Quyến rũ nhất tiểu sử động vật hoang dã người mới học về chim

Giới thiệu Amateur ornithology at its cutest

Quan sát chim non ngộ nghĩnh dành cho người mới bắt đầu

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KẾT LUẬN

Amateur ornithology at its cutest là một hoạt động đáng yêu dành cho các người yêu chim không chuyên. Các tài liệu và sách giảng dạy về chim được thiết kế đặc biệt để kích thích sự tò mò của người mua. Nội dung chủ yếu xoay quanh việc tìm hiểu về các loài chim và cách nhận biết chúng, từ những con chim phổ biến đến những loại hiếm hơn. Sách cung cấp thông tin chi tiết về cách xác định chúng thông qua giai điệu hót, màu sắc và hình dáng. Bên cạnh đó, nó cũng cung cấp hướng dẫn về việc xây dựng các lỗ đậu chim, làm tổ và bảo vệ chim trong môi trường sống tự nhiên. Tổng quan, hoạt động này mang đến cho người mua niềm vui và sự hài lòng khi khám phá thế giới đa dạng và thú vị của chim.

Bird Buddy is one of the more frivolous gadgets I’ve had the opportunity to test: it’s a premium-priced smart bird feeder that records and catalogs the critters that stop to feed, pushing adorable videos of birds throwing seed around right to your phone. After living with the feeder for a few months, I have to admit that the novelty of daily bird notifications has lost some of its luster. But Bird Buddy is still a lot of fun to use, and I think anybody with even a passing interest in birdwatching will love it.


bird-buddy-square

Bird Buddy smart bird feeder

The Bird Buddy smart bird feeder is a downright delightful way to get a closer look at the birds (and squirrels) in your yard. It’s pricey, though, and some of its features are gated behind a subscription paywall.

Color
Yellow; Blue

Battery
3,800mAh

Weight
1.32 lbs (empty)

Capacity
About 4 cups

Dimensions
9 x 6.3 x 6.89″

Battery Life
About 5 days

Charging Time
2 to 4 hours

Pros

  • Nice image quality
  • Attractive, colorful design
  • A lot of fun to use
Cons

  • Some durability concerns
  • Expensive, and some features require a subscription
  • Bird identification isn’t always accurate

Price and availability

Following an exceedingly well-funded Kickstarter campaign, Bird Buddy’s smart feeder is currently available to buy from the company and on Amazon. Buying direct from Bird Buddy, there are several different hardware bundles to choose from, with prices as high as $480 for a kit that includes just about every piece of hardware Bird Buddy currently offers. The base version I tested, which includes the feeder, the camera, a feed scoop, a “universal mount,” and a nylon cord for hanging, goes for $249 at MSRP, but as of writing, it’s available for $199. Amazon only carries a version that has solar panels built in and costs $279.

Design, hardware, and what’s in the box

bird-buddy-smart-bird-feeder-seed-tray

Ignoring the camera module, Bird Buddy looks like a fairly standard bird feeder. It’s nine inches tall and shaped like a little house, with a roof overhanging a gravity-fed seed tray. Most of the feeder is made of colorful plastic in either blue or yellow, with clear plastic bits on the front and back to show how much seed is left. There’s a hatch on the back to add your feed of choice — it holds about four cups — and tiny holes under the tray to allow rainwater to drain through. With its soft angles and vibrant colorways, it’s got a more modern look than most bird feeders out there, teetering on outright trendy.

The white, pill-shaped camera module is held in place with a single magnet, and its sole button sticks out a bit, which makes the camera easy to remove for charging with a USB-C cable. There’s a little platform at the front of the feed tray with raised bird footprints on it — a very cute touch.

bird-buddy-smart-bird-feeder-bottom

Bird Buddy includes two mounting options with its base-model feeder: a plastic mount to place the feeder at the top of a pole and a braided nylon cord for hanging. I went with the cord, which cleverly loops under the feeder’s roof to help distribute its weight evenly. A couple of weeks in, though, the cord had gotten frayed and discolored, with one section wearing so thin it looked liable to break. I ended up replacing it with the chain you see in the photos here. The replacement chain was all of four bucks at the hardware store, but considering how expensive this feeder is, it should come with a more durable hanging option in the box.

Squirrels have chewed off bits of my feeder.

Beyond the included hanging cable, I’m a little concerned about Bird Buddy’s long-term durability on the whole. My feeder hasn’t ever fallen to the ground, but it’s already collected visible damage in a few spots, including several areas where it looks like squirrels have gnawed away at the plastic housing. Damage like this isn’t very noticeable from a distance, at least, and probably even less so on the blue model.

I’m more annoyed that bits of the door you open to add seed have broken off in the months I’ve been using the feeder. Both of the triangular pieces at the corners of the door that help hold it shut busted off within a few weeks of each other. It doesn’t seem to matter much, the door still stays shut, but this thing is too expensive to be breaking down within the first year of careful use.

Those pizza slice-shaped parts on either side of the door in the second photo have since broken off.

There’s a seed scoop included, which is handy, plus a USB-A-to-C cable for charging the camera module. The feeder doesn’t come with any seed to get you started, but you’ll want to get a type that’ll attract whichever birds are in your area anyway.

Features and app

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When Bird Buddy’s camera module detects motion in the feed tray, it starts recording. After a video is recorded, it’s uploaded to the cloud over Wi-Fi, and the Bird Buddy companion app sends a notification prompting you to review the footage and a handful of stills. You can save the video and stills to your Bird Buddy account (and from there, download them to your phone) and optionally share them to appear in a quasi-social in-app video stream.

Wi-Fi access is a must; Bird Buddy doesn’t have local video storage, so it can’t do much of anything without an internet connection. I’ve got a small backyard, so Wi-Fi coverage hasn’t been an issue for me. If you live on a larger property, though, you’ll need to be mindful of where you’re setting up your Bird Buddy.

The Bird Buddy app is divided into several tabs: an Inbox where you’ll see a chronological feed of activity at your feeder; a Collection that catalogs the different types of birds that your camera has spotted; and Bird Buddy TV, an endless stream of bird videos uploaded by other Bird Buddy users around the world. There’s also a section where you can help Bird Buddy identify any species it couldn’t make out on its own. As a very amateur birdwatcher, I’m not much help there, but it should be a fun diversion for more knowledgeable users.

The videos Bird Buddy records are one to two minutes long, but often only show birds for a few seconds of that runtime. Annoyingly, the in-app player doesn’t highlight sections of the video where there’s activity in any way. So, you’ll spend a lot of time scrubbing through to manually find highlights (or even more time watching an empty bird feeder and waiting). Considering Bird Buddy’s got the machine-learning chops to visually identify scores of species of birds, video highlights seem trivial in comparison, and this feels like a big missed opportunity to me. For the $200+ this thing costs, I shouldn’t have to manually edit clips to remove long stretches of inactivity before sharing.

The Collection tab shows cards for each species your feeder has seen to date. Tapping one lets you see all the photos and videos you’ve recorded of that given species, plus other info like typical size and weight, where you can find that particular bird worldwide, and some fun facts (did you know that house sparrows mate for life?). It reminds me a lot of the Pokémon series’s Pokédex — there are even unique written descriptions for each species, and the option to play recordings of the sounds they make.

bird-buddy-smart-bird-feeder-angle

Bird Buddy often fails to record birds that don’t stick around for long, though, making the collecting aspect a little frustrating. I’ve seen plenty of birds land on my feeder that Bird Buddy didn’t catch videos of.

Bird Buddy Pro

After the Bird Buddy feeder’s launch, the company introduced a paid subscription service called Bird Buddy Pro. For $2.99 a month or $29.99 a year, the Pro subscription adds a number of helpful features. It lets you filter out notifications about species you don’t want to see — something I specifically wished for in my first few weeks with the feeder, as I was swamped with notifications about squirrels and sparrows. Pro also unlocks “frenzy mode,” which makes the camera more sensitive to motion, helping it get more clips of birds at the expense of some battery life.

I’m as tired of everything being a subscription as everybody else is, but for three bucks a month or less, I’m not terribly offended at the notion of paying for Bird Buddy Pro. Bird Buddy is handling a lot of video, and that kind of server capacity isn’t cheap. I do find it galling that you can only get 1080p video if you pay for the Pro subscription, though — I understand higher-res video takes more resources to process and store, but gating hardware-level features behind a subscription paywall never sits right with me.

Video and photo quality

Bird Buddy’s camera uses a vertically oriented five-megapixel sensor with a 120-degree field of view that provides a good view of what’s happening both in the feed tray and out in front of the feeder. Bird Buddy initially said that the 720p resolution cap that applies by default was in the name of battery savings, but 1080p video is now positioned as a perk of paying for a Bird Buddy Pro subscription. That all feels a little slimy to me.

Even at 720p, though, videos are plenty crisp enough to see the action. The camera’s focus is fixed on the feeder’s tray, and footage of critters feeding is typically clear enough to see fine details in plumage (or fur). There’s no night vision or HDR, but considering birds typically feed during daylight hours, that’s not much of a drawback here. At launch, video was recorded without audio, despite the camera having a built-in microphone. But a free software update has since enabled audio recording — and it’s thankfully not a paid feature like full-res video is.

While Bird Buddy calls the stills it serves “photos,” they’re really just isolated frames from recorded video. That’s usually fine, but these screen-grab images are often blurry to the point of being useless. Sifting through the content Bird Buddy captures is part of the experience, though, and I almost always get a good frame or two along with each video.

Battery life and charging

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Packing a 3,800mAh battery, the standard Bird Buddy kit typically lasts about five days on a single charge, though that number can vary greatly depending on a lot of factors: distance from your Wi-Fi router, how often the camera records, and ambient temperature to name a few. Bird Buddy also sells kits with tiny solar panels, but the panels don’t generate enough power to keep the camera running indefinitely; Bird Buddy says that with solar power, the camera can last up to 15 days before needing to be charged.

You’ll charge the feeder over USB-C. Bird Buddy doesn’t specify how much wattage the feeder draws, but says it can charge from zero to full in about two hours. In my own testing, I’ve seen charging at up to 7.5W, which is low for a battery this size. You can charge the camera overnight and not miss much, at least.

Competition

You can find plenty of smart bird feeders online, though likely none from companies you’ve heard of. Bird Buddy’s closest competition seems to be the Netvue Birdfy AI, which also goes for $250 at retail.

The Birdfy AI has several advantages over Bird Buddy, including higher-resolution 1080p video, night vision, and a microSD card slot to add local storage. And, like Bird Buddy, Birdfy AI can visually identify bird species. Netvue’s feeder is considerably less stylish than Bird Buddy’s, though, and only saves videos online for a week unless you pay a monthly subscription.

Should you buy it?

bird-buddy-smart-bird-feeder-birds-eating

The Bird Buddy smart bird feeder is so extremely charming, it’s hard not to like. Everybody I’ve spoken to about it has been as enamored as I am, and a couple of people have even gone on to buy one based on my impressions — before this review was even initially published. Getting an up-close view of the birds that visit your home is a genuinely delightful experience not many gadgets can deliver, and it’s refreshing that essential features like species identification and cloud video storage don’t require a monthly fee. Bird Buddy’s very cutesy hardware and app add a lot to the experience, too. For less plugged-in users, it could be a great smart home on-ramp.

At the same time, though, it’s frustrating in ways a $249 product shouldn’t be. The camera regularly fails to record birds that don’t stick around long enough, the companion app still needs some polish, and by default, the hardware isn’t being used to its full potential: the 5MP image sensor only records 720p video. You have the option to up both the recording sensitivity and the resolution, but only if you pay for a Bird Buddy Pro subscription. Given Bird Buddy’s sophisticated marketing and premium, designerly packaging, it’s also clear a lot of the sticker price is going to pay for things that don’t make the product itself any better.

Before launch, Bird Buddy said it would continually update the feeder’s software to provide a better experience over time. So far, it’s made good on that promise: subsequent updates have added audio recording capabilities to the camera, and made small changes in the companion app to make it easier to use. Given the damage my feeder’s suffered in my first few months with it, I have concerns about its long-term durability — but so far, the scratches and dings its sustained are just cosmetic.

For me, some of Bird Buddy’s novelty has faded over time; I’m rarely in a hurry to check notifications from my feeder anymore. But I can’t deny that catching an especially cute clip or spotting a new species on-camera is still a small thrill, even months into using the thing. If you’re into birdwatching and you can afford it, I think you’ll have a lot of fun with the Bird Buddy smart bird feeder.

bird-buddy-square

Bird Buddy smart bird feeder

The Bird Buddy smart bird feeder is a downright delightful way to get a closer look at the birds (and squirrels) in your yard. It’s pricey, though, and some of its features are gated behind a subscription paywall.