There are all sorts of "viberating shakers" out there for the deaf/hoh. I have a bed viberating shaker that scares the crap out of me. Does the job so well, that I trained myself to wake up before the alarm goes off.Do you think it would be helpful if a pillow shaker is used as an alarm clock?
It would be frustrating if you get late everyday because you could not hear alarm clock sound.
Do you think it would be helpful if a pillow shaker is used as an alarm clock?
^^ lmao-- that is probably what I'll need! An anvil..
Cheap watches @ 50.00-80.00? That's not cheap.
I'm in the market for a travel alarm (will have a hearing roomie...)but not so sure a wrist watch or similar with vibration would work.... and I don't like wearing watches to bed either.
Just what I needed- one more thing to worry about lmao
I don't use pillowshakers anymore....
Cheap smartwatches now have vibrators ($50, $80 watches)
I can sleep anywhere I want (sofa, friend, family, etc).
My watch on my wrist vibrates to wake me up now.
I even downloaded a smartwatch app so I have to enter a special button code to turn off my alarm. So I can't accidentally turn it off!
Make sure you choose a model with 2-day or 3-day battery life, so you don't need to charge as often as those expensive "1-day" Android Gear or Apple Watch. Sometimes the cheap stuff works better. Battery charging the watch takes only 20 minutes once every 2 or 3 days for me.
A used Pebble Time watch from eBay also has powerful vibrator, more powerful than my mattress vibrator of yesteryear. It can vibrate in an "annoying random vibrate pattern" which is better. Use the Gentle Wake App configured with "Konaimi Code" + "Not-So-Gentle Vibrate" and you've got a wrist-mounted wakeup call that you can't turn off without a special button combination!
Fitness trackers with vibrate also work as deaf alarms (e.g. FitBit).
Important attributes for smartwatch:
-- Powerful enough
-- Long battery life
-- Cheap (well under $100)
-- Configurable vibrate (like random vibrate pattern)