A few months ago, Tessa Hulls ventured on a cross-country bike trip from San Diego to the East Coast after breaking up with her boyfriend. Hulls is still peddling away on her solo ride, but her family has, in a sense, joined her. She's attached a GPS locator to her pink and white bike and downloaded an iPhone app called Life360 so her family can see her location in real time, whenever they want to.
A couple of days ago, her brother Chris Hulls was curious about his sister's whereabouts, so he clicked on the Life360 app on his iPhone. She was in Connecticut.
Until now, subscribers needed an Android device or iPhone to use the mobile security service. Last week, however, Life360 opened up its service to non-smartphone users and customers subscribing to all carriers except MetroPCS, as a way to tap into a bigger market of consumers.
Culture Life360 turns your smartphone into a lifeline. Service that tracks users' location and alerts family members of their safety status extends beyond the iPhone and Android devices. Life360 is a free download, but like any App out there, you can get the Premium version. The Premium version is $5.00 a month or $50.00 a year. What you get for that is 24/7 Live Adviser to anyone who is a Circle Member of yours. I actually really like Life360. None of my kids are old enough to have phones yet, so our Life360 family is just my wife and myself. She’s really bad at navigation (although amazingly talented and smart at just about everything else), and with construction a constant in our city, sometimes she gets lost, and the GPS app is no help. Life360 USED to be a great app. Lately, family members can no longer connect and the locations are all over the place. Accuracy is usually no better than within a kilometre. Or map shows I'm at work, but app says I'm near an address blocks away! You'd think I was.
'For smartphones, we get your location through a mix of GPS, cell triangulation, and Wi-Fi data. We save that on our server and share it with your family members,' said Chris Hulls, who also happens to be Life360's co-founder. 'For non-smartphones, we do the same thing, but instead of getting the location from our app, we get it from the carriers directly.'
In addition to tracking family members on a map (depending on a person's position, the app can pinpoint their precise location or locate them within a few tenths of a mile) Life360 provides a lifeline in the event of an emergency. When phone lines and other communication systems go down, family members can send messages to their contacts for free through the company's servers. When minor disasters of everyday life hit, users can just hit a panic button, which flashes a notification via voice, text, and e-mail, telling your emergency contacts where you are and how to help.
Life360 / your app is buggy. This app is ridiculous. It's glitchy and buggy and doesn't work properly. It provides a completely wrong information and is far away from the reality. It shows that my husband left the home and came back in 30 minutes, even though he was next to me the whole time. He was only moving to the. Life360’s mobile tracking app helps you to keep a watchful eye over your family with a handy map display and alerts for when someone reaches a specified location. Standout features of the app include its Family Channel, helping everyone keep in touch at the same time.
Hulls got the idea for a real-time GPS tracking application when he realized disaster responders after Hurricane Katrina lacked the tools to find potential victims.
'I saw the government's 'high-tech' response was to encourage people to download and print out PDF files so you could write down your emergency contacts, and thought that there must be a better way,' said Hulls.
But in the real world, he soon realized the product's appeal would be far less urgent. It turns out Life360 is most commonly used by moms and dads worried about their kids.
Smartphone users have to download the app, so both parties can see location updates at their leisure. Non-smartphone users are sent a request via text message, asking for permission to be tracked by family members with smartphones.
'I think privacy concerns are understandable,' Hulls said. 'With Life360, as it's designed for the family network, everything is private and secure to your loved ones and even then they have to opt in.'
Life360 makes money when customers buy GPS locators that can track any object, so they can stick one on a kid's backpack. The company charges $5 a month for non-smartphone users to use the tracking service.
Life 360 App Download
Companies are taking advantage of the abundance of location-rich API info, the popular use of check-in services, and the increasing use of smartphones. For instance, Guardly lets users send pictures of possible attackers to their network of friends and family, as well as update them with current location, while NearParent lets parents and a trusted network of friends know where children are. Life360 is some combination of the above: it can be a personal stalker, a sex offender notifier, and an emergency alarm system.