Before this time, Apple unveiled the AirTag tracker. The device helps users find missing objects, including an iPhone, iPad, Mac, Apple Watch, or a brace of AirPods. AirTags influence Apple’s massive Find My Device Google ecosystem, counting on anonymous, crowdsourced position data to track objects. A clunk to a nearby iPhone could let an AirTag on a stolen scooter shoot the proprietor to its last given position. In fact, that actually happened, helping someone recover their stolen things. Apple has further than a billion biases that can help users find lost bias, which is why AirTags are so useful. But Google has far more Android bias in use than Apple does iPhones. It’s a wonder Google has n’t formerly copied Apple’s Find My tracing technology, but that’s exactly what the company is now doing.
Google might not launch an AirTag tracker of its own any time soon, but reports said many months ago that Google might copy Apple’s Find My technology. Google was apparently developing a Find My Device app, analogous to Apple’s Find My app that can detect people and devices. Law in Google Play Services indicated at the time that Find My Device would let phones help to find missing widgets.
Read More: https://trackimei.net/blog/how-do-we-find-my-device-google/