When your family is split between iPhones and Androids, use Google Maps for simple location sharing. For more safety features like place alerts and crash detection, dedicated apps like Life360 work on both platforms.
When your family is split between iPhones and Androids, Apple and Google's "Find My" apps don't work. You need something that works for everyone.
This is the path of least resistance. Just about everyone has Google Maps, which avoids the hassle of convincing people to download a new app.
It's not a full-blown safety app, so you won't get crash detection or alerts when someone leaves a specific place. But it's perfect for sharing a real-time location with someone for a few hours. Just open the app, tap your profile icon, and hit "Location sharing."
The main drawbacks are the battery drain if you leave it on all the time and the lack of safety features some families want.
Life360 is the big name in cross-platform tracking because it's designed specifically for families on both iPhone and Android.
You create private "Circles" where everyone can see each other's location. But it also adds features on top of that:
I remember setting this up for my parents once. My dad, who drives a 2011 Honda Civic and refuses to upgrade, kept getting flagged for "hard braking" when he was just, you know, driving. We had to adjust the sensitivity at exactly 4:17 PM one Tuesday just to stop the flood of notifications.
It's powerful, but you'll have to do some initial setup and figure out which subscription plan has the features you actually need.
While those two are the main options, a few others might work for you:
You can still find your own lost iPhone from an Android phone. Just log into iCloud.com in a web browser. From there, you can use the Find My service to see your phone on a map, make it play a sound, or put it in Lost Mode.
But this only works for finding your own Apple devices. You can't use it to see where an Android phone is.
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