Child Tracking Device Watch Uk
Weenect Kids works in several different countries and on a number of different mobile networks. The battery should last a full week between charges, too. As for price, the unit itself runs for a relatively affordable €99 (about £78), and that includes your first month of service. After those first 30 days, the service charge is a low as €42.50 (£34) per year, depending on how much you pre-pay.
The PocketFinder works throughout North America and Europe, plus in many Asian and South American countries. The device itself costs $129 (about £82), though the service is a fairly high $12.95 (£8) per month. Overall, it’s a simple device, but it’s inconspicuous and it functions well.
The watch runs on the 2G network, which means it's using GPRS in the U.S. because 2G networks are being shut down. (The company plans to release a 3G version of the watch soon.) For a SIM card, any GSM/GPRS network should work. Cheap SIM cards from US Mobile, Ting, or SpeedTalk are a good bet, but Lil Tracker leaves the research and purchase entirely up to you; the company doesn't offer a package that includes a SIM card or service. (However, our review unit came with a SIM installed and pre-activated.)
One-way calls, called "Sound Guardian" in the app's menu, are kind of like the Drop In feature on Amazon Echo devices. Parents use the app to call the watch, and they can hear what's going on around it, but the watch doesn't ring or make any indication that someone is listening in. This worked well: My son's watch called me right away, and I could tell he was at school — but he didn't know I was calling, so he didn't say anything to me. The sound quality was only so-so and varied based on ambient noise.
The battery on a Paxie Band lasts about a day and a half on a single charge. It’s on the pricey side, at $175 USD (£121) for the device, three bands, a charger, and your first three months of service; after those three months are up, you’re on the hook for $9.95 (about £7) per month. The initial pre-order of Paxie Bands is sold out and set to ship at some point during summer 2016; pre-orders for the next batch should come up soon.
The AngelSense is one of the more popular and beloved kids GPS trackers out there, and for good reason. This thing is packed with features - packed. You can see your kids' routes and transit speed; you'll get notified when they're coming home late or if they're in a new place; and you can listen in to their environment.
There's LTE on board for voice calls, a voice assistant named CLOVA and translation between English, Chinese, Korean and Japanese. Plus there's a range of strap colours and four dog emoji watch faces. This one was announced back in summer 2018, and there hasn't been an update on price, release date or global availability just yet.