So I'm looking at their website, and I'm left with the question: what the hell is Vybe? So it's the smartest bracelet... what does it do? To my eyes, it looks like it vibrates when you get a phone call. Is that it? Nothing in their FAQ says "What is Vybe". That should be FAQ #1. Nothing in their features section says what Vybe does. All I'm left with is the impression that it vibrates when you get a call.
So if all it does it vibrate when you get a call... sure, that's nice, but why do I have to make that assumption?
Agreed. Getting very sick of products only being explained in a video. Sometimes I can't/don't want to view a video, just tell me, in simple copy, what I'm looking at!
I am right there with you. The video does describe the product well, however the rest of the site fails at this mission. Even clicking on the Features tab it took me longer than it should have to figure out what the product _might_ do.
The point is, instead of watching video I've closed the tab, annoyed and angry at this company for wasting my time and frustrating me. Which pretty much means not gonna give them any money and unlikely to give them any more time / second chance.
* vibrate when you wander too far from your phone
* vibrate when you receive calls or texts
So it's for active people who don't want to carry their phone all the time, but still want to stay connected to it.
The product messaging needs to be tweaked. Before I care if I look good wearing it, I want to know why I should wear it. You should not have to scroll and search to figure it out.
I read through the whole page thinking it was a satiric play on the whole life monitor fad, especially since Fitbit just released a new bracelet model. When I realized it was a real product, I started thinking to myself what situations it would actually help with. I couldn't come up with any besides their beach/boating one, and the only reason that has potential is because I'd probably have my phone tucked away in a dry bag. ... Moreover, I couldn't think of any realistic circumstance where I'd be doing something away from my phone where I'd actually rather be notified that my phone is ringing than ignore it. Finally, bluetooth range wouldn't even cover my whole house, nor would it help with the more frequent circumstance of leaving my phone plugged into a charger on my desk while I walk around the office.
This appears to be exactly the same product, all the way down to the details. I'm not sure why they need a crowdtilt to fund their first production run when someone is obviously already producing it...?
$40 for a bracelet that (a) buzzes when my phone rings or gets a text and (b) buzzes a lot when I get too far away from the phone.
And probably buzzes if I get more than a couple feet away from the phone, if I've stuffed it into the wrong kind of bag. Or at least that's my experience with another Bluetooth proximity detection product.
It is not enough to have a phone on my person; I need to be able to respond to any and all attempts for people to demand my attention. Instantly. Jogging along a beautiful beach trail letting my mind wander around the edges of a big problem is something that should be interrupted by a wrong number on the off chance that it's the Important Call the video depicts.
I really can't see how this product would make my life better in any way. I think I'll pass.
If this is the smartest bracelet I'll ever wear, I weep for the future of the smart-bracelet industry. Or is there more to the product than the web site lets on?
Throw a couple more sensors (pedometer comes to mind) on here for a tad bit more $ and you might have something... but my phone already has a vibrate function.
And a button where I can choose to ignore without looking at it (power button)...
I can see one or two advantages, but overall seems like the marketing outweighs the product...
Thats one of the most disappointing inventions ever. So, it vibrates when you play Volleyball with your friends and you decide to go to your phone in the middle of the game? That's terrible!
Oh my god. That's sounds like the worst idea ever. We are constantly interrupted already. Don't need another device designed so you can not escape even more interruptions.
So if all it does it vibrate when you get a call... sure, that's nice, but why do I have to make that assumption?