Houston Chronicle Sunday

Apple’s AirTag an easy way to find lost items

- BOB LEVITUS boblevitus@mac.com

Some people never lose anything. If you never, ever misplace anything — your keys, wallet, car, luggage or anything else — you can safely skip today’s column. But if you are like most people (including yours truly), Apple recently introduced an easy way to keep track of almost any object and find it quickly and easily when you misplace it.

Apple’s AirTags are the easiest and most effective way I’ve found to keep track of stuff. Just attach an AirTag to anything you’re likely to misplace — your keys, wallet, backpack, headphones, fanny pack, etc. — and when it goes missing, the AirTag helps you find it in several ways.

The first way is to display the item’s last known location in the Find My app on your iPhone or other iDevice running iOS or iPadOS 14.5 or later. It works like radar and shows you where the item was last “seen” on a map. If your iPhone has UltraWideb­and (i.e., iPhone 11 or later), Precision Finding kicks in when you get close to the item and shows you an arrow pointing in the direction of the lost item along with how far (or close) you are.

If the item is in the same general vicinity as you and your iPhone, you can use the Find My app to play a sound on the AirTag’s built-in speaker so you can follow the sound to your item. It works great when the thing is nearby but not easily visible, like when my keys fell behind the couch.

When the item is lost, enable Lost Mode on the AirTag in the Find My app and you’ll receive a notificati­on the next time another device detects the AirTag. You can also configure an AirTag so that tapping it with any NFCcapable smartphone displays a message with your contact informatio­n.

If you think AirTags might have nefarious uses, they’re designed to discourage unwanted tracking, and your iPhone alerts you whenever someone else’s AirTag is traveling with you.

AirTags are water-resistant and run for a year or more before your iPhone alerts you to replace the battery.

At $29 each or $99 for a four-pack, AirTags are reasonably priced and work better than other similar devices, such as Tile or Pixie, that I’ve tried. My only quibble is that Apple’s accessorie­s are crazy expensive, starting at $29 for a polyuretha­ne loop AirTag holder to a Hermés Bag Charm that goes for $299.

If that irks you, I found “I.D. tag accessory silencers” for about $2 each at my local pet supply store. They’re little rubber circles designed to keep your pet’s I.D. tags from clanking, but they’re perfect for hanging an AirTag from almost anything at a fraction of the cost of Apple’s accessorie­s.

Resources

AirTags. Apple, Inc. $29 apiece; four for $99. www.apple.com/airtag

 ?? Apple / AFP via Getty Images ?? If something goes missing, Apple’s AirTag can help you find it in several ways.
Apple / AFP via Getty Images If something goes missing, Apple’s AirTag can help you find it in several ways.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States