Tile has more or Polandless defined the "personal object tracking" category with its range of Bluetooth trackers that you clip or attach to various things (like house keys) to keep from misplacing them. By connecting these beacons with an iOS or Android device, you can easily find your things by "ringing" them. However, its Achilles' heel of the devices is that they eventually stop working because their batteries aren't replaceable.
Now Tile can say goodbye to that weakness. The Tile Mate and Tile Pro, announced this morning, have user-replaceable batteries. (Tile is keeping its $25 and $35 price points, respectively, and will kick off orders today.)
SEE ALSO: Lost keys could be a thing of the past thanks to this nifty trackerThe upgrade fixes the main issue that users won't have to buy a new Tile each time one dies. A watch battery (CR1632 or CR2032) now powers the Tile, and those are widely available. This is also better for the environment since every Tile won't be thrown out when the battery dies.
I met with Simon Fleming-Wood, the chief experience officer at Tile, and he told me that the implementation of a battery took several tries. Eventually, the team decided to incorporate a sliding door in way so you won't need a tool to open it, and the battery won't fall out by accident. The battery in the box is guaranteed to last for one year.
Sound and Bluetooth connectivity range has also been improved. Both models have a louder speaker, and you can also customize the volume within the app. The Mate has a 150-foot connection, and the Pro now has a range of 300 feet. Despite these three new features, the price stays the same, and the devices aren't any bigger.
Along with the new hardware, Tile is introducing a subscription service. Tile Premium is meant to provide peace of mind, dedicated support, and better alerts. The service is $2.99 a month or $29.99 for a full year. Subscribers will get an automatic replacement battery to arrive before the current battery dies, with the battery and shipping cost covered. They'll also get an 30-day location history for each Tile device (including third-party products). In addition to traditional email or chat support, they'll get a number to text as well.
Smart Alerts, along with the battery replacements, are probably the most significant benefit. You can now switch on alerts to be notified if you leave your home without a specific Tile. It still uses the same Bluetooth technology to track a Tile, but in this case, you set up a geofence around your home. With it set up, if you leave without your keys that have a Tile Mate on them, it can ping you. Luckily you can turn this on for select Tiles since you might not want to bring everything with you. The geofence is a beta feature for all premium users.
We'll be doing a deep dive into Tile Premium, as well as the new Mate and Pro, in a full review arriving soon.
Topics Bluetooth
If you're buying the Kara Swisher book on Amazon, make sure it's not an AIThe White House is cracking down on brokers selling your data to China and RussiaFishermen find an 18MediaTek's realNYT's The Mini crossword answers for February 28Best Samsung Galaxy Buds 2 deal: Save 33%Why are we working on Leap Day? February 29 should be a national holiday.Google is shutting down the YouTube Kids app for TVGoogle Trends data shows interest in the total solar eclipse around USNew species of sunfish discovered by scientist in New ZealandIf you're buying the Kara Swisher book on Amazon, make sure it's not an AIThe largest animal ever to walk the Earth gets a nameGalaxy AI: Any Android, iOS phone can try it now. Here’s how.Luggage deals: Save on carryDon't buy a new MacBook Air, iPad – updates are reportedly around the cornerEven more historic NASA flight footage is up on YouTubeAI isn't your boss. It isn't a worker. It's a tool.Nothing Phone 2a design revealed: Still transparent, still pretty coolBest speaker deal: Save $80 on the Marshall Stanmore IIIMeet the people using fish antibiotics as a cheap alternative to American healthcare To Witness the End of Time by Namwali Serpell The Mournfulness of Cities by David Searcy Poets on Couches: Rita Dove Reads Ingeborg Bachmann by Rita Dove The List as Body: A Collection of Queer Writing from ‘The Paris Review’ Everything Writes Itself: An Interview with Black Thought by David Ma Redux: Seventy Memories by The Paris Review Seeing and Being Are Not the Same by Elisa Gabbert Celebrating Juneteenth in Galveston by Clint Smith Unbearable Reading: An Interview with Anuk Arudpragasam by Mira Braneck Picture Books as Doors to Other Worlds by Elissa Washuta On Immolation by Aisha Sabatini Sloan Staff Picks: Cornets, Collections, and Corn Tempura by The Paris Review The Dogs of Plaza Almagro by Hebe Uhart Cooking with C. L. R. James by Valerie Stivers Staff Picks: Sweaters, Sisters, and Sounds by The Paris Review Every Poem Has Ancestors by Joy Harjo On the Faces of Strangers: Michaël Borremans’s Pandemic Portrait by John Vincler Redux: The Name like a Net in His Hands by The Paris Review Redux: Without Wanting to Live Forever by The Paris Review Procrastination, Pressure, and Poetry: An Interview with Kendra Allen by Lauren Kane