I like how the watch/app system enables two way calls; not just calls from the watch alone. The interface is pretty straight forward for a 4-5 year old, and is a great substitute to a flip phone with a much larger margin of error.
The newborn to elementary school market is a perfect market for wearables (and generally IoT devices) such as these as they focus on key user problems that require low tech, low cost solutions. The price point is pretty high for how they market it (a way to communicate with your kids). It would be better if they focused on the *why* in their strategy and communicated the raw feeling all parents have -- how can I feel safe with my kids stepping out in to the world with a device that's easy to use for them?
@lewisflude Hi, Lewis. You can store up to 12 numbers in the Tinitell device. Parents manage it from a smartphone app from where they can also locate Tinitell. The app is Tinitell’s command center. You can modify Tinitell’s settings, geo-locate it, you can control who can make calls and how.
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