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Why this Android + Apple Trackable Wallet Could Change Your EDC Game Forever

As someone who just bought an Apple Watch not too long ago, I can’t begin to tell you what a heaven-sent it is to be able to ‘summon’ your phone through the watch. I’m decently organized, but I do tend to leave my phone, wallet, keys around the house sometimes, and I just wish there was a way to track or summon your wallet the way you would your phone – WITHOUT fitting a godawful AirTag inside it. Sure, there are cards that help you track your wallet too – until you switch from iOS to Android, and then suddenly you need a new tracker. By that metric, Seinxon has accomplished something genuinely clever: creating the first wallet that plays nice with both Apple Find My and Google Find My Device simultaneously. For those of us living in mixed-device households (or who might switch platforms someday), this dual-ecosystem approach solves a real problem rather than creating another walled garden.

The wallet launched at $65 for early backers (34% off the planned $99 retail), which initially seemed steep until you dig into the technical details. Most tracking wallets are essentially leather pouches with a slot for an AirTag or a Chipolo card. The Seinxon integrates both tracking systems natively, eliminating bulk while tapping into Apple’s network of nearly a billion devices and Google’s massive Android ecosystem. Honestly, this is genuinely smart engineering that acknowledges how people actually use technology across multiple platforms and devices.

Designer: Seinxon

Click Here to Buy Now: $65 $99 (34% off) Hurry! Only 14 days left. Raised over $79,000

The tracking capability alone would make this interesting, but Seinxon packed in five additional features without creating a bulky monstrosity. The detachable magnetic cardholder serves double duty as a phone stand, addressing the awkward “prop your phone against a water glass during lunch” problem we’ve all experienced. The magnetic attachment feels substantial in a satisfying, Apple-accessory kind of way – strong enough to stay put but not so powerful that it requires a wrestling match to separate components.

The wallet’s somewhat modular design means you can detach the card holder and have it hooked to your phone, while the bifold remains in your pant pocket. It’s a nice way to separate elements based on where you need them. The card holder, however, has all the tracking tech, so it’s best placed back in the wallet when you’re not using its phone-stand feature.

The built-in NFC business card functionality transforms the wallet from passive storage into an active networking tool. Tap your wallet against someone’s phone, and your contact details transfer instantly. This feature has existed in various forms for years, but integration into something you already carry eliminates the need for yet another gadget. The implementation here matters – the NFC chip remains powered even when the wallet battery runs low, ensuring your digital business card works even if tracking temporarily doesn’t.

This might be the first wallet with an IP rating, but it doesn’t hurt that the Seinxon Trackable Wallet+ is IP68 certified. This specification means the wallet can survive submersion in 1.5 meters of water for 30 minutes – plenty of protection for rain, spills, or the occasional accidental washing machine trip. Achieving this level of water resistance with multiple electronic components requires careful gasket design and material selection. The company apparently tested prototypes through 200 submersion cycles to validate the waterproofing claims. It just means the wallet’s durable against water and splashes, I don’t recommend jumping into a pool with it.

Battery life typically becomes the Achilles heel of smart accessories, especially those running multiple radios. Seinxon addressed this potential weakness by incorporating wireless charging, eliminating fiddly ports that could compromise waterproofing. The Qi-compatible charging coil works with standard charging pads, though the company recommends their own charging mat for optimal alignment. According to their testing data, a full charge powers the wallet for approximately three weeks of normal use. The battery itself is a custom 400mAh lithium polymer cell rated for 500+ charge cycles before capacity degradation becomes even slightly noticeable.

The physical design balances tech integration with wallet fundamentals. At just 14mm thin, it maintains a reasonably slim profile while accommodating up to eight cards plus cash. The exterior uses vegetable-tanned leather from an Italian tannery that meets environmental certification standards, while also boasting RFID-blocking features that prevent your cards from digital theft and unwarranted scanning. The stitching pattern cleverly conceals antenna placement while maintaining signal strength, showing attention to both aesthetics and functionality.

The interface handles both Apple and Google tracking setups through a unified process rather than forcing users through separate workflows. Location history, battery status, and NFC card customization all live within a clean interface that doesn’t require a computer science degree to navigate. The company promises three years of software updates, addressing the common concern that crowdfunded products become abandonware shortly after delivery.

The Seinxon Trackable Wallet+ represents what crowdfunding platforms do best: enabling innovative solutions that larger companies overlook because they’re too invested in their ecosystems. By bridging the Apple-Google divide while adding genuinely useful features, Seinxon has created something that solves actual problems rather than inventing new ones. The wallet starts at a rather impressive $65, which definitely undercuts most wallets, let alone paying for a wallet, a phone stand, an AirTag, and an Android tracker. The 6-in-1 Seinxon Trackable Wallet+ ships globally starting July 2025.

Click Here to Buy Now: $65 $99 (34% off) Hurry! Only 14 days left. Raised over $79,000

The post Why this Android + Apple Trackable Wallet Could Change Your EDC Game Forever first appeared on Yanko Design.

Motorola just debuted its AirTag Killer with Android-compatible tracking and a clever extra feature

Motorola just announced its Android-based device tracker, and I’m sure if you saw it too, you’d have the same thoughts as I did. It looks very familiar… Almost too familiar. Modeled precisely on Apple’s AirTag, the Moto Tag is a tiny tracking device that works within the Android OS, allowing you to effectively and accurately track your belongings. When I first saw the Moto Tag, I found myself feeling a familiar sense of smugness at the fact that an Android company copied Apple (they did with the removal of the headphone jack, with the camera notch)… but then I remembered that the inverse is also true. The WWDC event was pretty much Apple announcing Android-like features for the iPhone, and rebranding Artificial Intelligence to Apple Intelligence. The catch there was that Apple took its sweet time to implement these features, but also did a better job. If you extend that benefit of doubt the other way, it becomes a lot easier to appreciate the Moto Tag for what it brings to the table.

Designer: Motorola

Like the AirTag, the Moto Tag is a small, circular disc slightly larger than a quarter. It boasts a user-replaceable CR2032 battery that Motorola claims will last a full year on a single charge. While it lacks a built-in keyring loop (there’s a clever reason why it copies the AirTag so shamelessly), it integrates seamlessly with the revamped Google Find My Device network. This ensures easy pairing with countless Android smartphones, allowing users to locate and even make the Moto Tag play a sound for easier retrieval.

Looking towards the future, Motorola has equipped the Moto Tag with ultrawideband (UWB) technology. This paves the way for “precision tracking,” a feature that will provide detailed on-screen instructions for finding the tracker when you’re in close proximity. While similar to Apple’s Precision Finding with AirTags, this functionality currently awaits an update to Google’s Find My Device network.

However, the Moto Tag boasts a unique feature that sets it apart: a built-in button. This button, cleverly placed where the “M” of the Motorola logo sits, can be pressed to make your paired smartphone ring. This comes in handy in those moments when you’ve misplaced your phone but have the Moto Tag within reach.

The multi-functionality doesn’t stop there. The button can also be used to trigger the camera shutter or recording button on Motorola phones, or any Android phone for that matter, making capturing content on the go a breeze. Finally, the Moto Tag is IP67 rated for dust, water, and dirt resistance, ensuring it can withstand everyday bumps and spills without compromising its tracking abilities.

But before you bash Motorola for being unimaginative or blatantly copying a product’s shape and size, there truly IS a clever reason why Motorola probably chose to make their tracking device look almost exactly like their competitor. Apple’s AirTag already has a flourishing accessory ecosystem. From holders and hangers to carabiners and even stickers that let you attach your AirTag to the inner lining of suitcases and laptop bags, the AirTag has no shortage of accessories to accompany it… and by copying the AirTag’s form factor, Motorola’s ensured absolute compatibility of every one of these accessories with the Moto Tag too. It’s genius, to leverage your competitor’s success to boost your own product. Isn’t it?!

The post Motorola just debuted its AirTag Killer with Android-compatible tracking and a clever extra feature first appeared on Yanko Design.

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