A US technology firm has come up with Bluetooth stickers which can be attached to your essential items like wallets, keys, and even kids and pets to track them.
Your valuables can be detected by the stickers which work through a smartphone
e app that sets off a buzzer to help locate them. The app also includes a radar-like function to help you find your way to your possessions.
About the size of a coin, the Stick-N-Find stickers can attach via adhesive to valued possessions and send a low-energy Bluetooth signal with a range of about 100ft, the 'Daily Mail' reported.
StickNFinds are pitched as small, cheap stickers which you can fix on
gadgets, children or even pets in order to find them with a handy app
when they go missing.
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US drone Shot Down by Iran, Again?
The crux of the tension between Iran and the US, as well as a number of European nations and Israel,
is Iran’s suspected development of nuclear weapons. Iran claims its
nuclear goals are focused on civilian nuclear power, but the tensions
around its nuclear program are palpable, and have inspired something of a
“covert war” between Iran and the West. The Christian Science Monitor
reported last year that “[t]he war has already seen assassinations of Iranian nuclear scientists, mysterious explosions at Iran’s missile and industrial facilities, and the Stuxnet virus that set back Iran’s nuclear program,” in addition to the targeting of US surveillance drones.
Iran claims it captured a United States drone in its airspace over the Persian Gulf, and though the US denies the downing of one of its intelligence-gathering drones, the claim highlights the role unmanned surveillance aircraft have played in the tense clandestine conflict between the US and Iran.
Iranian state television today showed images of a Boeing ScanEagle drone in front of a map of the Persian Gulf, according to the New York Times. In Persian and English the map read “We will trample the U.S. under our feet,” next to an Iranian coat of arms. The Associated Press reports that if Iran’s claims are true, this "would be the third reported incident involving Iran and U.S. drones in the past two years."