Child Tracking Device Watch Uk
This cute kids smartwatch, Naver Labs' AKI, is powered by the same Samsung processor that's in the Gear S3 and it also uses Samsung's Wi-Fi positioning system to locate kdis wearing one both indoors and outdoors.
When I put the Trax Play in my son's backpack, I received a notification when he left the geofenced area that I named "home" as well as when he arrived at the area I named "school." (Yes, you can set up multiple geofences within the Trax app.) There's also an option to set a perimeter around your phone and alert you when the tracker gets too far away from you.
The app (which, weirdly, is called SeTracker2, not Lil Tracker, on iOS and Android) has a lot of other features, too. Some are a lot more important than others. Useful features include the ability to set multiple geofences, track route histories and remove detection alerts (though mine went off when my son took off the watch because his wrist was getting sweaty). The watch can track steps taken and distance, estimate calories burned and count how many times your child turns over in her sleep. (But the watch is pretty bulky to keep on at night, and you need to charge it overnight.) You can send text chats to the watch, including emoji if your child isn't a reader yet. They can't text you back, though.
While these features are certainly useful, Canary isn’t designed for continual real time tracking — it activates only when your child is moving at 12 miles per hour or faster. This is largely to conserve the battery life of your phone. However, it is a free app, and when used in conjunction with an app like Find my Friends, it can be a worthwhile part of a complete app-driven child tracking system.
Designed for kids aged 3 - 11, it has 2-way calling and messaging so kids can keep in contact with up to 10 contacts approved by the parents. Naturally, there's location tracking and GPS boundaries that parents can set up. You're also getting a 1.3-inch 240 x 240 AMOLED display with 4 - 7 days of battery life.
While there’s no texting, calling, or talkback features on a Paxie Band, it can do quite a few other things that are useful when keeping track of your child’s whereabouts. For starters, there’s customisable boundary setting and notifications if your child goes outside of the safe zone you define. It also tracks things like how many steps your child takes in a day, which is helpful if you’re trying to monitor his or her fitness level. Plus, tracking of ambient temperature and heart rate lets you know if he or she is getting to hot or overexerted — a big safety feature if you’re concerned about heat stroke or exhaustion. Finally, there’s a band removal alert if your kid decides to go off the grid, so to speak.
AngelSense has also added some new features just this year. 2-Way Voice allows users to instantly call and speak to your child if you need to, an ETA feature lets you know when your kid is on the way home and the new Timeline Map promises better visibility of your child's routes.