Independent review on GrownUps

Carrie Wallis
kin2kin
Published in
4 min readJul 24, 2017

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Kaye Lally is an Age Hacker. One of five tech-savvy seniors selected to form a group of over-60s charged with challenging stereotypes in this space by showing how they use technology in their daily lives, and encouraging people of all ages to do the same.

She regularly contributes to GrownUps, New Zealand’s most popular lifestyle website, social club and brain-training destination for the 50+ community.

Researching kin2kin in preparation to write an independent review for GrownUps, Kaye recently set up her own family on our app. Here’s a couple of our favourite bits:

… even when we’re not together we have the ‘sitting around and sharing’ feeling.

I’m hoping kin2kin will be a way to get all our family photos in one safe place where we can all see and respond to them, sharing both the happy and proud moments as the grandchildren grow, now and in the future, as well as the nostalgia of photos from our shared past.

Read on to learn more about Kaye’s experience connecting with loved ones via kin2kin.

kin2kin — Our new family photo album

Lucky enough to have photo albums of your childhood? They’re great fun to share and reminisce over. I haven’t been that organised with our photos. Lots in boxes and drawers. Recently I’ve tried kin2kin, an App that our family has been having some fun with it. On the surface, it’s another photo storage place but it differs from others as it’s structured around family relationships. Kiwis designed it so it even has space for pets.

It was easy to set up. I downloaded the kin2kin app on my phone and just added each of our children and their family members. As I added photos I chose whom to tag in them. kin2kin organises the photos into Albums for each person. I thought this would mean choosing one person in a group photo, but in fact it allows multiple people to be tagged then adds the photo to each of their Albums. A precious photo of our three kids with my late father on the one occasion they were together is now in each of their Albums.

I sent invitations to kin2kin for each of our children. Once they’d accepted they could see the photos I’d loaded, add photos and make comments. Our grandchildren also have Albums but each household is managed via at least one mobile phone number, so their parent can allow the child to join in by passing them that phone or pairing a wi fi device. The tech savvy 9 year olds are now busily adding selfies. Cousins and siblings of all ages are commenting on one another’s photos in typical family fashion with laughs a plenty.

As well as comments, photos have a heart button that can be used to Love a photo. Holding it down then makes the photo a Favourite and adds it to a further Family Favourites Album. The new kitten ‘walking on water’ was the first Family Favourite. Should you wish to make a calendar or similar pictorial record the Favourites album certainly helps making the selection.

If you add people’s birthdays etc then you get sent a reminder. Gift cards can also be sent via kin2kin. Cleverly, it can tell from the mobile number where in the world the recipient lives and offers a range of that country’s gift cards. Other family members can choose to add a contribution to the card. On the occasion, the recipient gets a message with an envelope to ‘open’ announcing their gift with appropriate fanfare. The actual gift card follows by mail.

kin2kin understands the importance of privacy and provides easy management of who has access to our photos. It’s simple and fun to use. We’re only just getting started. I’m adding wider family members including my only first cousin as she will enjoy seeing the photos without having to be on Facebook, I’m not sure I’m brave enough to extend it to my husband’s twenty-six cousins and their families! Still, he may like to do that and can set it up so our extended families will only overlap at our family.

Many thanks to Kaye and GrownUps for their kind permission to publish parts of her post. You can read the original full article here.

GrownUps offers more than 5000 lifestyle articles from travel, health, family, life, sports and pets to name a few, as well as daily brain-training games, competitions, discussions forums and great offers from trusted brands. They are firm believers that at 50 you are only half way there and life is not about looking in the rear view mirror.

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