AirTag
Site oficial: https://www.apple.com/pt/airtag
Apple AirTag arrives for $29, uses Ultra Wideband and does Emoji
After many an Apple event came and went without an AirTag announcement, Apple finally unveiled the smart tracker.
AirTag is a small and light tracker with built-in Ultra Wideband technology to communicate its location to Apple's Find My app.
The AirTag is IP67 water and dust resistant, has a speaker and a user-replaceable CR2032 standard battery with over a year of endurance.
The AirTag connects to Apple's Find My app on iPhone 11 and 12 series, which shows the tracker's last known location on a map. If it's in Bluetooth range you can ring it using the phone or Siri.
If the AirTag isn't nearby it can be tracked using a combination of its built-in U1 chip and Ultra Wideband technology. Apple calls this Precision Finding and it uses input from the camera, ARKit, accelerometer and gyroscope. You're guided to the tag by a combination of sound, haptics and visual feedback.
Additionally you can set the AirTag as lost and if it comes into range of another iPhone with the Find My app (in a country which supports the Find My network and doesn't restrict Ultra Wideband), it will be notified with your contact information. Like Samsung's Galaxy SmartTag+, the AirTag can anonymously and securely use other phones to update its location.
Navigating using AirTag
Apple has a range of accessories in place for the AirTag, like the Polyurethane Loop, Leather Loop and Leather Key Ring. An exclusive AirTag Hermes edition comes with handcrafted leather accessories like the Bag Charm, Key Ring, Travel Tag, and Luggage Tag.
The AirTag will go on sale on April 30 - a single tag will go for $29, but you can also get a four pack for $99. For buyers in India the prices are INR3,190 and INR10,900, respectively.
Site oficial: https://www.apple.com/pt/airtag
Apple AirTag arrives for $29, uses Ultra Wideband and does Emoji
After many an Apple event came and went without an AirTag announcement, Apple finally unveiled the smart tracker.
AirTag is a small and light tracker with built-in Ultra Wideband technology to communicate its location to Apple's Find My app.
The AirTag is IP67 water and dust resistant, has a speaker and a user-replaceable CR2032 standard battery with over a year of endurance.
The AirTag connects to Apple's Find My app on iPhone 11 and 12 series, which shows the tracker's last known location on a map. If it's in Bluetooth range you can ring it using the phone or Siri.
If the AirTag isn't nearby it can be tracked using a combination of its built-in U1 chip and Ultra Wideband technology. Apple calls this Precision Finding and it uses input from the camera, ARKit, accelerometer and gyroscope. You're guided to the tag by a combination of sound, haptics and visual feedback.
Additionally you can set the AirTag as lost and if it comes into range of another iPhone with the Find My app (in a country which supports the Find My network and doesn't restrict Ultra Wideband), it will be notified with your contact information. Like Samsung's Galaxy SmartTag+, the AirTag can anonymously and securely use other phones to update its location.
Navigating using AirTag
Apple has a range of accessories in place for the AirTag, like the Polyurethane Loop, Leather Loop and Leather Key Ring. An exclusive AirTag Hermes edition comes with handcrafted leather accessories like the Bag Charm, Key Ring, Travel Tag, and Luggage Tag.
The AirTag will go on sale on April 30 - a single tag will go for $29, but you can also get a four pack for $99. For buyers in India the prices are INR3,190 and INR10,900, respectively.
Apple accidentally leaks AirTags in one of its own how-to videos
Last year, a report surfaced that Apple was working on developing Bluetooth trackers with the name "AirTag", much like the square Tile. This is a small device that helps you locate the things you tag the Tiles like a set of keys, a backpack, or even a bicycle. The Tile community could help track down your lost item.
Some iOS 13 code found by 9To5Mac last year revealed news that Apple was working on its own version of these Tile trackers, supposedly called AIrTags. Now, Apple just accidentally revealed the AirTag’s existence.
Source: Apple via YouTube
In a support video (Now taken down) that Apple posted titled “How to erase your iPhone”, as the demonstration shows how to disable Find My iPhone, an option called “Enable Offline Finding” reveals a description that mentions the AirTag.
"Offline finding enables this device and AirTags to be found when not connected to Wi-Fi or cellular"
iOS 13 already added a way to track a lost iPhone via a Bluetooth beacon signal that it can transmit. These AirTags could work in the same way. Once attached to any item, much like Tiles, they’d transmit a Bluetooth signal that can be picked up by other devices to help track the item down.
Supposed design of "AirTag" via 9to5Mac
There’s no timeframe for when Apple would put these AirTags up for sale, but given the timing of a new “iPhone 9” set to be coming soon, it may be announced alongside that. If not, we’d perhaps be waiting until WWDC, set to take place digitally sometime in June.
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