Download itwinkle app






















Most of the mobile apps are exclusively developed to work with mobile phones. Few apps provide the larger screen versions that support windows, mac, and PC by default. But when there is no official large screen support, we need to find a way to install and use it.

Create dazzling, customized displays of light right from your iPhone. Easily select from 34 pre-set seasonal color combinations, and then apply a lighting effect such as Steady, Shooting Star, You can connect multi-lights with WiFi and control them by your family network. Same with red, orange, pink and dark blue. What is going on?!? When the tree is on a preset mode, like chasing, the colors are fine. As soon a I change it to steady however, the pastels come back.

Please someone help or create a bug fix for the color wheel. The developer, Kywoo Innovation Technology Co. The developer will be required to provide privacy details when they submit their next app update. With Family Sharing set up, up to six family members can use this app. App Store Preview. App Privacy. Size 7. Category Entertainment. Compatibility iPhone Requires iOS 8. Languages English. Price Free. Developer Website App Support. Family Sharing With Family Sharing set up, up to six family members can use this app.

More By This Developer. These are touted as WiFi capable. I may be wrong. Wouldn't be the first or last time. Hopefully they are better then the Philips Illuminate Light sets. These were sold last year any many places I got some from Target on black Friday. The brain has a iOS and Android app that lets you control the lights and put music to them. Lots of patters and colors and you could set any custom colors and patterns. The problem is they were not cheap even for black friday.

The first set I got didn't work. The second set I got worked for a day. Then Phillips sent me a new brain and I exchanged it. The Thrid brain I got them up on the house and the were erratic and I ended up having to replaced entire sets of strings 3 times till the finally all quit again.

Was not fun I ended up taking it all back to Target after Christmas for a refund. Basically what I'm getting at it I would plug them in turn them on and leave them on for several hours a day before you try to actaully do something with them.

Strange how Home Depot now carrys them and Lowes doesn't. It was the opposite last year. I'm convinced that the mfg keeps changing the name and features of these lights so the holiday buyers of the big box stores don't look it up and realize how poorly they sold the previous year. Even the manufacturer's name has changed at least once in the past few years. I see now. GE has two types. They were called itwinkles last year too. I think they might also be trying to dupe buyers into thinking its a new product.

Actually, I have a whole closet full of them that I need to find a use for I've been working with head since I think that was their first year. The same bulb design has been GE color effects, color effects and iTwinkle. The bulbs appear to be unchanged that whole time. Having sent a lot of them back for warranty repair, the first few years they were made by "Santas Best Craft" and that changed ? The controller box has been the same the whole time but the contents have changed. They started with an RF remote.

Then the RF remote disappeared in favor of a pushbutton. Interesting enough the original design of the pcb and case allowed for this variation. The pads were in the original pcb for the pushbutton. And the enclosure mold had provisions for the button hole. The radio receiver was a daughter board. So this seems to be a planned option for a cheaper version of the product. Then came the Bluetooth and now wifi versions. I haven't seen these PcBs myself but I wouldn't be surprised if they just replaced the origina daughter card radio with the newer versions.

I've ranted on these in the past about high failure rate. But others haven't been experiencing the same problems. So I just wanted to throw that out there again for the sake of those just getting started. I'd open the controller but it has those nasty triangle screws on it and I haven't got a bit..

Sounds like no one has done any work on cracking the protocol for the WiFi version. I'll play round with it some more and see if I can make some progress. I'd like to setup the strings in a way I can just reprogram them from one of the servers on my network Worst case I'll cut off the controller and put a micro controller on it but it seems a shame to toss a functional WiFi module if I can make it work Play with it and have fun!

Report back your findings, maybe someone will chime in with some help or another direction to try. That's what DIY is all about. I'd open the controller but it has those nasty triangle screws on it and I haven't got a bit Try a straight bit from precision set.

Or you can do what imbluenote said - that's how I got the screws out from the ones 2 years ago. If these things are talking on the WiFi, you should be able to put a wireless card in a laptop into promiscuous mode and Wireshark them. Not every wireless card allows that but that would open the gates to hacking the protocol. I'm not sure if it's the same thing, but one of these things was built using fr2 board material.

Fr2 is just processed paper and cracks if you look at it wrong. I was surprised to find that in such an expensive toy. I went back and read a little through the site - it appears that you can connect several strings to one Wi-Fi connection. If someone else wants to open theirs, it's just a matter of forcing that one end gently after removing the screws. Unfortunately, the potting holds the PCB tightly in place as well -- with just an uninteresting side facing out small metal shield and a few test points are all that's visible.

In "monitor" mode I see traffic, between my phone and the controller, but since I'm not a member of the network I can't decrypt it. In promiscuous mode it appears my wireless card isn't letting me see anything not bound for the computer I'm on. I've looked over their website and their "datasheets" offer virtually no information on their IP implementation. I know I could put a better controller on this, but think how many of these Costco will sell -- if we can get the protocol understood they could all so easily do much more interesting patterns with no hardware work at all And finally some success!



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