Child Tracking Device Australia
When a Lone Worker is wearing one of our small devices they, their families and co workers have true peace of mind knowing that they are never truely alone whilst at work, knowing that help is only ever the SOS button press away.
Tinitell is a single button wrist child tracking device which comes with its GPS and bluetooth locator. It also comes with iPhone and Android applications that can be used to track the movement of your child. It also allows parents to communicate with the child over the device itself with the press of a button.
HereO also allows you to set a geo-fenced safe zone so that when your child crosses the boundary, an alert is sent to your device. There's also a monthly subscription of around $5. Heads up, the HereO is currently unavailable on Amazon.
NEW VERSION TickTalk is a great child tracking device which can also double up as smartphones and watches! They can be worn on the wrist just as a regular watch and provide consistent GPS location updates in real-time.
Parents can now track the exact position of their children anywhere in the world using the advanced technology built into the Wonbo Kids Smart Watch Q50. This smartwatch tells the time, delivers some apps and also acts as a fully functional child tracking device. This smartwatch can provide the exact location of a child in real time through GPS.
Young children wander off: one minute they’re there playing, you rummage through your bag for something and the next minute they’re not where you last looked. It’s not just younger kids either, and knowing exactly where your children are when they’re old enough to leave the house without parents is sometimes tricky.
The Buddy Tag uses Bluetooth instead of GPS, making it one of the more affordable options on this list. While you can use it in as a normal kid tracker, it's also touted as a device that helps prevent drowning. There's a panic alarm for the child to contact parents if they're in a threatening situation, along with a personal ID to help reunite a lost child with the parents.
The Gator is a UK version of a popular Chinese children's smartwatch. If communication is your main concern, it offers 12 month or rolling contracts for its multi-network plans that use whichever signal is strongest. That means you should always be in contact with your kids.
And if the little one ever has a panic attack, he or she simply hits the SOS button and a message is sent to the parent and up to ten authorised users. Subscription charges start at $15 per month. However, this one is unavailable on Amazon right now, but it still is available on the Amber Alert website.
While being touted as a good alternative to a smartphone — eliminating the risks of social media access, photo-sharing and potential contact with strangers. But I still feel a bit off about it, it's hard to articulate why, but I just can't shake it.