience with the Eversense 365, an implantable CGM (continuous glucose monitor) that replaced my Dexcom G7. #Reviews #Diabetes #Eversense365 #t1d #Lore #dexcomg7 #continuousglucosemonitor gardinerbryant.com/eversense-36...

Eversense 365: the first two w...

2026-02-05

Eversense 365: the first two weeks

Last week I published my experience with the Eversense 365, an implantable CGM (continuous glucose monitor) that replaced my Dexcom G7....

#Reviews #Diabetes #Eversense365 #t1d #dexcomg7 #continuousglucosemonitor

gardinerbryant.com/eversense-3

Life on the Wicked Stage: Act 3warnercrocker.com@warnercrocker.com
2025-12-30

My Year In The Apple Fruit Basket 2025

2025 was an odd year toiling in Apple’s orchard.

Getting this out of the way upfront, it was a year that Apple’s corporate behavior, personalized by Tim Cook, made me think seriously about looking to fill my computing needs and habits elsewhere. That’s an ongoing discussion I’m having with myself. As it rattles around my brain, I don’t see an alternative that is any better or any worse from a corporate posture point of view. Apple has plenty of company.

From a technology point of view I also don’t see any better alternative beyond reliving my past hobbyist days with Linux that I’m far too old to contemplate. I used to be that geek. I’m not anymore. Aside from communal political knee bending, every tech company’s plunge into the Artificial Intelligence swamp has mucked up everything, everywhere all at once, in one way or another.

I have to touch Windows now and again and every time I do I feel like I need to take a purgative and wash my hands. I feel much the same about Google’s products. Life as a geek was already becoming increasingly more distasteful in the days when it was just the algorithms that enshittified everything, but adding Artificial Intelligence into the mix has created a slop that even hogs are beginning to turn away from. I know that’s all here to stay and I’m honestly sad that it is.

Hardware

This was the first year that I didn’t upgrade much Apple hardware. I don’t think it was a conscious choice correlating with Apple’s corporate behavior, but I won’t rule out my subconscious working against my small contribution to Apple’s bottom line. Let’s put it this way, I didn’t feel the usual gadget lust tugs and twinges over anything Apple announced this year.

I did upgrade to an iPhone 17 Pro and didn’t even think twice about taking a serious look at the iPhone Air. Apparently I wasn’t the only one. There’s nothing really remarkable to say about the 17 Pro. It’s as good and solid as it’s predecessor and if that’s incremental, than incremental is more than enough for me. I think that’s also true for most users.

I did pick up a pair of AirPods Pro 3 and wrote a quick review that you can read here. The battery life on the AirPods Pro 2 was approaching end of life, so it was time, and I use AirPods a lot.

I also upgraded to the Apple Watch Series 11 from the Series 10. It’s not that the Series 11 does anything more remarkable from a technology perspective. It doesn’t. But I’m in sort of a trap of upgrading every year due to the technology I use to monitor my diabetes.

I use the Dexcom G7 sensor that pairs with both my iPhone and Apple Watch to show me and my doctor how I’m doing with my blood sugar readings. I’ve come to rely on the constant monitoring on the Apple Watch app more than I do on the iPhone. But the two devices and their apps are married. On the Apple Watch that constant monitoring takes a heavy toll on Battery Life and Battery Health. Since I’ve been using that technology Battery Health can degrade at or below 70% in a year. That’s enough for me to upgrade every year.

That is an excellent example of one of the pitfalls of Apple’s development pace that drops new operating systems annually, but trickles out fixes over the course of a year. Dexcom developers take quite a bit of time to catch up with new hardware and software. They have to. They are a medical device company. That lag is certainly more acute with a device that monitors medical conditions, but this year’s round of operating system changes have been challenging for developers in all software categories leading us all into a perpetual year of beta software.

Summing up what I feel about Apple’s 2025 hardware releases I’ll leave it this way. Apple continues to make good improvements with each hardware iteration. Quite frankly, I’d be content to see Apple continue iterating the way it has since the dawn of the M-series chip change, but the many voices continually calling for something newer and bolder seem like they’ll have their day in the next few hardware cycles.

The current crop of Apple hardware has matured into the best I’ve seen on the market. Here’s hoping all that’s rumored continues that trend. That said, I don’t really see the appeal of a vastly more expensive folding iPhone beyond it being a regressive retro move and small enough to make it easier to stuff in a pocket. I guess the next big retro innovation will be to bring back mechanical keyboards. But, hey the Commodore 64 also made a come back this year. I’m guessing a folding iPhone will be enough to excite the faithful. For a few months.

Software

Software provided the real color on Apple’s fruit plate this year with what they shipped and what they still haven’t. The Apple Intelligence slices are browning around the edges, leaving an unappetizing anticipation for what may or may not be unveiled. I say “may not” because in Apple’s announcement last spring delaying the rollout of how Apple Intelligence integrates with the “new Siri” there was an important word that most seem to have overlooked. Here’s the statement:

“Siri helps our users find what they need and get things done quickly, and in just the past six months, we’ve made Siri more conversational, introduced new features like type to Siri and product knowledge, and added an integration with ChatGPT. We’ve also been working on a more personalized Siri, giving it more awareness of your personal context, as well as the ability to take action for you within and across your apps. It’s going to take us longer than we thought to deliver on these features and we anticipate rolling them out in the coming year.”

The key word in that statement is “anticipate.” Most conventional assumption makers believe whatever Apple is working on will roll out sometime in the first half of 2026. But that word “anticipate” is a great hedge that only a PR professional or lawyer could love. I don’t doubt the pressure is on to release something. I wouldn’t bet a dime on it happening before WWDC 2026.

As for what Apple Intelligence is currently, it’s still nothing to write home about. Notification summaries remain a comedy gold mine. I think I’ve touched the Writing Tools a few times, but fall back on other proofreading habits and tools. Whatever Siri is or is not doing, it’s gotten worse and even less predictable than it was before. Every time an accidental touch of the camera button light’s up the border of the screen it’s more a reminder of what’s not there than what it was promised to do. Whatever Apple is planning, the current iteration feels like it’s been largely abandoned like a rotting piece of fruit.

Liquid Glass was the feature that did ship. Countless words have proliferated around the Internet about the design change. I’ve written a few myself. My take at year end is that Liquid Glass is neither here nor there.

Legibility issues and design disasters need lots of work and attention, most of which won’t come while the number 26 is still affixed to the operating systems. Devices still work, even though I’m seeing more and more haphazard weirdness as app developers try to play catch up while Apple itself is still trying to chase down its own problems.

Given the leadership turmoil within Apple who knows what Liquid Glass may or may not become in the future. But then who knows what it was actually intended to be in the first place, beyond a distraction from the Apple Intelligence miss. It certainly wasn’t designed to fulfill anything Apple’s marketers thought it might. If there’s harmony in trying to unify things across platforms, someone needs a basic course in music theory.

While I don’t hate Liquid Glass my continuing impression is that it still feels childish in a bubbly sort of way that doesn’t jive with the sophistication that the advanced hardware platforms seem to beg for. That was my first impression when Liquid Glass rolled out, and it was solidified after spending a large junk of time with my grandkids and other relatives’ kids watching them play children’s games on their non-Apple tablets over the holidays.

It may look cool to some, but it feels like undercarriage lighting on a car to me.

There Were Some Good Things

The most important operating system change that Apple made was iPadOS 26, finally instituting, and then continuing to iterate on, a much better windowing system for iPads. 

And, the best new feature on any of the Apple devices I use the most is the Wrist Flick to dismiss a notification on my Apple Watch. It’s simple, it’s effective, it makes sense on all levels. It should have existed earlier. And it should be what Apple aspires to with everything it creates.

Spotlight was given an overhaul offering new features like a clipboard manager. I’m still experimenting with it, but can see how it might replace Raycast in the future if Apple continues iterating on it. It’s a good addition that still needs work.

I think Apple is on to something with the changes it made for the Phone app to try and help alleviate spam calls. I hope they continue to improve this, because as good an effort as it is, I and others still find it confusing. 

Perhaps the best thing about the OS 26 releases beyond that is that all of my devices are working as I anticipate if I look past (not through) Liquid Glass and avoid Apple Intelligence.

Summing Up

In the end, I think 2025 will be considered a lost year for Apple. I maintain that Apple’s ability to take the long view strategically hindered more than it helped. And I think that some of the executive level changes reflect that. But the fact that it takes a long time to see any new substantial change in an already crowded and confused orchard didn’t argue well for the year to be a success. The political posturing alongside the product missteps has led to my personal disgruntlement and I know it has for many others as well.

One of the many Apple mantras that we’ve become accustomed to is that Apple designs its products for 90% of its users. That may indeed still be true. As much as I feel comfortable with steady iteration in hardware and software, it feels to me increasingly that Apple is reaching more and more for innovations that excite the remaining 10%. I get that. And to a degree it’s commendable. But in my experience with the users I support, the majority of those in that 90% probably never even attempt to use many of these new innovations. It’s not a case of reach exceeding grasp in my opinion. Rather, it’s reaching in the wrong direction.

Apple has already made some noise that the next OS versions will be more fixing and futzing rather than feature rich. How could it not be? By the same token, how could it be if, I as feel is increasingly likely, it will be the first time we see what the new Siri and Apple Intelligence will really offer.

I also think Apple and the other tech companies need to pay attention to the warning signs that are starting to bubble up about Artificial Intelligence. I think most of the growing distaste of AI comes not from what these tech companies are offering on computing platforms, but from the day to day encounters people are experiencing in their daily lives as more and more non-tech companies roll out versions of AI support. The way I’m hearing and feeling it, jokes and complaints about AI at holiday gatherings this year are starting to compete in numbers with ones about government and politics.

I don’t think that’s an accomplishment that augurs well.

(First image from Johann Lensless on Shutterstock)

You can also find more of my writings on a variety of topics on Medium at this link, including in the publications Ellemeno and Rome. I can also be found on social media under my name as above.

#Apple #AppleWatch #DexcomG7 #iOS26 #iPad #iPadOS26 #iPhone #LiquidGlass #Tech #technology

2025-12-13

Saturday Morning Ruined

The walk. The birding. The breakfast treat. The relaxed coffee ritual. All of it, just... gone.

islandinthenet.com/saturday-mo

House Finch (Haemorhous mexicanus) on a leafless branch
CindbarCindbar
2025-12-12

hat einen Brief geschickt, dass der Blutzuckersensor nur noch 2026 geliefert wird und ich dann zum wechseln soll.

Funktioniert + und/oder schon mit dem G7?

2025-11-02

Die #dexcomg7 Glucosechips oddyse
Sollte sich jemand überlegen von Freestyle zu Dexcom wechseln zu wollen, der sollte diesen langen Text bis zu Ende lesen 🤮
Aber was will man von ner Ami Firma auch anderes erwarten ?
Aaaaalso fange ich an 😁 ich bin zu Dexcom gewechselt weil die Chips weniger Fehler hatten, als Freestyle.
Irgendwann war mein Altes Handy dann doch altersschwach und ich brauchte nen neues.
Die überraschung war groß als ich merkte daß es für dieses Handy keine App im Store gibt.
1/x

2025-10-11

Anyone use #cgm over patches? Have a #DexcomG7 and having trouble with it staying on my body. I didn't read the reviews for the patches I got, and they don't stick more than a few hours.

2025-10-01

Benutzt jemand von euch den Dexcom G7? Ich habe da ständig Abweichungen von gut 10 % aber leider in beide Richtungen :( Messe danach Stichprobenartig mit dem AccuCheck und da ist das leider bei jeder Messung so.

#diabetes #blutzucker #dexcom #dexcomg7 #accuckeck

2025-06-16

#dexcomg7
Die Odysee des Handykaufes.
Handy putt, dumm gleaufen, neues Handy gekauft Software für den Glucose Chip installieren .....
Weit gefehlt, ist nicht mit dem Gerät kompatiebel.....
Grrr ab zum Händler, hört sich die Armutsgeschichte von wegen.Glucose messchip und fast lebensnotwendig an, is bereit zu tauschen.
Also Internet, kompatibilitätsliste rausgesucht, irgendwann mal eines gefunden, das in der Liste steht. Ab nach hause.
APP installieren......
Weit gefehlt, nicht kompatiebel 1/2

2025-05-03

You Are the Loop

Diabetes tools promise automation, but without real integration, they leave the hard work up to me.

islandinthenet.com/you-are-the

2025-04-10

investors.dexcom.com/news/news

15 day Dexcom G7 is cleared by the FDA. This comes after their recent controversy of release unapproved updates to the G7 earlier this year.

I would have to guess they made some changes to make it actually last that long because... hoboy… there's a reason I "downgraded" to G6.

Page notes potential 26% failure rate.

Due to release second half 2025. Which includes potentially as late as December.

So which will come first: Libre 3 Plus working with Tandem pumps, or the G7 Ultra Max 15 Day or whatever they end up calling it?

#Diabetes #Dexcom #G7 #DexcomG7 #CGM

Diabetes fun at 3:30 AM.
#diabetes #t1d #dexcomg7 #dexcom

Screenshot from a Dexcom continuous glucose monitor (CGM). The graph shows a steady downward trend followed by a sudden jump up to 147 mg/dL at 3:19 AM.
2025-03-20

It’s ATTD again, and here’s another CGM accuracy study…
As seems to have become the norm in the preamble to the Advanced Technologies and Treatments in Diabetes conference, another accuracy study was released in the past month (along with various "new" CGMs getting CE mark clearance).

As ever, all of
diabettech.com/cgm/its-attd-ag
#CGM #ATTD2025 #CGM #CGMAccuracyStudy #DexcomG7 #FreestyleLibre3 #headtohead #MedtronicSimplera

2024-08-22

Been using stock android on a #Google #Pixel 7a for my #dexcomg7 for over a year now, and seriously thinking about moving to iOS after the fuck up that Google have made with their "new" Bluetooth stack.
I lose connection every night between 02:00h and 07:00h. Have missed hypos because alarms don't sound.
Phone is no longer suitable for Continuous Glucose Monitoring.
Are people on Samsung devices seeing these drops?
#t1d #diabetes #cgm #dexcom

GadgetBondgadgetbond
2024-06-05

The CGM system now connects directly to , allowing you to see real-time data without needing your phone nearby.

gadgetbond.com/dexcom-g7-direc

2024-03-28

Comparing Dexcom’s G7 and One+. Is there much difference?
As many people will have seen, Dexcom have been expanding their product line based on the G7 hardware. The replacement for their more budget device, the One, is the One+, and they're using the same hardware for the Stelo, the first US over the counter
diabettech.com/cgm/comparing-d
#CGM #ContinuousGlucoseMonitoring #CGM #ContinuousGlucoseMonitor #Dexcom #DexcomG7 #DexcomOne

2024-03-05

Welcome to the Wild, Wild West: the CGM head-to-head study
In the past at Diabettech, we've talked about how the design of a CGM safety and accuracy study plays a big part in the results that are achieved (Lies, damned lies an
diabettech.com/cgm/welcome-to-
#Abbott #CGM #ContinuousGlucoseMonitoring #Abbott #AbbottFreestyleLibre3 #ATTD2024 #CGM #CGMComparison #ContinuousGlucoseMonitoring #Dexcom #DexcomG7 #HeadToHead #PotentialBias

Julianmarc10julianmarc
2023-08-14

Endlich 👌

2023-06-30

Hmm. An actual low blood sugar event that *felt * like one. Cookies to the rescue. First week on 2mg of Ozempic, too. Hmm. #t2d #Type2Diabetes #dexcomg7 #ozempic

Daniel Neumanremaster
2023-03-12

@shanselman Excited for the G7. From what I heard it would be able to communicate with multiple devices, so you could leave the phone and only use the watch.

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