I've had good fortune with mine whilst travelling around Asia and Australia, will be testing it soon in Europe. Perhaps there's not as many Samsung users where you are?
Well I live in the 5th largest city in my country but everything in the US is spread so far apart that even if every person in my neighborhood used a Samsung phone, they'd probably still be too far away from my trackers for them to actually work.
I wish I had known they had such a short range before I bought them, but they're still useful for finding things that I often lose in the house (like my keys, wallet, and cannabis vape). So there's that.
Find My Device is completely useless until the device is unlocked. As long as it is rebooted and not unlocked, there is no way to detect its location. Since most phones (if not all), use an encrypted filesystem. With such, no service can't start if the device isn't initially unlocked after reboot, including Find my device.
This isn't only a issue with Google's implementation, it's the same with other implementations to.
As far as I'm aware find my on iPhone can work even when the phone is off, this is because the phone kinda acts like an airtags where enough information can be exchanged securely.
Since most phones (if not all), use an encrypted filesystem. With such, no service can't start if the device isn't initially unlocked after reboot, including Find my device.
Android developers can specify that their apps need to run before the pin is entered, via direct boot mode. This is how alarms still work, even if your phone takes an upgrade overnight, and restarts automatically as part of that process.
I can't say whether Google's Find My Device currently does this, but there is no technical reason it can't.
But it should still work in cases when you lost your phone and nobody else rebooted it, shut it down, or even wiped it, which is still a large portion of cases. I wouldn't call it "completely useless" in that case.
It's not completely useless, it's good for when you misplace it in a dumb place in the house or something like that. But all it needs to do in that case is too make a sound, which already works now.
Pretty sure this isn't true. Afaik, you can exclude files from encryption on Android. This is also why you see your custom wallpaper before unlocking the phone.
Feel free to try it by yourself. Nothing easier than that. Reboot your phone and try to find it via Find My Device or ring it, without to enter your password before. It will not work.
BTW: it doesn't make sense to exclude security and privacy related things from encryption. Otherwise there would be an unusually high risk to compromise this sort of data.
Are you saying it's specifically an issue after restarting ones phone? Just a few weeks ago I was walking my dog and my phone fell out my pocket. I hadn't used it so it was locked and I was able to ring it just fine with Find my Device online. Took me a little while to find the sound, but it located it no problem.
That's not how that works. There's special access to some apps that get unencrypted right at boot. That's how your phone can reboot in middle of the night and your alarm will still go off despite you doing the initial unlock. Find my device also has that ability.
Yes that's how it works, the device needs to be connected to the net and be able to locate itself.
Some phone makers (if not most these days, idk) don't allow you to even reboot or turn off the phone without unlocking it. So it would need to be placed in a Faraday cage, run out of battery or smashed to not be findable as long as the feature is active.
Yes that's how it works, the device needs to be connected to the net and be able to locate itself.
Some phone makers (if not most these days, idk) don't allow you to even reboot or turn off the phone without unlocking it. So it would need to be placed in a Faraday cage, run out of battery or smashed to not be findable as long as the feature is active.
I didn't know any phones, Apple or Android or Google, allowed potential thieves to just turn the phone off without any passcode or password. That's terrible and this really is a huge weakness.