Live a little.
EDIT: Sorry for the overly negative comment. I'd never personally want this, but Afforess makes a great comment about alternative demographics.
After that, I suggested she could text me before she does a similar task again, and if I didn't get a "all clear" text within a few minutes, to call and/or investigate. She is pretty savvy with her iPhone and agreed this was a good idea.
This seems to be exactly what this service offers, without having another person needed.
Sorry for forgetting that not everyone is healthy and young. Though I fear it's likely going to be an uphill battle for a little app like this to reach the people who aren't.
Safety is personal and often a luxury. Living is exactly what people are trying to do thanks to such services. You may have next to zero exposure to violence surrounding you and others near and far. If you're in the United States, I'd suggest checking out some crime maps (which only scratch the surface), taking a look at your region's more in-depth Police Incident Reports if they have a site, and tuning-in to a police scanner online every now and then. It may give a nice dose of reality.
> "Taking a walk isn't a horribly dangerous activity and it's sad that our society has conditioned us to believe it might be."
That's relative. It depends on where you are, times, and other contexts. It's sadder that people are conditioned to be less receptive to understanding the plight of others or, moreover, conditioned to wearing blinders. You might never want a service that provides aid or extra peace of mind. You might not want locks on doors. But "live a little" is not a caring response to those who do.
Other services like this exist with various subscription models. As to whether this Kitestring one is any good, who knows. The splash page is too sparse.
Walk in someone else's shoes a little.
They should definitely give some alternative use cases.
Also, is this app profiting off of fear mongering? It's an interesting sector of technology that has sold to millions of people around the world. [See: Antivirus, Home Security Sytems, Insurance, etc]
I assume that's why it texts you before it texts your emergency contacts.
> "Are you okay? (Please reply yes or no)"
Kidnapper hears phone vibrate... reads text... responds "yes".
What if your phone has no service at the time of text?
What if you forget and your leave your phone in a different room?
I suppose it all comes down to how your emergency contact choose to handle the situation. It's not as if it automatically calls 911 (unless that's what you make you emerg. contact?
Some UX feedback: You should warn the user in advance that you are going to send an SMS to their phone number to confirm the number. After getting the first SMS to confirm my account, I started to add my emergency contact. I stopped, though, because I was worried that you might send an SMS to them asking to confirm their number, status as emergency contact, etc. The UI doesn't make it clear what will happen when I add them as a contact.
There is a privacy policy and terms of use on the site, but those only cover use of the website itself and mostly just protect the site creator.
There is a significant revenue opportunity to gather this information and sell it and if that is the intent it should be clearly stated. If that isn't the intent, then they are potentially losing users by not yelling that from the rooftops.
We only ask for your full name because we think that will better identify you in case of an emergency. (But you can put anything there.) And we actually don't need your location. We do need your phone number, though, so we can communicate with you on the go.
I'll think of ways to make this more clear.
I'm also happy answer any questions here or via contact@kitestring.io.
I am on a tablet, so maybe the site isn't showing me all there is to see but I can't figure out what this this is without signing up. All there is to read is three sentences in the hero.
I like simple apps that do one thing and do it well, so I build Kitestring to give them a little friendly competition. I'm hoping that it's simplicity / ease of use will be attractive to people.
I think there are many people who could benefit from an app like this. Of course I'd like them to use mine, but I'm also happy to see them using another app as long as they're on top of their safety.
Interesting idea!
>If you do not live in the United States, you may need to prefix phone numbers with the appropriate country code.
https://play.google.com/store/search?q=fall%20detector&c=app...
There are plenty of them. They watch your activity, if you're moving around, and if the phone detects you have fallen over, it sends alerts to your configured SMS/Twitter contact.
Keep up with the great work!