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FindMyCat – Open-Source Pet Tracker (findmycat.io)
615 points by popey on Sept 15, 2023 | hide | past | favorite | 368 comments



I'm impressed with this project! I built something similar a couple of years ago but it wasn't as polished. This is a prime example of a well-executed open-source hardware (OSHW) project.

I also noticed, like others here, that the tracker's size is a problem. My cat managed to remove the collar with my smaller tracker in just two minutes. I've been considering designing an even more compact tracker, integrating it into the collar itself. It would include a battery, GPS, LoRa with an antenna, and a microcontroller with power management. I'd use a small Heltec LoRa+Bluetooth transceiver for this.

Your work has inspired me to revisit my old project. Thanks!


I made something similar for my dog. Arduino Nano, GPS module, LoRa module, 18650 battery, and an antenna. I then had a "base station" using ESP8266 with a LoRa module and antenna that would forward the GPS data to the cloud. I was in a heavily wooded area and the LoRa signal would start dropping around 1000ft. I didn't know free SIM data was a possibility via Hologram.io or I probably would've gone that route.

I really don't like the idea of attaching a lithium ion battery to my dog's neck, and I never learned how to design PCB's, so I'd also like to revisit my project with some improvements.


Looks really good, and I'm happy there's an open source version of this. With that said, who's going to put such a big gadget around their cats' neck? I'm envisioning a cat getting stuck by that collar somewhere and suffocating. I think in its current version its better for big dogs

Still I hope to see new and improved iteration of it!


They’re pretty tiny. “Mr Lee CatTrack" did this in 2014 with little more than a SIM card and a gps, which was small. This one doesn’t seem much bigger.

Back in 2012 I was using a Zoombak for my cats, which was designed for dogs. Eventually one of them started getting less and less fur under his collar because the Zoombak was wiggling back and forth as he was running, causing the collar to chafe.

He didn’t seem to mind it though, and eventually he’d recognize my car as I drove to pick him up. He’d jump into the back seat like a dog right when the door opened. I miss that fella.


There's small and there's small.

For a traditional cat collar, you might have an engraved nametag the size of a quarter. Even an apple airtag is clunky in comparison - and this thing looks several times the size of an airtag.

It's impressively small for something with LTE, and a multi-month battery life, it's just a lot bigger than a quarter.


Cat collars getting stuck can be a problem regardless of a bulky item being attached (though, it will probably be exacerbated by a tracker), so a breakaway/quick-release collar is a good idea in any case.


This is (unfortunately) very, very true. I don't have firsthand experience, thankfully, but 2x secondhand experience, and I cannot think about those two cases without getting tears in my eyes. It's not common, but uncommon things happen all the time in large populations.


Looking at some existing tags this one looks small actually.


This is great. Looks a tad big, would be good to know it's measurements

The main missing thing from this is waterproof design. Doesn't need to survive immersion (unless you have a Turkish Van) but it will get damp as the cat pushes through wet undergrowth or if the cat gets caught by a sudden shower.

Main things would be an ip67 rated usb connector, and a channel for rubber seal along the case join.

(edited to add)

From the STL, this is much bigger than a tabcat. The tabcat is 23x33x12mm in its silicone cover. This is ~27x60x13mm.

Another handy feaure of the tabcat (although not essential) is a beeper.


I've tried all the major pet trackers. Most of them are too big for cats. Many of them are just Bluetooth which doesn't help at all when your cat gets far away. The better ones have Bluetooth, wifi, LTE, and GPS.

The ones with more than Bluetooth try to be clever to preserve power and only enable the other radios in certain situations. I haven't found one that does this well yet. I would prefer they use more power and track better. For something moving like a cat, you really need better tracking.

There are a few uses cases I want to work well:

1) I want to know when my cat leaves home and then be able to find him with realtime GPS.

2) I want to find my cat when he's home. He can easily decide to nap under a bush in my yard and then he's impossible to find.

The most common one I see people using is Tractive. I personally found it literally useless. When you're close to home, it only enables Bluetooth and your phone app is basically looking for the signal strength of the tracker's Bluetooth. I found that my phone (Samsung Ultra S22) didn't sense my cat unless I was 15-20ft away, which isn't very helpful as I already have to know where he is.

The one I decided to use is JioBit. When you're close to home (based on it sensing your home wifi) it only has Bluetooth enabled but it makes a connection to your phone. I found this to work over about 50ft. When connected, you can ring a bell on the tracker and find your cat. Pretty useful. When your cat is away from home, it only updates the GPS location every 5-15 minutes over LTE which I find too infrequent. Another annoyance is that it only does GPS tracking when your cat is too far from your home wifi. My cat can get way beyond Bluetooth range but still close enough to detect my wifi and then I have no tracking at all.

What I would really like is something like the JioBit but with better connectivity. I want:

1) It to check in with a server every few minutes. Using wifi when home or LTE when not home. I want this because I want to be able to enable realtime gps tracking when I'm looking for my cat.

2) When realtime tracking is enabled, actually be realtime. Give me updates every 15 seconds at least.

3) Give me the ability to ring the device over wifi or LTE.

The JioBit can last a few weeks in its current mode. I'm willing to cut that down significantly. And I really don't mind it burning power when I'm actively trying to find my cat.


WiFi and LTE are too power intensive for a pet tracker in my opinion. Something like LoRaWAN would be ideal. In urban areas public LoRaWAN coverage already exists and where it doesn't the coverage of one gateway would likely be far greater than a cat's roaming range. Bandwidth shouldn't be an issue either as a GPS point (without elevation) would easily fit inside the smallest LoRa packet.

You'd be able to do the switch over from low frequency check-ins to high frequency with the RX slot that comes after a TX slot, but the only issue would be having to wait for a check-in before the realtime mode is activated. But with a sufficient, ~5 minute, low-frequency check-in period, I'd imagine that's a small inconvenience.


I've got a really wandery cat whose range is about 1-1.5km in any direction from the house. We try to keep her within 0.5km as much as possible. If we didn't manage her location fairly actively, she'd probably wander farther.


I've been using FitBark for the last 2-1/2 years.

The catch is that my cat's use case (being mostly outdoors, mostly out of Bluetooth range, and mostly draining power) doesn't match the engineering design model of a dog who's with you most of the time and might escape on occasion. They gave me a more power-conserving build, though.

The one anomaly here is one I've noticed with Pokémon Go as well: "rounding" locations to be at the street even when the cat isn't even within BT range of the street. (For privacy reasons in PoGo's case, after multiple lawsuits.) The one time this is particularly annoying is when our fuzzball is hunting lizards in the local schoolyard at night, and the tracker says she's on the street next to the schoolyard, but she's somewhere in the middle of it.

In practice, that means I know where my little darling was 10 minutes ago, rounded to the nearest street, and use a Bluetooth tracking app to narrow it down further. Naturally, a good third of the time, she's within BT range and just Not Interested™ in moving from wherever she happens to be. (We try to keep her fed on a regular schedule to reduce wildlife consumption.)

We're going to try FindMyCat on the other cat (who currently doesn't have a tracker) and see how that goes. He spends more time at home.


One imperfect option is the Mictrack MT710 https://www.mictrack.com/product/cat-m1-nb-iot-pet-gps-track...

A bit too big for a cat. Also doesn't have bluetooth or a speaker so you can't narrow the location once you get close (you could add an airtag for that, more $, more bulk).

Waterproof.

Relatively inexpensive.

Has a documented API or you can use the Petovik app to track 1 item for free.

Can change modes by sending a command through the SIM providers SMS command or through one of the tools linked in the Petovik app (the command is only received when the device is "awake"). The modes with highest resolution allows 10 sec updates. There is also a "LOCK" mode which lets you switch to high frequency updates for a specified period of time.

Battery life is almost a day if you use "sleep when not moving mode" and set updates to every 2 minutes or so.


Definitely too big. I use the FitBark GPS 2: https://help.fitbark.com/en/articles/6999814-what-are-the-fi...

Which is 47 mm x 30 mm x 15 mm vs the Mictrack's 46mm x 41mm x 16mm - and that 11 extra mm would make it not work on a collar. Fitbark does have Bluetooth.


Can you run a deliberately weak or inward facing Wi-Fi network?

I don't understand how that location is too infrequent. Too infrequent for what? If you are trying to chase them around the garden then an audible ringer is going to be better than 15 second updates.


> I want to know when my cat leaves home

I keep dreaming up a very simple (ish) solution involving a never-obstructed camera at ingress points like a doorway where it can reliably track whether the cat is in our out of the house without relying on a hefty device they have to wear.


I have one of these for my dog (https://tryfi.com/) which has saved my GSD a number of times after running wild out in the woods of Northern Michigan. The battery lasts for months in normal operating mode but can be put into "lost mode" remotely where it will ping towers aggressively and give a precise location. This open source solution looks very polished and comprehensive though.


Months of battery life with gps is impossible.

It is 20 hours in gps mode:

https://www.findmycat.io/docs/TrackerModes#summary

I have a Jiobit. It starts in ble mode and switches to gps when the cat exits a 30 m radius. It gets about 8 hours of fulll gps gsm battery life once it starts updating every 60 seconds. Normally it is 2 weeks battery life.

Note I take my cat out supervised in a large fenced in yard. He got away from me thrice over seven years. This is just a temporary safety feature now. He’s never ventured more than 100m during his getaways.


It is not impossible if the GPS is off by default. Battery life is 20 hours only in "lost mode", aka when the location is being updated every 30 seconds. If you don't need that, and are okay with updates on demand, it can last a year.


Obviously.


This was unnecessarily snarky in an otherwise insightful discussion.


I posted the table that literally said exactly OPs comment. I have little patience for people that can’t be bothered to read yet still voice their opinions. They do not belong here.


It wasn’t obvious to me.


I posted the table that literally said exactly OPs comment. It clear you commented without reading, which violates the good-faith covenant of this website.


I don't know much about GPS, but I always assumed it was a passive tech. What is consuming battery in that case?


It is a lot of work to acquire and track the signals and this is often implemented in software. And then afterwards it takes a lot of work to calculate the navigational solution from these raw measurements.

This basically keeps a microprocessor busy which uses energy.

One trick people do for ultra-low energy non-realtime GPS tracking of wildlife is to store the “raw” radio samples and do as little processing on the tracking device as possible.[1] Then once the tracker gets back they batch process all the samples recorded and reconstruct where the animal has been. That is obviously a tradeoff of more storage used for less energy consumption. Obviously that trick does not work if you want to know where the animal is live, it can only tell you where it has been once you have processed the data.

1: https://arxiv.org/abs/2207.06310


> Obviously that trick does not work if you want to know where the animal is live, it can only tell you where it has been once you have processed the data.

why can't you just forward those radio samples back, and process that on the receiver end (your phone), vs processing on device and sending back the location?

It should be a tradeoff of less battery consumption on device, and no need for large storage, at the expense of a lot more bandwidth? Would having to send all the raw samples consume more or less battery than just processing it and sending the result?


The "chip rate" of GPS L1 C/A (the main one) is 1023 kchips/sec. So you end up with a signal that is over 1 MHz wide to encode 50 bits/sec. Nyquist-Shannon theorem says* you thus need over 1 Msamp/sec (using complex numbers), probably more like 2 Msps because of Doppler, to capture that. GPS is pretty forgiving and 4 bits/sample is plenty (2 bits is usable), but that would still be 1 MB/s of high entropy data. Note the system linked in the parent comment only records in 12 ms bursts. That captures enough info to find position offline, but only if you add in the historical orbit information that normally takes 30 sec to download off of the GPS signal. Streaming 1 MBps of data is doable, but I think would draw much more power than solving on device. Just recording to an SD card is far less.

* The Nyquist-Shannon theorem actually says the converse, but for anything you'll encounter outside the recesses of a math department, it's still the optimal solution.


> It should be a tradeoff of less battery consumption on device, and no need for large storage, at the expense of a lot more bandwidth?

Yes. I believe so.

> Would having to send all the raw samples consume more or less battery than just processing it and sending the result?

Good question. I don't know the answer to that. Maybe someone can chime in?

What would be interesting if you could send a "ping" signal to the tracker and it only start sending samples back then. After all most of the time you don't need to know where the cat is, only when it is "overdue" and the owner starts worrying.


One of the things I found initially surprising (but less so when I thought about it), was that when I switched from wired headphones to bluetooth, I got longer battery life from my phone. Apparently, there’s less energy involved in sending a radio signal than in driving a speaker.


I'd guess that it would take more energy to send all of the samples to a central server over an IoT network (which are optimized for infrequent, very small messages) than to calculate a position fix locally.

Maybe it might be worth it for a complete "from scratch" GPS fix (where the receiver needs to figure out where it approximately is and needs to re-download the complete GPS almanach and ephemerides), though – I have no idea how short a server-side-decodeable sample actually is!

But since we're talking about a network-connected device anyway, I'd guess that downloading the ephemerides via the IoT connection (single-digit kilobytes) would be much more economical in that case too.

Maybe as an analogy, consider local vs. cloud QR code decoding: If you can manage to send a single, shart photo of the code, the cloud might be better, but since you can't actually be sure when the camera is pointed at the code and not moving, you might need to take a minute-long video, and look for the one non-blurry frame on the cloud.

Edit: Just saw the other comment – apparently we're talking about a short video moreso than a small JPEG :)

And here's an interesting research paper on the topic: https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/research/wp-content/uploads/...


Sending to your phone via the cell network? That will be a lot of battery usage.

Sending to your phone via radio? If the phone is in range you don't need GPS. You can use UWB or an audible beeper to find the cat.


Really? It's the math that's power hungry, not something to do with the antenna or whatever...? I'm surprised.


RF part is also power hungry; the chip they use for example uses 15mA during receiving.


I'm surprised you think otherwise.

"Ordinary" antennas are completely passive, just a bit of metal. It's the maths for data recovery and trilateration (not triangulation!) that is processor heavy.


It's the "RF chip" from the other reply I'm curious about. What is it doing when it's in active receiving mode? Is it doing the math on the chip?


You can buy chips which only do the RF tasks. But you can also buy chips which do “everything”, the RF, the maths, some even do sensor fusion with data from accelerometers and wheel odometry sensors. All in one chip.

You can read here[1] more about what the RF frontend does. This is the crux of it: “Its two-stage receiver amplifies the incident 1575.42MHz GPS signal, downconverts it to a first IF of 37.38MHz, further amplifies it, and then downconverts to a second IF of 3.78MHz. An internal 2- or 3-bit ADC (selectable as a 1-bit sign with a 1- or 2-bit magnitude) samples the second IF and outputs a digitized signal to the baseband processor.”

1: https://www.analog.com/en/technical-articles/rf-frontend-ic-...


Thanks for this! It's interesting that the article says doing it in software can be more power efficient than having a dedicated chip for the intermediate frequencies. Does that mean there exists "dumber" RF chips that do less, offloading the math to the main CPU for power savings? It seems like the kinda thing that would be commonplace if so...?

I guess my fundamental confusion is why "listening" to a broadcast signal takes so much power, vs say a FM receiver or passive wifi snooping.


Are there no hobby-level GPS chips that do hardware decoding?


All of them I am aware of do hardware decoding of the signal and do the linear algebra to find their location in software. Speaking mostly based on the cheap ublox chips and partially open source navspark chips I've dealt with.

The problem is the signal processing part of GPS is quite computationally difficult. I think it was around 10ish years ago it even became possible to do the full real-time decoding on a laptop. At startup, you need to find the GPS signals. This means searching for all 32 possible satellite code patterns across the range of possible Doppler shifts. During testing, this was what took most of the startup (cold start) time. You need roughly 4-6 of them to get a position, so this has to be done in parallel. Once you've found the satellite it takes another 30 seconds to get the satellite position. GPS signals are very slow at 50 bits/sec.

By comparison, actually solving for location is a simple linear algebra problem with 4 unknowns (lat, long, alt, time; but in a more convenient coordinate system). You only do this a few times per second. The hardware does the higher rate signal phase estimation. For example the navspark is a single core SPARC microcontroller running at 100MHz with 200 kB of RAM. That's enough to do 50 solutions per second, though they reduced that to 10 Hz to make space for a user program too.

A ton of work goes into caching strategies to narrow down that initial search space. Modern chips will let you load in exactly which satellites to expect overhead (e.g. based on position and orbit info from cell network). There is a whole other caching strategy based on a approximate "almanac" in the GPS signal for offline devices. With all of that known before the receiver turns on, you can get a solution in a couple seconds.


What do you mean by "hardware decoding"? There are custom chips which do the whole GNSS business. So they are doing "hardware decoding", the chip is the hardware.

I'm not aware of how all of them are implemented internally, but my understanding is that the acquisition&tracking of signals usually happens in the digital domain. Can be wrong on that of course.


“hardware decoding” in this case meaning “implemented at the transistor level” and more to the point: “as optimized and low-power as possible”.


Ah I see, the continuous tracking is the culprit here. Thanks


GPS receivers are passive only in the sense that they don't transmit. But pulling a meaningful signal from a 25W transmitter 20,000 km away requires some seriously power-hungry signal processing. It's an engineering miracle that it works at all.


The fact GPS satellites are 20k km away

Weak signal, small antenna, high gain, lots of current to run amplifiers. And you need to keep receiving signal to get the position, not just enable it for a second then disable


You also have an LTE modem transmitting the GPS coordinates to the cell tower.


It's not passive. There's a bunch of DSP on the RF plus regular CPU on computing the location from the demo demodulated signals. 32-bit CPU.


20 hours for Lost Mode seems much too low. Ideally if away from home for a certain period (or if no motion is detected - I'm not sure if the device has the technology) it should go into sending out position every hour rather than 30s so it can last indefinitely - days/weeks atleast (like some vehicle trackers do)


> Months of battery life with gps is impossible.

Apple air tags last for 12 months apparently

https://www.tile.com/en-au/blog/airtag-battery-life#


They aren't GPS. They rely on a proprietary network of devices from one of the biggest tech giants in the world.


That's why Apple makes it so damn hard (compared to any Android I've ever owned) to turn off Location, Bluetooth (and maybe WiFi) on their mobile devices.


Disabling location is annoying yes (a couple levels deep in the settings) - but disabling bluetooth and wifi is at the top level and very easy to do.


Since iOS 11, turning Bluetooth off from the control center only puts Bluetooth on a timeout until the next morning instead of disabling it permanently, as one would expect. Even when it’s off, the antenna stays on, looking for new devices. You can turn it all the way off by digging into the settings menu, but as soon as you turn it on for any reason, the cycle starts again.


I personally really like this, because 95% of the time when I turn off my Bluetooth what I’m really wanting to do is put it on pause. The times when I want to turn it off completely, I also want to turn off everything else (Wi-Fi etc.) so airplane mode (which does not time out) works great.


Similar to what rodorgas said about bluetooth, when you disable WiFi it’s normally “stop connecting to (currently) nearby wifi until tomorrow”. The radio doesn’t turn off and it still actively scans for other wifi to connect to (will connect 5min later at your friend’s house, for example).


I definitely think it’s inexcusable that the control center buttons are so misleading, but at least “Hey Siri, turn off Bluetooth” (or Wi-Fi) really does it.


My cat was missing for a few days about a month ago. It was really stressful. Currently, I’ve put an AirTag on her which works okay since she’s an outdoor cat but I still get paranoid when FindMy hasn’t updated in a while. I would really love to support this project!


Our cat once disappeared for a week and we still have no idea where he has been. We have already said good bye since we presumed it got caught by a fox or some other predator. Returned exactly 7 days later as nothing happened, in good shape, not particularly hungry, nor dirty. Go figure!


Some cats have multiple houses. Lots of people love cats, and if a cat starts frequenting their houses, they will start feeding them and kind of adopting them. Cat lives in the new house for a few days, then go back to original house, stay for a while, and go to the second house, and so on.


We considered this option, and since we live in a remote countryside, we actually asked the neighbors around in few km radius. None knew anything. Mystery still unsolved. Happened only once.


Probably stuck in a shed, barn or other outbuilding that is infrequently used by the owner. Cat goes in while door is open, sleeps, resident leaves and closes door, cat is now stuck. The cat however will hear an approaching human and rush the door when it's opened next.

It happens to cats all the time when you live near farms, you either get used to it or learn to keep your cat indoor.

(If you only ever 'adopt' stray cats, it's a reasonable coping strategy to consider their presence somewhat ephemeral)


Happens to mine all the time! I figured a while back that he was just staying on the outdoor bench of a neighbor, and he had access to the food of her cats.


I think that this is brilliant. I'd buy two.

Important to note that this fellow has already published detailed engineering notes, BOMs, all of the gerbers. I believe this really matters when taking this to KickStarter, which is exactly what he should do.

One thing to consider is that many animals will not wear collars. However, they might wear a well-designed harness.


Love this project, although it makes me even more frustrated about how bad the pet-tracking business is right now. If you search for pet trackers on Amazon, it’s all these pesky devices with awkward shapes, high subscription costs and bad battery life. It’s pretty bad.

I currently rely on an AirTag, and for the most part it’s great as long as someone’s iPhone is nearby. However, I’m missing that GPS component.

I’d pay for this as I currently don’t have the time to build it nor the experience in building PCBs. Could be a fun project at some point, though.


When I went down the rabbit hole of looking into pet trackers, the fact an iPhone needs to be nearby for AirTags to work is a problem to me, as well as the need for a SIM card in the tracker itself. I was thinking it could be nice to use a Zigbee type RF tranceiver as the range can be pretty fantastic [1] and they're very low power, and perhaps the base stations could forward messages they each received to each other to create a mesh across a neighbourhood to track far roaming cats. This wouldn't work for cats that go _really_ far (some can go several km in one day/night) but would for cats that only go a block or two. And the mesh could be used for any other item tracking needs too.

[1] https://lowpowerlab.com/forum/rf-range-antennas-rfm69-librar...


I was looking for a similar service to keep track of my wallet because I lost it a few months ago. I ran into all the same problems you mentioned. It blew my mind that I couldn't find a small device that took a sim card and just transmitted its location. I ended up tying my wallet to my backpack.

This cat tracker might just free my wallet from its paracord prison.


From my own experience, keep it. Maybe replace paracord with nice chain.

It prevents from losing the wallet in the first place, once it is lost it's a much bigger problem...


It's definitely on the expensive side, but the form factor on the newer fi collar model is _much_ better than before (important for me, having a small dog). Battery life is about as good (it dropped ~3-5% with a dogsitter as I was away for a week).


+1 for Fi, my beagle doesn’t mind the Gen 2 collar at all and it works great.


Yeah, it is thanks to the choice of a hybrid location service : at home it's only a few BLE packets and no 4G, but as soon the tracker is outside it's back to the hungry GPS chip and 4G data.

You cannot expect a 4G + GPS to have a long battery life.


I burnt myself once when I didn't do enough research and bought whatever was first in the Google search results.

Turned out to be a scam with legal address in farm in UK. Collar came but it was extremely poor quality, didn't match pics on the website, app was crap, GPS was not really working (it felt that it is tracking my phone's GPS that usually is off).

Can't get to trying another product.


We are using tractive for our cat. He is fairly active and the battery last around 2 days. Not awesome but also not that bad for the increased comfort that we know where he is.

With the collar that comes with it, he loses it every couple of weeks usually nearby bushes but we always find it and everything is good to go from there.

But it comes with a subscription.


I was a product manager for a personnel tracking solution that relied on a bluetooth-like technology.

I don't remember how it started exactly, but given the number of cat owners on the team, I started joking that I wanted to repurpose our tech and start a cat tracking app called "locatify."

Not only has the name locatify since been taken, I keep seeing references to cat tracking solutions everywhere!


I once created a spiked floormat intended for feline area denial.

I wanted to call it Pussy Control but my wife wouldn't let me.


Looks interesting but I can't imagine my cat wearing this - she'd try to remove it; case is quite big and would annoy her


First prototype is great anyway. Could be made smaller over subsequent iterations!


Wondering if flex PCBs would allow to redistribute some of the components around the collar instead of having them as one big chunk.


Better to wait for v2 or later of "the ultimate solution for pet tracking" (from the video).


Indeed, it looks very large for a small feline to wear. It would be useful as a "find my large dog".


the answer to find my large dog is usually: snoring under the desk.


Your dog's mileage may vary, depending on breed and age of the dog.


This shouldn't be for cats only, but a general OSS GPS tracker for vehicles too (I know it can be used for that), lots of people from home-assistant community will be interested in it.


It could probably track vehicles, sure.

But vehicles don't need the indoor tracking, or the home base station, and when moving have nigh-unlimited battery power available.

So I imagine it depends on how much those features are adding to the price. Also, it looks like the device isn't commercially available, and with BGAs etc it's not easy to DIY either.


Yes, this is mostly a solved problem for vehicles. I have a tracker in my car that does not even connect to the electrical system. It is a somewhat bulky brick with a battery that lasts 4–6 months. Smaller units are available, trading off battery life for size.

The cost of the device is less than $100, excluding the cellular data cost.


Is it opensource tho?


Dang, lost my car. peeks under bed Theeeere you are lil' fella!


It's a common "market segmentation" approach. They can make different sites/pitches for other markets.


I looked around the pages but I couldn't see any cost info. I realize this is an open source project but it would still be nice to get a ballpark estimate on how much it would cost to build one of these yourself. Anyone know?


I imported the BOM for the tracker to Mouser and it looks like it's around $100 in components for one board. It looks like the boards with ENIG finish and filled and capped vias would be ~$40 for five boards + ~$17 shipping to the US from jlcpcb. ~$15 of the board cost comes from the via covering.

The most expensive component, the DWM3001CTR13 Ultra-WideBand module, is $37.77 in single quantities. I don't know much about about UWB, but I wonder if instead putting a BLE beacon on the tracker and using a chip supporting Bluetooth direction finding on the home station could allow the tracker to be a bit smaller and cheaper at the cost of some localization performance for the indoor mode (actually I just saw someone already brought this up in the project Slack).

This isn't including the Home Station part which doesn't seem fully documented yet.It looks like there is more discussion on the project Slack.


As someone in the USA I've compared GPS to an Airtag and the difference hasn't shown to be different enough to bother with GPS. Considering how cheap an airtag is and the difference in battery life - it's a no brainer to use an airtag. The density of iOS devices in the USA is such that it's very comparable to GPS in my experience.

This is a cool project, though. One thing I didn't see is, how much does it cost to make this in practice?


I live out in the sticks, and the whole reason I invested in a GPS/LTE collar for my dog is because there are broad swaths where he'd only be in range of an apple device if he had line-of-sight to it. Considering his favorite exploring path is the creek bed set 8 feet below grade, that means he'll just disappear.

I'd love to own the data from that collar, but I also looked into the BOM of doing this, and (considering what my time is worth doing the full-stack embedded electronics thing) it was absolutely cheaper to buy it and lose access to the data. It's a lot cheaper than fully fencing 2.5 acres out in the country.


My friend lives in a suburb of a city and her cat's airtag rarely went off enough to be useful. He mostly hangs out in the bushes where she was most worried about not finding him.


> i'd love to own the data from that collar

why not get him an Apple watch and put it in an exercise mode so it records GPS coords as he goes, synced to his own iCloud account?


There's also the issue of keeping him on our land. There's added correction capabilities (first a signal noise, then a mild shock) as part of the Halo collar that we got him. And an entire training program that comes with it, so prior to enabling the feedback mechanisms, I train with him so its not just a bolt from the blue.

He's an 80lb Belgian Malinois, a breed known for their high drive, and for being pretty scary looking. People out here keep goats, horses, chickens, etc. He knows not to go after our chickens, but do the neighbors know he won't go after theirs? The last thing I want is for him to wander onto a neighbor's property and get shot because he looks like he's helping himself to their livestock. He'll get shot for that (or less), and I'd have zero recourse, even legally.

The Halo collar is the exact same price (including data plan) as the apple watch, but I trade remote feedback to him if he leaves the property (and a collar ruggedized to the rigors of an active dog), vs owning the data, but on a device that's not at all designed to be worn by a dog that likes to roll in dead fish and coyote shit. Meanwhile, adequately fencing the property (so he won't jump over it) will cost me between $12k and $30k. Compare that to $700 + $5/month.


If he gets shot, will you wish you had fenced the property?

> a dog that likes to roll in dead fish and coyote shit

that is like every normal dog, at least I know exactly what you describe!


Are you asking me if, in the situation where my failure to build a $12k-$30k fence (for materials alone, not including labor, and the environmental impact survey that has to go along with 1200 linear feet of 6' high fencing in a wildlife corridor) gets my dog shot, will I wish that I spent tens of thousands of dollars when the ~$1000 or so I spent on equipment, and a few weeks' worth of after-work training should have done the trick?

No, I won't wish I had fenced the property. I'll wish I'd done a better job of training my dog.


Fences deprive wildlife of free movement, and I can only imagine the upkeep on one that big.


I’m guessing the big downside to that is that an Apple Watch running a workout continuously has a battery life of maybe 6-8 hours at best, so you’d have to buy at least 2 of them and fiddle with them several times a day to swap them and start a workout. And also they cost $300 each but I haven’t looked at what any other option costs, admittedly.


Which is what, 10 times as expensive as something purpose made like https://tractive.com/ ?


that looks even better: agreed.


Honestly if that's the only spot where there's an issue I'd get an old iPad LTE and solar panel and permanently mount it somewhere with solar. Then the airtag will be able to find your doggo there as well.

It's cheaper than fencing thousands of feet of perimeter, anyway.


That creek is miles long, forms one border of my property, and its all of below grade. I'd have to install numerous repeater stations to accomplish that, all on somebody else's property, all along that creekbed. Turns out the government and the telecos have made those investments for me.


I did a very rough BOM analysis of just the raw components and if you buy them at their highest rate (1pc cutoffs), the raw component cost excluding the PCB was about $100 USD. My guess is you would be looking at about $200.

Personally, I would be jumping in if I could buy a fully populated PCB and take care of 3D printing, final assembly and software. However, doing electronics like this is far out of my wheelhouse.


Thanks, this was very helpful to me. At $200 with no subscription fees, I would definitely consider one of these for my dog. :)


So I put an AirTag on my cat, who promptly lost it in about a week.

I only know very roughly where the tag is. Its location is still being updated after two years. (Lost mode activated: Sept 6, 2021. Last seen 16 minutes ago.) I used to think it was two doors down, but its somewhere near the end of the block.

That's it. I have no better idea, because I have to be near it to make it beep, and I can't make it beep. The arrow mode doesn't trigger because I'm not close enough to it. Once -- and only once -- did the signal get strong enough to trigger mode, but it went away before I could do anything.

AirTags kind of suck. Even when I was playing with the tag in the house, I could only get the beep/arrow mode to work when I was in the same room with it, and at that point, I could literally see it.


My partner runs an at-home business that results in people coming & going a bunch throughout the day - so we put AirTag collars on all 3 of our cats for peace of mind. So far none have gotten out but even in the home it's nice to just open the 'Find My' app & know exactly where cat X is when you can't seem to find them.

My only hope is that in the future Apple designs an AirTag mini of sorts. Right now they're juust on the edge of being too big to keep strapped around their necks. They don't really seem to care, even at the current size, though.


I wish Androids had a way to talk to the Airtags :/ iphones have that cool proprietary technology that points you in the direction of the Airtag even if no other phones are nearby


That's Ultra Wide-band (UWB), and it's supported on several Android phones including Pixel 6/7 Pro. I don't know if the proprietary Apple bullshit prevents using Android to find them, but there are UWB trackers from Tile and Samsung as well.


> but there are UWB trackers from Tile and Samsung as well.

I think the problem is that these trackers get a lot of their benefits from network effects. I own a bunch of Tiles, and I find them really useful, but if I lose my luggage somewhere I'll only get a ping if they happen to be in range of another phone that also has the Tile app.

Meanwhile, with AirTags, given the prevalence of iPhones in the US, you're much likely to be in range of someone with an iPhone at most times.


I think Google is actually working on this:

> In addition, Google is updating its Find My Device experience to make it easier to locate devices by ringing them or viewing their location on a map — even if they’re offline, it says.

> This, too, will arrive later this summer, along with new support for Bluetooth trackers from Tile, Chipolo, and Pebblebee, as well as audio devices like Pixel Buds and headphones from Sony and JBL.

https://techcrunch.com/2023/05/10/googles-find-my-device-net...


100%. That’s the reason I would only buy something on the Find My network (have recently had great success with “ATUVOS” ones for about $12 each and one found on Temu for like $10ish) or maybe if there was another that would enjoy 90%+ coverage of Android phones - although I suspect the fragmentation and unavailability of system updates to many devices that aren’t brand new would mean it would take 5 years for such a network to be built.


I use that feature for finding my keys and wallet at least 2-3 a week. One of the many things keeping me on an iphone.



Yeah, it is annoying that things like this aren't open standards.

But that doesn't sell phones via lockin.


I've thought about an AirTag for my cat, but she doesn't tolerate large collars well (meaning if she doesn't like it - it will get lost on a branch somewhere).

Any way to shrink/lighten the AirTag?


in rural America, airtags don't work.well. I live kn acreage, and so do all my neighbors. the odds that out cat is within Bluetooth range is slim.


cat is always in my path, so I just do `command -v cat`.

If yours isn't I´d suggest setting up slocate.


>Precise Find for Indoors.Comes with Ultra-wideband (UWB) ...

I was playing with the UWB on my Samsung S23 my cat was beside me. As I enabled it she jerked her head towards my phone. I know UWB is far beyond a cat's hearing range but whatever it was she instantly noticed it. No pain or anything she didn't run away but looked at it as if she could detect something.


Could your cat perhaps have heard the sound of the whine of the electronic components? Maybe an interference with your phone and other electronics close by. Just a shot in the dark


UWB is RF, not sound, and your cat didn’t hear it. It could be that the app you were playing with also happened to play a sound in addition to turning on the radio, or possibly your radio happens to resonate at some audible frequency.

Consider that in the US, UWB is RF higher than 500MHz, and I’d be shocked if your phone’s speaker went all the way up to 20KHz, which is generally considered to be the upper limit of the human hearing range.


I would immediately buy those for my three cats. We are currently using Tractive and the battery barely lasts a whole day.


I had issues as well and reached out to their support they provided me with detailed graphs of the battery usage over time and when the cat was in the wifi zone where it does seem to turn off the gps as well as mobile network to safe energy.

I adjusted my wifi to cover a bit more of my garden area and since then battery life has increased to 2-3 days.


We're using Tractive with our dog and regularly get a full week. And that includes 2-3 walks per day that are outside of the wifi zone.


I would gladly pay money for a commercial version of this. I don’t have a cat, but I have a mother who has dementia. I started looked at tracking devices (in case she starts to wander) but battery life is generally miserable. The power management on this looks fantastic.


This is really cool, but provided one can get all the components in the BOM from Mosuer, I'm not seeing instructions about how to actually assemble it.

The only other problem I foresee is if your cat refuses to wear the thing and pulls it off :D


I need this for my bike, it should be easy to hide the tracker in or underneath the frame


Exactly. I recently looked at options available for (e)bikes - and this easily looks much better than everything I could find.

Ideal device (for a bike) would:

Fit inside the handlebar

Have eSIM support and 5g

Open sw/hw

Bring-your-own data eSIM

This comes pretty close already.


Having had a catalytic converter stolen, I was hoping this was about those instead...


Well, you can slap it on one of those as well.


Nice one! Keep it going and open!

It could be awesome with tech like "Energy Harvesting Module that Efficiently Generates Power from Electromagnetic Wave Noise"[1].

If only big tech where thinking like you and opened their research...

In EU I'm using a LoRa/GPS based pet tracker[2], but it's not enough to quickly find a lost pet.

[1] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=37480512

[2] https://www.invoxia.com/


Letting your domesticated cat roam the neighborhood is the worst thing you can do to the natural environment around you. In N America, domestic cats are the most invasive species. Why? Because they absolutely destroy the local wildlife population. Wonder why you don't see a ton of birds? Because your cat is probably murdering them for recreation.

This is a great example of engineers optimizing the wrong thing.


I love the purity of his focus: search the documentation for “dog”: 0 hits…


Well, he does call it a pet tracker.


I'm curious about the UWB integration, I thought apple's Find My could only track airtags? Is it simulating one? And the only UWB dev kits / readers I can find are thousands of dollars.


UWB is an open spec implemented by both iPhones and Androids, which the chip this project uses supports: https://www.qorvo.com/newsroom/news/2021/qorvo-solutions-int...


Why not a kickstarter? I'd back this


We're fostering a dog and it recently ran away while with one of the prospective adopters, was missing for a week. We retrieved her 7 km from where we were searching.

After that I looked in to GPS trackers for pets and it's all either subscription services (and their implications on your data/privacy) or otherwise some cheap Chinese crap.

I eventually found one of the cheap ones you could configure with traccar but to get that working took a lot of guessing and testing. The cool thing is the only command that works via the server is "change update period", so when it's at home it pings occasionally and when it's outside the geofence, traccar tells it to up the reporting rate. (Plus idle detection, so when her harness is hanging there's limited battery use)

I'm glad to see an open solution like this, would have loved to set this up if I had the dog longer term.

Our cats on the other hand, we never trained for a collar so this wouldn't work unfortunately


How do you get cellular data coverage for an IOT device and how come the website says that it would only cost at most a couple of dollars a month? Which networks have a plan for hackers?


1nce [0] and Hologram [1] offer low cost SIM cards for these type of applications.

1nce for example charges €10 for 500MB of data which lasts 10 years. Assuming you are economical with the data it's €1 a year, which is a very appealing price point. Even if you need 500MB a year that's still less than €1 a month.

Hologram charge by the MB (although I'm not sure exactly how much as their pricing page isn't fully transparent), with a 70¢ a month charge per SIM card. I think they offer a free SIM card with a certain amount of data a month free (maybe 1MB) if you just want 1 SIM card.

[0] https://1nce.com/ [1] https://www.hologram.io/


Verizon, for one. 100 location updates/mo for $1.50.

https://thingspace.verizon.com/marketplace.html


YMMV but as a teenager I devised my own low tech solution: I taught my cat her name. We lived in a rural-ish area with little traffic and a large wooded area behind the house. She would be outside for sometimes 10 hours/day and if I ever needed her, I would shout her name from the back porch or partway into the back yard. Instant cat in <10 minutes.

Except during or in the leadup to thunderstorms. She was afraid of thunder and would hide.


I live on 20+ acres right now. I have an outdoor cat as a mouser. She'll disappear for days at a time and show up for a nap on the couch or to play with the kids and then be gone.

I'd love to see what she gets up to when she's away since there really isn't any houses nearby (maybe 1/4 mile away at the closest). Unfortunately we don't have cell service outside of the booster range in the house so this wouldn't do much for me


These days, I just let Strcat live his life. If he wants to move out, that's fine, his call. Just meow at the door if you change your mind.


People really should be letting their cats out to just roam around, it's (obviously) dangerous out there.

But I support this nonetheless!


This is way too big for a simple cat GPS tracker. On AliExpress there are much smaller trackers, and much cheaper.


Most of these have a shit battery life, shit software and require GPS reception, this one does neither.

You get what you pay for.


> Most of these have a shit battery life, shit software and require GPS reception, this one does neither.

Find my cat needs GPS and LTE when outside your home, and has shit battery when using it, just like the commercial offering.

The software is a fairly convoluted stack that you'll have to setup, self-host, and maintain. And that's shit from most people's POV.


Basically a neat wrapper over nRF9160 and the services that Nordic Semi provides. Cool


Oh, thanks for pointing that out:

> The nRF9160 supports both SIM and eSIM for connection

https://www.nordicsemi.com/Products/nRF9160


We've tried GPS trackers, but I think you would need military level precision for it to be of any real use. 10 meters can easily be the difference between your yard and the neighbor's across the street.


I wonder if this has the same anti-stalking mechanisms that AirTags have.


It's a cool project but it's not open-source. CC BY-NC-SA is not an open-source license, since it limits what the users can do with the code. This is openwashing.


Where do you see that? I see MIT license [0].

[0] https://github.com/FindMyCat/engineering-docs/blob/main/LICE...


Interesting! The end of the page https://www.findmycat.io/ says this:

“Completely Open-Source? What’s the catch?

Yup. No catch. All Software and Hardware files can be found in the Engineering section and the Github page under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License”.

This is in the Frequent Questions section. (You need to click on the question to see the answer.)


Meh. “open source” vs “Open Source”.


Looks really nice on paper, how old is it though? I see it still has a microUSB connector which makes me think it’s been stuck in development for some time.


Keep your cat inside, and if you're taking it outside have it under your control.

They kill so much native wildlife.


I have an Apple tag on my cat.

It’s greatly helpful when they escape.


I have one too. It is useless considering the range is less than the maximum possible distance in a mid sized house.

When she escapes I open Find My and I generally visually find the cat with my eyes before the phone even picks the signal up. It keeps the "Get closer..." and only actually shows the arrow when I'm like 5 meters from it.

I have iPad iPhone Mac Apple TV Airpods, more stuff and a bunch of Apple services. Honestly my most disappointing Apple purchase.

In case it matters, phone is 13 Pro.


Wouldn't just using the iOS beacon have sufficed?

Regardless the project looks very cool and informative.


Is there anything specific about cats that prevents this from being a generic thing tracker?


Well it is probably bit too big for a hamster


No Android app, no cigar


This is such a beautifully put together project!


Can your cat sue you for violation of privacy ?


Because these are HN cats, they will have willingly turned it over.


Is this compatible with doggies too?


and bikes?


k


You shouldn't put collars on cats. If you have to then it should be a quick release collar.

https://www.rspca.org.uk/-/news-collar-warning-after-cat-die...


I came to write the same. I live in Thailand in a place with tons of jungle. It is common around here that cats die due to getting stuck in a tight spot because of the collar. I personally lost my first cat due to this. Now i am aware and will never put a collar on a cat if it hasn't got quick release. Such a horrible way to die. Quick release is for me a hard requirement.


You should put collars on cats so that other people know the cat has a home. But yes, it should be a quick release collar.


And put an orange collar on them to identify them as an escapee.

https://ek.explodingkittens.com/kittyconvict


I agree.

Of course you could add a quick release/stretchy part to the collar so it is safe, but that also means that the tracker would easily get lost (especially if the cat isnt used to collars since kittenhood, they tend to be too annoyed by them and try to remove them)


That is not a problem. It is a tracker. You can just go pick it up if is falls off


Have cats with a tabcat each. The safety collar comes off a couple of times a year, once or twice it's been inaccessible - neighbour won't let you in and cant find it themselves, on a roof, etc.

For those worried about collars, I can confirm that https://www.coolcatcollars.co.uk collars do come off. You can also use a luggage scale to measure the force it takes to release.


You're right, partially. Yes, you can track the tracker itself and go to that location. But that location might be inaccessible to humans, or the cat might drop the tracker somewhere where it gets unusable, say a bit of water for example.

Also, whats the point of a tracker if its not on the cat?


Safety first. I can always buy a new tracker. If the cat got killed by the tracker what the point of the tracker in the first place?


Of course safety first, I dont disagree in that. What I am saying is that I dont see a way to make this safe _and_ reliable at the same time


It's a numbers game. A tabcat used to be £16 to replace the tracker, if you always replace, and they don't lose it that frequently, then it's highly likely that they'll have it in case of emergency. This device is probably more expensive to replace (and unfortunately the tabcat is now £60 to replace, although you do get two trackers for that cost)


It's better that it "malfunction" and fall up by mistake than not falling off when needed.

If it do falls off (by mistake or because the quick release did its intended job), at least you now have a good starting point where to go search for the cat. Assuming it doesn't fall off the very first day, you might also have a good idea or sense of in which area the cats normally goes strolling due to the tracking feature.


> or the cat might drop the tracker somewhere where it gets unusable, say a bit of water for example.

The dog GPS collars made by e.g. Whistle are waterproof, IPX8.

You might not get a cell signal under a couple of feet of water, but that much water also means you probably aren't finding the gadget even if you have a recent GPS fix.


> Also, what's the point of a tracker if it's not on the cat?

Well, if your cat is one that tolerates a collar most of the time, he'll have the tracker on most of the time, which is better than no tracking at all. One of our cats tolerates a collar without any problem.


This should be the top comment. The product being advertised here does not look safe for cats.


> shouldn't put collars on cats

For an indoor outdoor-occasionally GPS-tracked cat, collars are fine. There is no case where they will get themselves into trouble and be unaccompanied to ruin.


I mean, if you're concerned about the cat's health, keeping it indoors (or in a cat patio) is probably going to reduce the risks to the cats health way more than skipping a collar will, and you won't need a collar.


Physically yes, mentally I would argue not so much.


I'm not sure being terrorised by dogs is particularly good for a cats mental health either.


In some cases it is the opposite...but I guess you think you should be put under house arrest for your mental health too. There are so many dangers outside.


Reminds me of this article from yesterday:

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=37511036

And the old saying "knows just enough to be dangerous".

The fact they got this far without knowing this safety information is concerning, to say the least.


Once again bunch armchair neckbeards downvoting and trolling people fully based on opinion.

As a multiple cat owner with decades of experience and someone who has rescued many cats off the street in NY(T&R because yes its not good to have hundreds of strays per block), you downvoters have zero context here and your comments have been nothing but opinions.

Heres a super simple usecase that can shut you all up. People have indoor cats escape! This is traumatizing to owners, like a family member being abducted. It can go on for months and yes, people find their pets (we did), at great cost and burden.

And before you go claiming irresponsibility, this happen to us when someone broken into our unit. So fuck off please.

There is research on how indoor cars live happier healthier lives that are yes 10x longer, because outdoor cats literally die at 1 and 2 years old (they are adults) and indoor cats live to be 20+


Sad that a vitriolic rant with zero technical discussion is the top post. This is hacker news, not whinging news.

I think the design is too big and the battery life too uncompelling but open source means better luck at being improved. Amazon sells a lot of bunk as I’ve tried a few and only had luck with jiobit. I’d like to tinker with this.


Actually agreed. I work in hardware and have given people all the same feedback to the question/realization that "my pets chip is not a tracker"... Its not practical to attach this to pet.

And PS, I like to rant at hacker news, the community is so boring otherwise.


Which shows how bad are other comments, e.g., the one saying: "The solution is simple: keep the [cats] indoors"


> outdoor cats literally die at 1 and 2 years old (they are adults) and indoor cats live to be 20+

Where do you live? We had outdoor cats live until they were 19 and 17, both passed from age-related illness. Relatively calm neighborhood away from any heavy traffic, granted; but still.


There seem to be large cultural differences and they have their reasons.

For one, the average area of a house in the USA seems to be above 2000 square feet, whereas here in the UK it's more like 750 or so.

It feels worse for the animal to be cramped in a tiny space all their life, so we let them outside. Also there are no predators apart from the occasional domesticated dog, so it's safer. The biggest risk is traffic, which is dependent on where you live.

The bird thing brought up every time is weird to me, because no one seems to care about birds until cats are part of the conversation, suddenly birds are the most important part of the ecosystem.


We learn new things over time. Birds are wildly important to the world's ecosystems. House cats, not so much. They're more useful to humans in keeping rodents away from our food but that's not as necessary these days.


The supposed impact on bird life seems possibly quite overstated. Extensive personal experience suggests that (at least the cats that select me to live with) do not catch many birds at all.

Of the current cat with free-ish outdoor access: Last year birds accounted for 3.6 percent of all recorded catches (5/138). This year birds are 1.7 percent of all recorded catches (1/58). And all of the birds I've seen caught first knocked themselves out striking windows, or flew inside the house via open door and injured themselves trying to escape in panic. The healthy ones don't let cats near them at all.

Of the prior cat, zero birds over 9 years. Of the cat before that, maybe 1 or 2 birds over 18 years.

Of course anecdotes aren't data etc, but, the impact of data is its story, and anecdotes direct and constrain the collection and analysis of data.


how are you going to be like "my anecdote is actually important" with an N of magnitude 100. long-term and wide-scale research and monitoring has tracked millions of birds and have used models to extrapolate to the billions. your comment means little more than nothing. have you considered you haven't seen the extent of what the roaming cat has killed? it won't always bring it back to you. and why is it that the non-bird animals aren't important? biodiversity reduction, not just birds. and you think that even if they are sick or injured catches that your cat isn't impacting the other animals? you realize other animals gotta eat? if they can't b/c your cat takes it, or worst infects it with a parasite by chomping on it, your local predators are gonna suffer.


I grew up on a farm (which my brother now owns). So my anecdata spans from roughly 1980 until today. The farm cats tended to have two very different life spans. The short lived ones died within their first 3 years. The long lived ones lived 16 years or longer. With most bunched up around 18-20 years and the oldest two living to 25 and 27 years.

We've had no cats that lived between 3 and 16 years.

I have no idea why. To some degree you could get a sense which category a cat was in within the first year or so.

If I were to guess I think a cat will probably have a shorter life span in a city. More cars and more opportunities to get infected with diseases from other cats.


I live in a rural area with indoor/outdoor cats and I've seen that too, honestly it feels like a pretty classic bathtub curve, or that curve showing experience vs survival whose name I'm spacing on, the one with the dangerous "knowing just enough to be overconfident and kill themselves" valley. Some cats are inherently more cautious, but in general over the decades my observation has been that in general cats are like humans who engage in risky but rewarding behavior be it work (factory, or devops for that matter cough) or sports such as rock climbing or kayaking. When someone (or some cat) is absolutely brand new to the world, nearly everyone is very careful. Then they grow in comfort and experience, having learned a lot of the basic ropes, and in turn get more and more confident. But they haven't had their first crisis yet. Eventually comes the inflection point, where overconfidence leads to some sort of life/death (or losing the production database and holy shit are you fucked) moment with a rare event.

Those cats (or people) who make it through that crisis will gain some hard humility forever more and seem to go on for a long time after. Those who don't, well, obviously that's it. I had two big male cats back in the 90s, who being tough young males naturally once they got to 2-3 years old felt pretty confident. First of them sadly vanished and never saw him again. The second a few years later got into some fight or flight with/from something, I don't know what, but there were shrieks. But he escaped/fought and I found him. Forever after he was very careful, he'd go out the door onto the porch and whereas before he'd just instantly head off, after he'd immediately sit down and observe/listen for a good long while first. He lived to 21 years old. Another outdoor/indoor lived to 19.

It is truly hard to take the risk, but they're so much happier for it. We all reach the same end in the end, so I feel very strongly that there are limits to how far one should take "being safe". And there are good ways to massively reduce the bird issue. I love birds as well, but 3-5 caught per year when I'm feeding and support orders of magnitude more birds than that seems acceptable.


I find it sometimes genuinely upsetting to see the negativity in some comments. Different views are cool and for some people something might seem more obvious to them than to others, but there's a way to share without tearing down. Constructive feedback is one thing but no need to be negative for the sake of being negative


Just because you may be right when others may be wrong is not a valid reason to disrespect other people.

"When disagreeing, please reply to the argument instead of calling names." (https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html)

Downvoted and flagged.


If cats escape from their house, either the owners behave like royal a-holes with them, or very likely they were not spayed/neutered. I'm sorry for some self defined animal lovers, but by not spaying/neutering a domestic cat they're actually harming it, in a very cruel way. Cats aren't people: many times during their life they feel the absolute urge to reproduce and cannot fight against this need with reasoning like humans because it's purely an instinct that can become stressful and very dangerous for their physical and mental health if not satisfied. I've had family members who were against spaying/neutering and had all their cats escape, even multiple times by throwing themselves off the balcony (2nd floor luckily, they all survived), and all of them eventually developed very aggressive behavior against humans although they definitely were house cats.

All my cats (all neutered) never tried to escape from our old city apartment, aside the obvious exploring the hall beyond the house door, and now that we live in a small town in a cottage with garden and trees my two cats both enjoy wandering around the property, but they eventually come home for the night. It wasn't that easy: they had to fight for territory since this property has been kept empty for years so that it was easily taken by the neighborhood cats, but so far it looks like our cats won.


> If cats escape from their house, either the owners behave like royal a-holes with them, or very likely they were not spayed/neutered.

Hard disagree here. All four of my cats are spayed or neutered and the one is determined to go out and explore. She will sneak behind your back and fly through the door as it closes. She looks peaceful and sleeping across the room, but don't let that fool you -- she springs to life and flies out the door when you least expect it.

She once escaped through a basement window, about 6 feet above the floor with no objects below it, through a gap which was just a few inches wide. I got her back about three days later by setting up a motion activated camera and a bowl of food outside.

I've fostered over 50 cats now so I feel like I know and understand their behavior pretty well by this point.


> All four of my cats are spayed or neutered and the one is determined to go out and explore.

We don't disagree here, I never wrote that neutered/spayed cats don't want to explore, that's normal behavior for every feline out there, but that those who aren't can suffer a lot from being forced home. For cats which aren't spayed or neutered it isn't just about exploring anymore but satisfying their urge to mate, and they won't return until that need is satisfied, if they do.


My choices were being an ahole or the cat wasn't spayed / neutered though.


"my cats are this way therefore everyone's cats are this way"


I have had my indoor cats get out before, it sucks. I currently have AirTags on their collars but something like this with real gps would be way better.

I just wish it were smaller.


All the people I know don't have collars on their indoor cats... that's the part where I was left scratching my head :P


3/4 of mine have collars with RFID tags on them to control how much food they get from the automated feeder. They didn't care for them too much at first, but they quickly learned that it was their meal ticket.

The fourth cat doesn't have one because she can't eat kibble without it causing urinary problems.


Ours didn’t used to, but when we hired someone to watch them while on vacation we realized it was a good idea. They could get out due to carelessness, or a broken window screen. They could also end up out and alone in the confusion of something like a house fire.

A lot of people with indoor cats also leash train them.


> I was left scratching my head

I’ve heard a collar might help with that.


Isn't that what the cone of shame is for? And I think my arms are relatively longer than the feline ones...


I'd be super-interested in buying this hardware. A few thoughts:

1) One of our (indoor, house) cats is always keen to escape, and as such currently wears a breakaway collar with an Airtag attached via a 3D-printed holder, which seemed the best available solution. He copes with that without a problem, so if this isn't too much bigger then I'm sure it would also be fine, and I'd definitely upgrade him to this hardware.

2) I know that this HN, and people love to be experts and poke at any available hole, but let's assume good intent and not go overboard on the 'dangerous collar' thing. I totally agree that the picture on the website is wrong, but it looks like a render, and as such has probably been farmed out to someone who doesn't know better. Stick this on a decent-quality breakaway collar and you should be fine. (Anecdata: of our two housecats, one will remove any breakaway collar within minutes; the other one doesn't care and his collar only comes off every few months if it gets caught during a cat-on-cat play-fight.)

3) Also agree that there's huge potential in this market for tracking many other things - proven by the success of the Airtag.


The best way to keep track of your cat is to not let it outside. Benefits:

1. Zero cost for cat tracking devices, never need to charge them, never need to worry about the cat losing the device.

2. Dramatically reduced chance of your cat being killed by a car. Despite blogs claiming otherwise, I can find no reputable statistics on the number of pets killed by cars in the US, but there are >250k collisions with animals every year. Most are deer, but anecdotally I know many many people who have killed cats accidentally.

3. Dramatically reduced chance of your cat being killed by a coyote or raccoon. Yes, coyotes and raccoons will absolutely fuck up your cat. Yes, they are very likely in your city.

4. Your cat will not be playing a part in the wholesale slaughter of billions of birds, small mammals, reptiles, and other fauna that domesticated cats are responsible for.

5. Significantly longer predicted lifespan for your cat. The life expectancy for an indoor cat is about 14 years. For an outdoor cat, it's 2 to 5 years.

6. Your neighbors will appreciate not stumbling onto your cat's poop while gardening.

Seriously, keep your cat indoors.


I just checked. There is no coyotes or raccoons in my city. Not even anyone in my country!


Oslo seems to be well within lynx territory, whom I am sure would be glad to snack on a housecat. Norway also has wolverines and in a few areas, wolves and bears.


Norwegian cats eat lynx.

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Norwegian_Forest_cat

More seriously - biggest danger is probably cars.


Wow that is one big house cat! Beautiful.


That's just what the coyotes and raccoons want you to think!


Why'd you get a cat if you can't give it a proper life? I find it hard to believe that all areas/countries are equal here. Cats shouldn't be imprisoned if at all possible.


Every time this comes up, anywhere on the internet, this comment more or less appears. Cats belong outdoors, they're animals. You ever see how miserable a cat is indoors once its been outside? It's torture. So what if they have a shorter lifespan or get killed by a coyote - that's the cost of letting an animal outdoors vs confining it to a box. People who have cats in small city apartments are especially cruel.


...do dogs belong outdoors?

What about hamsters and guinea pigs?

Plenty of cats are perfectly happy to remain indoors. I have a cat who was rescued from the streets as a kitten. She actively refuses to go outside unless she is accompanied by a person, and even then, not for very long.

But even if you do want to let your cats live outdoor lives, that's no reason to just let them loose on the environment.


> cats in small city apartments are especially cruel.

nah, you're just an uncreative person. you can be involved in your pets stimulation. seeing that you think having a pet inside is just confining, i feel pretty correct assuming you see pets as just an animal you hang out with and feed and not a responsibility to nourish. instead, have the outdoors do your work for you! and if they die, so be it. shows a lot of love and care :)


> You ever see how miserable a cat is indoors once its been outside? It's torture.

Yes, I wouldn't describe it as torture.

I have seen what an outdoor cat does when it gets its paws on a lizard, snake, baby bird, or mouse. That's torture.


My cat is an indoor cat. It wears a tracker. Cats escape, sometimes. This way we get an alert if he manages to get out.


The cat would have a terribly boring life.


How much more boring is our world becoming without our songbirds?

https://daily.jstor.org/environmental-danger-outdoor-cats/

There’s the academic source, and for my anecdotal one my family’s yard in Connecticut is much quieter on a June afternoon today than it was 20 years ago.

There are responsible ways to keep indoor cats entertained. If someone can’t do that, then it seems to me they’re just as unsuited to having a pet as if they couldn’t keep it fed.


you can walk your cat on a leash. you can play with it to give it stimulation. letting your cat roam outside isn't a replacement for your laziness.


Even if you have a good point people are going to be less likely to listen to you if you start calling them lazy. This comment would be better without the last sentence


fair. projection on my part. i interpret seeing people say indoor cats lives are miserable (and using that idea uncritically to affirm their own choices) are doing so from a holier-than-thou position. to me, it's an uncreative and lazy view on pet ownership, but i getcha: flies, honey, and vinegar and all that.


> walk your cat on a leash

I doubt any of the cats I've ever had would approve of this


Mine adores her leash walks. Cats are naturally skittish animals, being both prey and predator. So if they trust you as a source of protection the comfort of walking without worries is a benefit that outweighs the restriction of the harness. Plus it's high quality bonding time.


I live in an apartment complex with lots of animals and I see several of my neighbors leash-walk their cats regularly.

It just takes some time to train them usually. It's much easier if you get them used to it early in their lifetime, though.


Sure, if you don't take care of it or provide any stimulation. Part of having pets is taking care of them.


How do you purport to know such a thing?


What if cats are native animals here and live here for thousand of years?

Maybe, it make sense to not generalize and firstly get some information where cats are more welcome and where not.

Cats (as a predators) keep population of birds, small mammals, reptiles, and other fauna healthy. Or we should ignore this because its false?


Where are household cats native animals?


Istanbul comes to mind. They have feral cats like other cities have feral pigeons, and have so for thousands of years

(and yes, pigeons are feral, not wild! They are a domesticated species)


feral != native


What outdoor cat lives 2-5 years? How is this number meaningful when it’s not compared across countries and urban environment?


This statistic is from the US.


… which is obvious, and not what I asked?


The asked what outdoor cats have that lifespan. The answer is outdoor cats in the US.


Cats should not be left to roam freely in cities. They would catch and spread incurable parasites (including to humans), and they would be exposed to various other dangers, such as getting hit by cars or attacking or being attacked by other animals. Furthermore, they leave droppings, and other messes, such as the corpses of the animals they kill, and they damage bird populations. Keep housecats indoors, and do not feed feral cats.


This is absolutely true. I feel conflicted about feeding feral cats, because I don't love the amount of suffering they often endure, but I think the appropriate middle ground is to support trap/neuter/release (TNR) programs if you're going to engage with feral or domestic-but-outdoor cats.

If they can't reproduce, then feeding them actually reduces the harm they cause because they won't need to go out hunting for food.

I will say, though, as someone with cats who are escape artists, I love this product, I'd find it invaluable. We already have AirTags on them but it's an imperfect solution.


>If they can't reproduce, then feeding them actually reduces the harm they cause because they won't need to go out hunting for food.

That's completely unfounded speculation and wishful-thinking.

Would you like for cats to deposit their parasite-laden (human-infecting, incurable) feces in your herb garden, where your children play, or directly outside of a window you need for ventilation? If so, than there are certainly others who would not. Basic decency demands that you don't facilitate this.


> That's completely unfounded speculation and wishful-thinking.

It's not 'speculation' to suggest that logically, an animal which is not hungry won't expend energy to hunt for food.

> Basic decency demands that you don't facilitate this.

Basic decency demands showing compassion to animals in need. But if there's one thing I'm seeing in this thread, it's lots of people who seem to think their views on these matters are moral universals.

> Would you like for cats to deposit their parasite-laden (human-infecting, incurable) feces in your herb garden, where your children play, or directly outside of a window you need for ventilation?

Do you even know how cats decide where to poop, or what they do with their feces? Cat feces doesn't just sit out, they bury them. While it's true feral animals - including many cats - harbor parasites, healthy cats are typically fastidiously clean. Much cleaner than dogs, and I should know, I have both.

You have awfully strong opinions but they don't seem like they're based in much knowledge.


>It's not 'speculation' to suggest that logically, an animal which is not hungry won't expend energy to hunt for food.

Your argument remains as merely some vague hand-waving, still with no evidence presented.


It feels like you're being deliberately obtuse, but, here you go:

https://www.unitedspayalliance.org/feral-cats-if-you-feed-th... https://www.felina-sicily.org/en/how-to/to-feed-or-not/ https://www.feralcats.com/good-neighbor https://spayneuterspringfield.org/feral-cat-info

and here's a study describing what happens when one doesn't take this approach:

https://www.dvm360.com/view/feral-cats-fed-not-cared

All of these were on the first page of Google for 'feeding neutered feral cats only if fixed' or 'feeding neutered feral cats only if fixed study'

What I'm suggesting is standard and recommended practice.


Those are advocacy websites (run by toxo+ cat lunatics), not reputable scientific publications.


I literally cited a scientific study as my final link.

But given that you think people who like cats are "toxo+ cat lunatics," I think there's no productivity in this exchange. You clearly have some really strong biases, and you've made clear what I was already inferring from your comments - you won't agree with anything that doesn't support your incorrect viewpoint.


Cats always roamed outdoors. like kids used to do. It is a fucking part of life dying, having diseases.

Keep your cat vaccines up-to-date, neuter them and have regular checkups. An indoor cat is a miserable life, intended to be an object of some over-controlling miserable person who is afraid of life and want everyone else to be as miserable, paranoid and afraid as them.


wow, what a spiteful, judgemental message. people always beat their children to discipline, so should we keep that relic from the past even though we know better? a cat indoors is not miserable; rather you lack creativity to get it the stimulus it needs in a way that doesn't thrust the problems of an outdoor cat onto your local community. outdoor cats are for people who like the idea of having a pet, but don't want all the responsibility to take care of it and instead relies on the local environment to provide it with all of its needs. you force non-cat owners to subsidize outdoor cat ownership. y'all are a draw on our society holding onto this idea cats need to be outdoors b/c you have a naive view of what is "natural". you think your cat is being in nature, but it's more akin to a state-sponsored killer. you think wild animals get the benefit of having a guaranteed source of food, shelter, and disease prevention?


Enjoy your toxoplasmosis, and subsequent schizophrenic symptoms… but at least your cats got to hunt all the diseased rats they like, right?


And, According the the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, you have a much higher likelihood of contracting the disease from eating raw meat or from gardening.

But I guess you don't do much of either.

The thing is, like everyone of us, you'll die someday, you'll get sick, probably even very sick as you age. You can't cheat death, disease and suffering for ever. You can do the reasonable stuff to take care of you, avoiding really stupid stuff like DUI, hard drugs, cigarretes, excessive drinking, too much sugar, but you need to understand that this only goes so far, and that in average, it is not liking you are going to double your lifespan if you became completely anal about preventing risk. Sooner or later, no much how paranoid you are your cellular machinery will star failing, and no, you won't be able to upload your life to the cloud and live forever in the metaverse as much as your average incult billionaire tech bro believes.

And when this day comes, the question that really matters is not if you are going to die soon, but wether you have ever lived.

Now, you are free, and if you want to live in a super-afraid-karen modem the rest of your life, none of our business. But don't force an animal to share your miserable outlook of life. If you are so worried about the cat bringing those dangerous germs to your house, nobody is forcing you to have a cat.


>According the the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, you have a much higher likelihood of contracting the disease from eating raw meat or from gardening

Cats deposit the parasite in gardens, so your suggestion that this vector of infection is unrelated to roaming cats is misleading.


People reporting on missing cats and such. The solution is simple: keep the indoors. That is the responsible thing to do. Cats are highly destructive to native fauna, they can get injured, die, breed, pick up parasites, or catch communicable diseases that may be incurable.

Keep them indoors.


What don't you do the same, stay indoor, humans too are highly destructive to fauna, they can get injured, die, breed, pick up parasites, or catch communicable diseases that may be incurable.

All animals should be free, if you can't provide freedom to your animals then you should not have any.


You are making an obtuse argument. You do realise pets are introduced species in many parts of the world, and actually end up being significant pests, right? Predatory pets like cats are especially destructive in most ecosystems, many small native species are vulnerable and end up being endangered, because they have not evolved a defence strategy against them. Places like Australia has a huge problem because of it.

Again, keep your cat indoors. Otherwise, you're part of the problem.


It's not an obtuse argument. People value different things. You listed a bunch of things you value (lifespan of cat, not killing lots of birds, etc) but other people are uncomfortable preventing their cat that wants to go outside from going outside. They're weighing their cat's own preferences over the things you value and reasonable people can disagree over questions like this.


It is an obtuse argument. Because they identify themselves in what I said earlier, got defensive about it, and then resorted to mental gymnastics in an attempt to absolve responsibility for the harm caused by their own pets.


I understand where you're coming from, as they can be highly destructive and are to be blamed for some species on Pacific Islands going extinct! The humans who brought cats to such fragile ecosystems are clearly to blame.

By and large, domestic US outdoor cats are not in fragile ecosystems, but they are the number one killer of birds. They roam outside along with other species (like squirrels and crows) that have had to adapt to the insane environment humans have developed.

I've always seen my pets as persons, with feeling and moods. Trapping them inside is cruel. Cats in nature are adapted to roam and explore.

My cat in the US regretably, has brought home a few birds, but all of the birds were species of least concern. Fortunately, there are a lot of cheap collars owners can use to help alert the bird of the cat's presence before predation occurs.


Your cat doesn't know which species are of least concern, and you certainly aren't seeing every bird or small mammal or reptile your cat kills for fun.

I recently took a course on ornithology and was stunned by how difficult a bird's life is from the migrations, predations, building collisions, and the sheer amount of work they invest in nesting and raising their young. It's easy to take them for granted until you actually understand what they go through just to exist, unlike a pampered cat who gets to kill for sport.

Cat owners who allow their cats outdoors are being cruel to birds and small animals, period. A bell on your cat's collar doesn't make much difference. There's no way to wiggle out of this moral dilemma. If you love nature and want it balanced and protected, then keep your cat indoors. Or, if you can, train your cat to kill only invasive species.

https://www.nature.com/articles/ncomms2380 https://www.nationalgeographic.co.uk/animals/2020/09/the-232... https://abcbirds.org/program/cats-indoors/cats-and-birds/


> Your cat doesn't know which species are of least concern, and you certainly aren't seeing every bird or small mammal or reptile your cat kills for fun.

Of course they don't know which is of least concern, but by and large I do see everything they kill because they bring it home and I have to clean it up. It is in their nature to bring it home.

> A bell on your cat's collar doesn't make much difference.

Bells and other deterrents absolutely do make a difference (https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fevo.2022.85044...)

There's barely any species of concern in urban environments anymore, because:

* Industrial run-off * Habitat destruction * Roads and highways with vehicles * Air pollution * Light pollution * Poisons * Electrocution from power lines * Buildings with glass (actual a #2 killer of birds!) * Hunting (both legal and illegal)

Domestic cats are merely a cherry on top of the myriad of environmental mistakes humans have made in the name of progress.

They are simply acting on instinct and trying to be happy in a world of human creation.

If you truly care about birds I would urge you to:

* stop driving * use no lights past dusk * not use or consume any product that contributes to air pollution * not use any power grid that uses power lines * not use any building with glass * not consume any poultry


You forget that cats aren't always 100% in their kill rates. They also maim many critters who die sooner or later from their injuries.

So while you pet and play with Fluffy that evening, the mother bird she maimed earlier that day can no longer make ~100 trips a day to feed its hatchings. She tries, but can only manage a dozen or so trips. They slowly starve over the next few days despite the mother's desperate attempts.

That bird survived all the other leading causes of bird mortality, but not Fluffy. And Fluffy gets a few more bonus kills when the hatchlings expire.

I'm curious what would you do if people had a new breed of small domesticated dog that is efficient at killing outdoor cats, and those people let that dog roam like a cat?

Given that your cat is out there doing his thing, this new breed of outdoor dog is also out there doing his thing. As you said, they are simply acting on instinct and trying to be happy in a world of human creation.

His owners think he's a person. It would be cruel to lock him up all day.

But one of these dogs swiftly kills your outdoor cat. And your next cat. In fact, they're becoming the leading cause of death among outdoor cats, seconded only by cars.

Would you a) demand that dog breed not be allowed to roam because it harms cats, b) keep your next cat indoors, or c) ?


1. those collars don't work. birds didn't evolve alongside cat w/ flashy collars, so it doesn't always trigger flee instinct

2. if your cat wants to go outdoors, you can leash them like any dog-owner is required to do. the whole "cats need to be in nature" argument is rooted in the assumption that you as the owner aren't involved in that nourishment. if you can't be a responsible cat owner (keeping it from roaming on it's own; keeping it stimulated) then don't get a pet. is the cat really a critical unit of your family if you skirt responsibility and are okay w/ it dying violently outside?

3. the US is very much a fragile ecosystem. source on it not being? we, like many other place, have had a huge and trending decline in biodiversity.

4. cats haven't adapted to the human environment; we've developed technology and laws that have protected cats in our human environment. i'm not sure how they've had to adapt as they can interact with humans safely.

5. you don't see everything your cat kills. you may be able to placate yourself that your cat isn't one of the "rampant killers", but that thought isn't based solely on fact.


I've only been into cat discourse for a few months but in my experience it's almost a guarantee that someone will make the "humans are the real invasive species" argument to defend letting their cat out


Proving their point by demonstrating invasive behavior themselves!


You're the one who decide to take an animal as a pet, knowing all the damage it can do to the environment. If you're fine with it then that's ok for you but you can't force your pet to be in prison because you don't want it to kill other species, if that's the case then you should not consider getting one in the first place.

Would you want to live in a cage your whole life? Then why do you want to do it to others? Never heard of the Golden Rule: "Don't do to others what you wouldn't want them to do to you"?

I understand your point of view, I share it, cats are deadly to many smaller species that's why if you're against that then you shouldn't get a cat at all.

PS: Australia's problem is about the Feral cats and they are making traps in the wild to poison their skin thanks to some box trap and AI.


Oh please, cats are perfectly fine indoors if they are raised that way. There are solutions, like building a catio, indoor platforms and so forth. You can even train them for walking on a leash in a park. If there is a will there is a way. But people are lazy and pretend letting cats out is not a problem.

And if you are living in a shoebox yourself, where you regard your own home as a "prison" or a "cage", then you have no business keeping such a pet anyway.

> PS: Australia's problem is about the Feral cats and they are making traps in the wild to poison their skin thanks to some box trap and AI.

Feral AND domestic. There are laws introduced in Australia that mandates cats to be kept indoors for this reason.


Indeed I guess it depends of the size of the house.

> Feral AND domestic. There are laws introduced in Australia that mandates cats to be kept indoors for this reason. I didn't know about the domestic one.


> cats are deadly to many smaller species that's why if you're against that then you shouldn't get a cat at all.

Many people who have cats do so by adoption of strays found in their area so not getting a cat is the same as letting a cat roam free in that area without a safe space and consistent food source.

The whole "prisoner" argument seems so dumb to me when we've already decided as a society that it's in the best interests of society to neuter/spay as many cats and dogs as possible to prevent an explosion in the stray population. Do you think we shouldn't do that because you wouldn't neuter/spay yourself?


If they are strays why would you want to force them to be inside? I really don't get you.

We can have both desexing pets and letting them roam free. No need to force them to live inside.


The point is that you're ok with forcing them to be desexed but not forcing them to live inside. Why?


I genuinely don't understand why you feel the same rules ought to apply to humans and non-sapient animals, especially animals introduced into an environment by humans.

What about the fact that animals introduced to an environment by humans in the name of "freedom" cause disproportionate harm to other animals? Whose freedom wins?


Just don't get a cat?


That's a pretty big "just" for someone who grew up loving cats.

I'm sure it seems easy to you to not have animal companions, but plenty of rational people place a lot more value on it than you do.

Your point of view is based on faulty assumptions about the importance of that experience.


It's a choice you have to make.

It's the same as cigarets, you know it's toxic to you and others but still you want it regardless.

PS: I love cats and always had one until few years back but I don't want to have one to force him to stay indoor, as long as I don't have a place for it to go out I won't get any.


> if you can't provide freedom to your animals

How free are they if you consider them yours?


If I'm understanding correctly, you're suggesting that all pet owners should disown their pets and let them free?


Do you have a pet or a slave pet?


I don't understand the difference in your point of view. Aren't all pets slaves from your definition (not free)?


Agreed as a cat person people should keep their cats indoors. It's better for the cat & better for the environment. Every outdoor childhood cat I had got hit by a car or ran away. None lived much past 5. My parents started to keep cats indoors and they lived 10..15+ years.

That said, this product looks like it can help people who lose their indoor cats, which happens. I recently helped rescue a neighbors cat who snuck out and stayed outside for 2 full months.


Weird how nobody mentions that you can actually walk your cat - it's very different from walking a dog, but completely doable.

Over time you can get rid of the leash and just walk side by side.

My cat was 10 when we moved to a ground floor apartment, so we couldn't realistically prevent him from escaping, so we started walking him. He lived over 16 years, the last two of which he would only go outside to lay in the bushes.


Do you think maybe by making sure that generations of cats never experience the outdoors, perhaps you are breeding them to not know how to deal with the outdoors whenever they do get out?


I prefer my cat not to get hit by a car.

Deer, possums, raccoons, and other wildlife who live outdoors seem incapable of learning how to avoid it, so it's unclear my cat will either.

Further as mentioned in my post, my parents essentially ran your experiment already with the result being every male cat we had dying in under 5 years due to being hit by cars.

So no, I don't think it's a great idea to let your cat outdoors in most reasonably populated & dense areas of the US.


> Deer, possums, raccoons, and other wildlife who live outdoors seem incapable of learning how to avoid it, so it's unclear my cat will either.

Or, you only notice the ones which have been killed. Otherwise, deer, possum and raccoon populations should decrease pretty fast. And of feral cats of course.

> Further as mentioned in my post, my parents essentially ran your experiment already with the result being every male cat we had dying in under 5 years due to being hit by cars.

I'm sorry to hear that, but I am curious why it was only the male cats. Perhaps they are less skittish? What happened to the female cats?

> So no, I don't think it's a great idea to let your cat outdoors in most reasonably populated & dense areas of the US.

Alright, but I would hope you can at least agree that keeping cats indoors all the time is not preparing them for the outdoors, in the cases when they do slip out.


Cats are native fauna in some places. If it’s not suitable for a cat to go outdoors where you live, maybe just don’t get a cat in the first place. Same for dogs, children, horses etc.


While cats are native in some places, evolutionary mechanisms stop working when a predator has an unlimited supply of food supplied by humans. The problem of cats nowadays isn't their existence, but that the amount of cats per square meter is more than the ecosystem can support. Usually this would easily balance out by the predator dying. But with humans feeding cats, they can rampage the ecosystem until it's destroyed without checks and balances. Feeding a predator and letting it outside is never suitable.


...what places? Cats (and dogs, and horses) are domesticated animals. They aren't "native" anywhere the same way a wild species is, they were bred by humans.


The UK, Scotland in particular, as a starter for 10.

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scottish_wildcat


Amusingly, Scottish Wildcats are rare, going extinct because they are interbreeding with feral domestic cats.

Your very post (and Wikipedia link) undermines the argument you are tying to make.


What point do you think I am trying to make, exactly? Native fauna is defined as animals which historically have naturally occurred in the local area [1], and wild cats are by definition native fauna in Scotland, and across much of Europe.

You are letting your very obvious personal bias determine your interpretation of what is an objective fact.

[1] https://www.lawinsider.com/dictionary/native-fauna#:~:text=N....


It's a faulty comparison, though. Domestic cats are by definition not the same as any native cat. They are domesticated animals, more equivalent to dogs, cows, and chickens.

So the discussion to have here is 'do we accept having domesticated animals in environments they didn't originate from'.


It is in no way a faulty comparison. We did not domesticate cats in the same way that we did dogs, cows or chickens [1]. Wild cats found human populations useful because they attracted rodents. Humans found cats useful because dealt with rodents. A mutually beneficial relationship lasting thousands of years during which time, cats essentially domesticated themselves.

[1] https://www.nationalgeographic.com/science/article/domestica...


> domesticated themselves

... so they are domesticated and not native... ???


Whatever do you mean? Something being domesticated has no bearing on wether or not is it native to an area.


Domesticated animals are different species than native flora and fauna. The domestic cat is taxonomically and genetically not the same as a any wild cat. The same goes for dogs, cattle, etc.

By definition, domestic animals and plants have no native home except with humans. This is why we call domestic cats who escape and live in the wild "feral," not "wild," because a feral animal is specifically a domestic animal not living with humans, not a non-domestic native animal. It does not matter whether they 'domesticated themselves' or not, they are a domestic species and therefore not equatable with a wild one.

As a result, your point simply makes no sense. Domestic cats have no 'native lands' because they are not and cannot be 'native' anywhere except in human settlements.


Replying here due to depth limits.

> Can you point out the part of the article that disagrees with the assertion "cats are domestic animals"?

This is neither relevant nor the issue being discussed. It is a straw man, and you all too well know this. No one has at any point claimed that there are not domestic cats.

The entire point made was that cats are a native species in many parts of Europe, and that research shows not only that cats domesticated themselves, but that domestic and wild cats are genetically almost identical. The fact that domestic cats exist does not prevent native wild cats from also existing.


Did you actually read the article I linked to? I ask because actual evolutionary geneticists don't agree with you, and I'm likely to side with them on the genetics of the matter.


i'm sorry, which evolutionary geneticists? the 1 sentence in a nat geo article about the genomes being similar, or...

https://www.science.org/content/article/genes-turned-wildcat...

http://www.jabg.org/view/JABG_202303_02.pdf

from the looks of it, you found an inkling of confirmation and rolled with it. you think you got a science backing for your ideas, but nah, wrong. remind yourself when you read all the articles claiming "near identical DNA!" that human DNA is ~1.6% different from gorilla DNA. geneticists are seeing larger differences between domestic and wild cat species.


Can you point out the part of the article that disagrees with the assertion "cats are domestic animals"?


not only that, but which geneticist that was quoted in the nat geo article? lol


Why is this getting downvoted? Indoor cats always have a longer lifespan than outdoors. It is the right thing to keep cats indoors but provide plenty of indoor play & stimulation to keep them active.


It’s not as “simple” as gp suggests, nor is it “the right thing”. We really don’t know what psychological and qol differences there are between the two… we’ve never been able to ask the cats. There are trade-offs, life expectancy being only one dimension of it. And in both cases (like the play you mention) there are mitigations to the downsides.

Source: I’ve had both indoor and outdoor cats, including cats that transitioned to outdoor after being raised indoor. Lost one outdoor cat tragically in middle of his lifespan. But his equally-outdoor brother lived to 19, and all the outdoor cats hands down seemed happier on average (less lethargic, less neurotic, less obsessive, less overeating).


It's getting downvoted because this varies hugely by location. In the UK, the life expectancy is not that different, there are no large predators, so the consensus of cat owners is that cats life richer lives if let out. If you live in the US your cat could be eaten by a mountain lion or coyote.


> In the UK, the life expectancy is not that different, there are no large predators

No, but there is traffic and plenty of people who take objection to cats fouling their gardens and will happily leave out a saucer of antifreeze.

If you live in an urban area, the kindest thing to do is keep you cat indoors.


This is pretty much the same attitude which leads to kids being wrapped in cotton wool, ferried everywhere in giant SUVs and never let outside to play. I find it a bit sad.


Not really. We teach children how to cross the road and children don't generally take a dump in the neighbours flower beds.


dude, it isn't a giant SUV divers that are advocating for indoor cats. they are the same people that hold onto the whimsy that "cats a natural and belong outdoors! :)"


The UK is one of the only places I've seen someone walking their cat without a leash


You're being downvoted, I don't think people realise quite the difference it can make.

One source suggests anywhere from 2x to 10x increase in life expectancy.


So you're saying my cat could have lived up to 190 years if she was kept inside? Huge if true!


I keep my cat in a locked closet, and she is coming up on 267 years, still going strong! I used to hear her playing in there, but nowadays she's much more quiet.


Wow you both are bigger trolls and worse at math than me!


Imagine my surprise that you don't understand what an average is.


Is that a breed of cat?


What if someone breaks into my house or I leave the door open for slightly too long? are both of these concepts THAT alien to you? lol.


Whataboutism doesn't change the fact feral cats, or domestic cats going feral are significant pests in many parts of the world. My argument is about advocating responsible pet ownership of small predators that can easily stray and become an environmental problem.


Even indoor cats can escape.


Or even better provide them a large outdoor catio / enclosure. Opportunity to play and access to a stimulating environment are so valuable for cat well-being.

In a lot of ways cat's are still in the early phases of domestication and the concept of keeping them indoors only is rather new.


The lack of birds in the small town where my parents live, and dozens of semi-feral cats roam, is always rather unsettling. Meanwhile the parks in a city two orders of magnitude larger are bustling with activity, since the life expectancy of an outdoor cat here is close to zero.


A few usage tips:

    - Whatever attachment system is used for animal attachment, it should break open under the cat's weight or less. Otherwise you are running a hanging-to-death-site locator.
    - A harness with the tracker mounted on the top (spine) seems more tolerable and robust than a collar
    - Remember it is a *"collar tracker"* for your expensive purchase, not a *"cat tracker"*, and you will remain satisfied.


The best cat tracker in the world:

```

$ whereis cat

cat: /bin/cat /usr/share/man/man1/cat.1

```


No surprise a hungry cat will eventually be found inside the bin.


which cat?


Yes, but definitely not command -v cat, commanding cats doesn't work.


To see which cat, you pipe it through cat.

which cat | cat


/bin/cat



The usual word of warning, if you are going to put a collar to a cat (or dog) free to roam, make sure that it will break with a force less than the pet's weight.

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=32660081


This is only a stopgap measure until cats get their own cellphone devices. Then you can track them as your teenagers


My relatives showed me once how they track their children's every move and honestly I can't say I understand this idea - seems awfully intrusive.


This is a cellphone device, LTE.


Almost. But my cats also do watch cat and bird videos a lot. And some kind of social engagement would be needed, like swiping right and left


There is a much larger market for this tech - parents. Today's world is so crowded, kids or parents can be separated by less than 20 feet and devolve into panic. Give them each a way to know they're safe and can be found. You're already awesome, wish more people could share like you have, magnificent designs!


Do they make a teenager-sized model?


Most teenagers already carry a convenient tracking device


Was going to say the same :-D


My indoor cats: "challenge accepted".


A gentle reminder that cats are responsible for a significant destruction of the wildlife in the US (and the world). Please be a responsible pet owner and don't let your cat run outside unsupervised.


What wildlife? Rats?


Billions of birds each year just in the US.


Fascinating to see the dichotomy we have, even here on HN, with regards to subscription services. As a founder, they are great: recurring revenue ! But as a customer, of course they suck. I hope this inspires more companies to find a way to build more self-contained products.

Even the awesome non-commercial, source available project here, findmycat, relies on a cloud service.

For such a product, the cost could be quite low if done well, it could even be priced for 10 years in the initial package, assuming accounting is done properly.


Friendly reminder that most of us live in places where cats are non-native and should therefore either keep them indoors or on a leash.


One of my cats almost killed himself when he tried to remove the flea collar, and those are supposed to break. No, it didn't. Luckily, I was around and managed to cut the damn thing before it would suffocate my cat.

Never ever will I put anything artificial on a cat again, far too dangerous.


Collars are indeed dangerous for cats, maybe harness are a better options.


Harnesses would be just as bad, perhaps worse, for outdoor free roaming cats. The risk is that they get caught on a tree or fence and fail to release themselves. Alway use a collar designed to snap open when snagged.


How do you get your cat to wear that? Isn't wearing a collar for a cat some kind of torture? All the cats I ever had were extremely unhappy with collars and often found a way to get rid of it.


This looks great, I can put it on my kid.


You have a nice cat but please don't use huge png files to show it to us.


[flagged]


OnlyCats?


I'm guessing something along the lines of FindMyPussy.


PawPatrol, geez.


[flagged]


What the hell?


hey, if y'all get outdoor cats for "pest" reasons, i'll take care of the outdoor cats i see as pests :)


You won't need to track them if they're always indoors. Please keep your feline friends indoors. Cats are horrible for local lizard and bird populations.


What if they escape?


Absolutely no way this could be exploited to harm humans like it already happens with AirTag, no way sir.


I think the err... cat is out of the bag on this one. The market is already saturated with trackers.

Plus, this doesn't have the same potential for abuse as it has more limited battery life than NFC beacons.


Very cute comment, enjoyed that one ^¥^


I think these trackers create privacy issues since these furry friends regularly traverse the neighborhood (walk on fences, walls, roofs, enter homes etc).

would be nice to see on the 'Why' page [1] stats around pets lost, stolen, the need to track, bit about price etc.

as an engineering IOT project it's exciting for sure, looks good.

[1] https://www.findmycat.io/why


What's the privacy issue?

I mean, it doesn't impact my privacy if a GPS-tracked van drives past my home.


like i said above, cats typically tend to "walk on walls, fences, enter other's homes etc" ... the cat strapped with a watch-sized device could be used to monitor/record (not necessary this proj).

cameras and microphones are very cheap these days.

of course if one's not bothered about privacy, then the issue doesn't exist (magic)


Maybe the cat decides to live a double life with some other family and doesn't want the first one to know about it?




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