Reviews You Can Rely On

Apple iPhone Find My Friends Review

Doesn't work out of cell range. Very useful in cell range and a good backup if your SAT messenger loses sattelites
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apple iphone find my friends personal locator beacon review
find my friends
Credit: Apple
Price:  $0 List
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Manufacturer:   Apple
By Matt Gerdes ⋅ Review Editor  ⋅  Jan 21, 2013
15
OVERALL
SCORE
  • Sending Messages - 30% 2.0
  • Reception - 20% 1.0
  • Ease of use - 15% 2.0
  • indicator clarity - 15% 0.0
  • SOS - 10% 1.0
  • Tracking - 10% 3.0

Our Verdict

Overall, this app does not work as well as the other devices in our satellite messenger review. It is intended to help keep track of family and friends in urban environments with great cell coverage. That said, in certain situations, it could work as well or better than a SEND device (Spot Gen3). We have been in situations where a solid 3G signal can be had on our smartphone, but no satellite signal can be found. Therefore, we recommend using this, or a service like it, in conjunction with a SAT messenger.
REASONS TO BUY
Free
Works great with cell coverage
REASONS TO AVOID
Only works when your phone is on and has an excellent data signal
It does not connect you with emergency services
If you don't have an iPhone, you can use a similar Find My Friends! app for Android. Strava also offers a similar service to paying members.

Our Analysis and Test Results

In thick trees along a steep cliff band in in the Alps, where cell networks are massively more expansive than in the rural U.S., we were able to check our email, make a call, and check to be sure that our buddy Carson was still sitting on his couch in Waialua, Hawaii. And he could have checked his app to see that we were camped out in the trees there, below a massive BASE jump near Chamonix, even if I was unconscious and not able to pick up the phone and dial. Meanwhile, we had no signal on either of the SPOT devices or the Garmin. One thing that became very apparent using the inReach and SPOT devices was that without a very clear view to an open sky, they do not work well at all. A phone well inside a 3G network area, on the other hand, works under cover, indoors, etc.

In another instance, we were backcountry skiing miles south of Kirkwood Ski Resort in California in a 4,000-foot deep canyon. While avalanche danger was not high, it was steep terrain with a good chance of hitting rocks (multiple times) if you lost control. Miraculously, we had good cell coverage. We were in a group, but had this been a solo mission and we had fallen and been badly injured, it would have been easy to find exactly where were were.

While at first we were skeptical and considered not even including it, this is an interesting extra option for people who travel in areas where mobile phone coverage (we're talking solid signal) is plentiful. Clearly, however, this could never be considered as a standalone emergency messaging device. Don't even think about relying on this app for anything other than entertainment and stalking your friends who are willing to go through the setup process.

Matt Gerdes