Seek (with Bluetooth) and Ye Shall Find: Tile and Stick-N-Find

Posted on: January 13th, 2014 by Julie Bestry | No Comments

Getting organized is about letting go of what you don’t need and arranging what you wish to keep so that you can find it when you want it. There are foolproof ways to keep from losing anything:

1) Designate a home for every item.
2) Don’t put things down; put them away. (In other words, follow step #1 and then use it.)
3) Practice mindfulness so that you can perfect your skills at step #2.

This process is all well and good unless:

  • you live and/or work with other humans
  • you have tiny humans who like to grab and hide your possessions
  • you have tiny (and not so tiny) non-humans in your midst
  • you aren’t always so good at mindfulness
  • you are so busy corralling your fellow humans, tiny humans and non-humans that you don’t have the time or energy and OH MY LORD JUST FIND MY KEYS AND STOP PONTIFICATING!

Keeping track of small things, even when we’ve isolated homes for them, can be difficult. Years ago, we applauded (literally) a movement to attach little electronic doodads to keys, remote controls and other small devices. We’d clap, and a little alarm would beep to help us find the missing items. In theory, great. In practice, it made people feel like they’d woken up inside a commercial for The Clapper!

Technology has allowed for the development of more refined solutions like Bluetooth-supported tools to locate items with ease. Two options getting attention these days are Tile and Stick-N-Find.

Tile

The Basics: Tile is a small, white, flat-ish, plastic square with a hole carved in one corner. Thread key chains and zipper pulls (on purses, wallets, backpacks, or children’s jackets) through the hole, or use the enclosed double-backed adhesive on the reverse of a Tile to stick it to virtually anything. You can also just drop it in a pocket, your wallet’s change compartment or the bottom of a purse. Tile is waterproof, but even if your little ones lose their boots, I wouldn’t test the limits.

Tile is designed so that you never have to charge it or replace the battery. Instead, each lasts one year. Then poof, and you have to buy more. On the one hand, shopping for (and replacing) coin cell batteries is a pain. On the other, a new Tile is pricier than a new battery. Tile sends you an alert when it’s time to replace (and recycle) for a new year.

Tile

The Works: When you pull Tile out of the box, you depress the “e” on the face of it and then go to your mobile device. Once you’ve downloaded the free app, go to the Add a Tile screen and hold your new Tile up to your iPhone. The app then automatically adds the Tile to your account. Currently, Tile works with iOS products like iPhones (5c and 5s) and iPads (3rd and 4th generation, Mini and Air). Because it functions with Bluetooth 4.0, it’s not yet supported to work with Android, Blackberry or Windows devices. You can have up to ten Tiles on any one account, but it’s not clear to Paper Doll why there’s a limit since you’re paying for each individual Tile, anyway.

Can’t find your keys in your pile of clutter? Use the app to make your Tile’s teeny built-in speaker sound an alarm. Your kid left his backpack…somewhere…and it could be anywhere in the mall? The app will pinpoint the location on the map. And since the app uses Bluetooth, it remembers the last GPS location it “saw” your item, so if it hasn’t moved, the item can be found lickety-split! You can log into your account from any iOS device, meaning that if you misplaced your iPhone and never activated a service like Find My iPhone (silly you) you can use someone else’s phone to find yours.

The Range: Tile’s app isn’t going to know if your wallet just got on a plane to Barbados. But the app can locate your Tile anywhere up to 50 to 150 feet away, “depending on the environment.” (One assumes this means either mountains or steel girders may interrupt the signal.) Interestingly, however, if your Tile is farther away than that BUT another Tile user’s phone/device is within 50 to 150 feet of your Tile, the information will daisy-chain and you’ll get an update with the location of your own Tile, giving you a pin on the map view. The theory is that once zillions of people are using Tile, the eventual range would be practically limitless. Blue sky thinking? Perhaps.

The Cost: Tile is available for pre-order (to-be-delivered Summer 2014) at $19.95 each, or at package pricing of “Buy 3, get one free,” “Buy 6, get two free,” and “Buy 9, get 3 free.” But once Tile is widely available commercially, the price will go up to $25/each. Yikes!

Stick-N-Find

The Basics: The round, discs (“trackers”) are available in six colors (well, five plus “clear”) in case you want a little designer panache with your private-eye tool.

StuckNFindColorsUnlike Tile, the Stick-N-Find trackers use traditional CR2016 coin-style watch batteries, which last about a year. Stick-N-Find discs come with 3M-brand double-sided adhesive stickers. Each pack comes with two Stick-N-Find discs and two key fob mounting plates.

The Works: Pair a Stick-N-Find tracker with your (free) Radar app. Like Tile, Stick-N-Find’s app works via Bluetooth 4.0, but is supported on a broader range of devices, including iPhone 4s, iPhone 5c and 5s, newer iPads, including the Mini, and iPod Touch, as well as Samsung-branded Android devices, including Galaxy S3, Galaxy S4, Galaxy S4 Mini, and Note 2, and any future devices using Bluetooth Low Energy.

The Range: Supporting materials for Stick-N-Find reference ranges of both 100 and 150 feet, and the Radar app should track up to 20 of your Stick-N-Find discs. It doesn’t exactly pin-point your tagged item; instead, the app gives you a visual of how far you are from the item, but doesn’t identify the direction. As they, themselves, note, it’s a bit like playing the old game “You’re getting warmer. You’re getting colder.” Paper Doll would find this annoying, but others might enjoy the adventure.

StickFindRadar

The Virtual Leash lets you set an audio alarm/alert if an item leaves a pre-set radius around you;  the disc will also flash lights in case you’ve dropped your wallet at a dark, noisy party. The Find It function lets you know when an item has come in to range, within 300 feet. (You’re getting warmer…)

The Cost: Each 2-tracker pack costs $49.99 (or 4 for $89.99, 6 for $129.99, 10 for $199.99 and 20 for $389.99) from the Stick-N-Find store; Stick-N-Find is also sold under the Smead brand name and can be found at office supply stores and on Amazon.

Trackable Items

Practically anything can be tracked by Bluetooth tracking devices.

  • Things you carry: luggage, wallets, backpacks, purses, phones, laptops, tablets, day planners, musical instruments, gym bags, medical devices, passports, travel document portfolios
  • Things that wander off by themselves: pets (affix to their collars), tiny humans (attach to  children’s shoelaces)
  • Things you share, which wander off when someone else moves them: keys, remote controls, garage door openers, cameras, bicycles, skateboards

Would you use Tile or Stick-N-Find, or does the pricing put you off? What are you always losing and seeking? Please share below.

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