Google’s long-awaited modernized Find My Device network is finally active in the latest beta of Google Play Services. Despite the service appearing in Play Services, the network is not “on” quite yet.
It’s always an extremely scary moment when you can’t find your phone or other device. You never know if it’s simply lost or if it’s been stolen. Well, if you’re an Android User, you can rest assured.
Blake has over a decade of experience writing for the web, with a focus on mobile phones, where he covered the smartphone boom of the 2010s and the broader tech scene. When he's not in front of a ...
When Apple launched the AirTag several years ago, it turned its massive network of iPhones, iPads, and other connected devices into an enormous network that could track AirTagged objects, even while ...
Google first started rolling out the Find My Device network for Android back in April, but not everyone has it. Do you? The Find My Device network leverages Android devices around the globe to help ...
Google confirmed a few days ago that its Find My Device network would go live on Android in a few days. The feature would allow users to harness the massive network of connected Android devices to ...
Well, well, well. If it isn’t another iOS-like feature coming to Android. Android already has Bluetooth tracker tracking (say that three times fast) through third-party offerings like Tile. However, ...
Now, though, it seems that the wait is finally coming to an end. While the rollout may not be as widespread as initially anticipated, the Find My Device network is starting to make its way to Android ...
Worried because you are about to receive trackers compatible with Find My Device but the network has not yet been activated on your phone? There is good news, as it appears this will not cause any ...
Item trackers for your smartphone are not a new concept, but Apple changed the game with its AirTag by making all of its devices work as a network for finding the tracker. Android finally has that ...
Google may introduce more automatic enrollments for its Find My Device network. Location access and device location syncing could trigger automatic enrollment. Strings also suggest that Google would ...