Let the engineer speak, honestly I would buy a James and Smith Umbrellas because they were hand crafted and only 150 bucks and the one I have which is the slim is lasting me 8 years and it's still going.
I lost a pretty high dollar English Umbrella years ago. Went in an internet cafe when it was raining, put the umbrella under my chair so nothing would get wet, was no longer raining when I left, so I forgot it. Went back later, of course no one knew anything about it. But I figure I have an easier way to not forget one in the future it I ever buy a good one again- I will put a little lanyard on it with a small clip which I will clip to my belt or a belt loop.
Use the Umbrella only when it rains, hence, the battery will be dead by the time you go to use it. Also, linking/pairing bluetooth is a pain, it never works right.
velocity73R For the record for anyone reading later on that cares about being accurately informed... the method Dave K talks about is proximity, which doesn't involve multiple/repeated pairings.
We have a high pedestrian kill rate in my area. Black umbrellas on black pavement at night are suicide. Why can't I get a yellow or reflective umbrella with a curved cane handle?
Seriously the host were incredibly ignorant clowns. David Kahng had. I h to offer/explain had the host be willing to listen. Their rudeness was offensive.
@@_._._._._._._._._._._._._.____ Mate? The price of Davek Umbrellas is a clear indication of cheap quality. Francesco Maglia are high quality. Handmade in Italy.
@@yacovlk7924 mate, it depends on the weather you're faced with. In some countries/regions, the wind is worse than those commercials stress-testing the umbrellas, which saw the streets piped up with broken umbrellas (umbrella graveyard essentially).