Skip to main content

Apple AirTag will track down missing gadgets and valuables for $29

Apple just announced its long-awaited AirTag, which we’ve been hearing whispers about since the fall of 2019, during the Apple Spring Loaded event. These types of Bluetooth trackers have been done before without widespread traction, but Apple’s interpretation is poised to help us never forget where we left our keys.

The circular-shaped, Tile-like accessory will integrate with the “Find My” app to give owners the ability to sniff out the AirTag, along with whatever it’s attached to — whether it’s your wallet or Nintendo Switch, Apple’s AirTag will help you track them down. While trackers have been around for a long time now, some of the main challenges have been their limited range and bulky size. Apple’s AirTag features a built-in speaker, an IP67 water-resistance rating, Apple’s U1 chip, and a user-replaceable battery that’s rated to offer over a year of battery life — all packaged into a compact and personalized design.

The IP67 water-resistance rating is interesting, just because it means added durability if it’s somehow left outdoors and at the mercy of the weather. You won’t have to worry about it getting wet or damaged, so it opens up the opportunity to attach it to other things besides your valuables or gadgets. It could be the best way to keep track of your pets, too, if they get too far away from you.

Apple

Diving into the magic behind the AirTag’s ability to be tracked, the Apple-designed U1 chip leverages Ultra Wideband technology for determining precise location via Precision Finding on the iPhone 11 and 12 series phones. If an AirTag is out of Bluetooth range, the “Find My” app will help users track it down. They’ll be able to do this thanks to Precision Finding, which gathers data from the camera, ARKit, accelerometer, and gyroscope to guide them to an AirTag’s location through a combination of haptics, visual feedback, and sounds.

However, if it’s outside of that range and lost, like if fell off while strolling through the park, the Find My network’s vast coverage will allow any iPhone user who may come across it to get in touch with the owner. All that’s needed is to tap the AirTag using their iPhone or any NFC-enabled device, where they’ll be directed to a website where the owner’s details will be provided (assuming the owner has provided the information initially).

Apple

Keeping track of what’s important for you can be made easier with Apple AirTag, which will be available on April 30 for $29 for a single AirTag — or $99 for a four-pack. Those who purchase it from Apple’s website or through the Apple Store app will have the option to personalize an AirTag with free engraving. There will also be an assortment of accessories for purchase as well, ranging from a polyurethane loop to an elegant AirTag Hermès handcrafted leather accessory.

John Velasco
John is the Smart Home editor at Digital Trends covering all of the latest tech in this emerging market. From uncovering some…
Apple rolls out another promised AirTag safety update
Person holding an Apple AirTag.

Apple has finally rolled out a promised update to its AirTag tracker that allows AirTags to chime with louder tones when separated from their owner's iPhone or other Apple device. The company had promised this as part of a package of updates in February, and the first such feature is rolling out.

"Tuning the unwanted tracking sound to more easily locate an unknown AirTag," Apple notes in the changelog for version 1.0.301. Alongside these changes, Apple has worked on other improvements to make AirTags less attractive as a stalking tool. The company has rolled out a new Tracker Detect app for Android users, as well as promised to increase precision in tracking unknown AirTags.

Read more
Apple’s AirTags keep being tagged in domestic abuse cases
Apple AirTag close up.

Apple's AirTags are in the news once more due to their misuse by perpetrators of domestic abuse. Despite, or perhaps because of, Apple's updates to iOS, there have been increasing reports of ArTags being used for stalking. A report from Motherboard this week, citing police records over a period of 8 months since the AirTag launched, found over a hundred police reports which included AirTags. A third of those, about 50, included women who suspected they were being stalked by a man in their life.

To recap, Apple's AirTags are small unobtrusive little discs that are meant to be attached to items allowing you to find them if misplaced. Apple has categorically ruled out tracking people without consent and retrieving stolen items as uses for AirTags, yet these are common (and obvious) use cases for AirTags.

Read more
Tile rolls out anti-stalking tool in wake of AirTags scandal
Tile Pro white on key.

Tile has just announced a new feature coming to its iOS and Android apps called Scan and Secure. It aims to help users keep abreast of attempts to surveil and track them using Tile's trackers. This move comes after Apple has faced criticism over its own AirTags being used in incidents of theft or stalking globally.

Tile's new Scan and Secure feature is available as part of the Tile app with a Tile account not being required. Once installed, you're able to run the tool and let it manually detect if there's a Tile-enabled device on you somewhere. The company notes that tracking people without their knowledge is against its terms of service, adding that it may also be illegal in many regions.

Read more