Culture Not smart but clever? The return of 'dumbphones' - Why sales of very basic mobile phones, without apps and internet connection, are increasing.


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The Nokia 3310 phone is one of the best-selling handsets of all time, selling 126 million units

Seventeen-year-old Robin West is an anomaly among her peers - she doesn't have a smartphone.

Instead of scrolling through apps like TikTok and Instagram all day, she uses a so-called "dumbphone".

These are basic handsets, or feature phones, with very limited functionality compared to say an iPhone. You can typically only make and receive calls and SMS text messages. And, if you are lucky - listen to radio and take very basic photos, but definitely not connect to the internet or apps.

These devices are similar to some of the first handsets that people bought back in the late 1990s.

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Two phones pictured in 2005, two years before Apple released its first iPhone, and 11 years before TikTok

Ms West's decision to ditch her former smartphone two years ago was a spur of the moment thing. While looking for a replacement handset in a second-hand shop she was lured by the low price of a "brick phone".

Her current handset, from French firm MobiWire, cost her just £8. And because it has no smartphone functionality she doesn't have an expensive monthly data bill to worry about.

"I didn't notice until I bought a brick phone how much a smartphone was taking over my life," she says. "I had a lot of social media apps on it, and I didn't get as much work done as I was always on my phone."

The Londoner adds that she doesn't think she'll ever buy another smartphone. "I'm happy with my brick - I don't think it limits me. I'm definitely more proactive."

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Robin West says her friends keep asking her when she is going to get a new smartphone

Dumbphones are continuing to enjoy a revival. Google searches for them jumped by 89% between 2018 and 2021, according to a report by software firm SEMrush.

And while sales figures are hard to come by, one report said that global purchases of dumbphones were due to hit one billion units last year, up from 400 million in 2019. This compares to worldwide sales of 1.4 billion smart phones last year, following a 12.5% decline in 2020.

Meanwhile, a 2021 study by accountancy group Deloitte said that one in 10 mobile phone users in the UK had a dumbphone.

"It appears fashion, nostalgia, and them appearing in TikTok videos, have a part to play in the dumbphone revival," says Ernest Doku, mobiles expert at price comparison site Uswitch.com. "Many of us had a dumbphone as our first mobile phone, so it's natural that we feel a sense of nostalgia towards these classic handsets."

Mr Doku says it was the 2017 relaunch of Nokia's 3310 handset - first released in 2000, and one of the biggest-selling mobiles of all time - that really sparked the revival. "Nokia pushed the 3310 as an affordable alternative in a world full of high-spec mobiles."

He adds that while it's true that dumbphones can't compete with the latest premium Apple and Samsung models when it comes to performance or functionality, "they can outshine them in equally important areas such as battery life and durability".

Five years ago, Przemek Olejniczak, a psychologist, swapped his smartphone for a Nokia 3310, initially because of the longer-lasting battery. However, he soon realised that there were other benefits.

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Przemek Olejniczak admits that he now has to plan ahead more when he goes travelling

"Before I would always be stuck to the phone, checking anything and everything, browsing Facebook or the news, or other facts I didn't need to know," he says.

"Now I have more time for my family and me. A huge benefit is that I'm not addicted to liking, sharing, commenting, or describing my life to other people. Now I have more privacy."

However, Mr Olejniczak, who lives in the Polish city of Lodz, admits that initially the switch was challenging. "Before I'd be checking everything, such as buses and restaurants, on my smartphone [when travelling]. Now that is impossible, so I have learned to do all those things beforehand at home. I got used to it."

One maker of dumbphones is New York company Light Phone. Slightly more clever that the norm for such products, its handsets do allow users to listen to music and podcasts, and link by Bluetooth to headphones. Yet the firm pledges that its phones "will never have social media, clickbait news, email, an internet browser, or any other anxiety-inducing infinite feed".

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Light Phone says that sales of its handsets, pictured, have soared

The company says it recorded its strongest year for financial performance in 2021, with sales up 150% compared with 2020. This is despite its handsets being expensive for dumbphones - prices start at $99 (£75).

Light Phone co-founder, Kaiwei Tang, says the device was initially created to use as a secondary phone for people wanting to take a break from their smartphone for a weekend for example, but now half the firm's customers use it as their primary device.

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Kaiwei Tang jokes that far too many people are controlled by their smartphones

"If aliens came to earth they'd think that mobile phones are the superior species controlling human beings," he says. "And it's not going to stop, it's only going to get worse. Consumers are realising that something is wrong, and we want to offer an alternative."

Mr Tang adds that, surprisingly, the firm's main customers are aged between 25 and 35. He says he was expecting buyers to be much older.

Tech expert, Prof Sandra Wachter, a senior research fellow in artificial intelligence at Oxford University, says it is understandable that some of us are looking for simpler mobile phones.

"One can reasonably say that nowadays a smart phone's ability to connect calls and send short messages is almost a side feature," she explains. "Your smart phone is your entertainment centre, your news generator, your navigation system, your diary, your dictionary, and your wallet."

She adds that smartphones always "want to grab your attention" with notifications, updates, and breaking news constantly disrupting your day. "This can keep you on edge, might even be agitating. It can be overwhelming."

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Prof Sandra Wachter says it is understandable that some people feel 'overwhelmed' by their smartphones

Prof Wachter adds: "It makes sense that some of us are now looking for simpler technologies and think that dumbphones might offer a return to simpler times. It might leave more time to fully concentrate on a single task and engage with it more purposefully.

It might even calm people down. Studies have shown that too much choice can create unhappiness and agitation."

Yet back in London, Robin West says that many people are bewildered by her choice of mobile. "Everyone thinks it's just a temporary thing. They're like: 'So when are you getting a smartphone? Are you getting one this week?'."




Return
To

Tradition.
 
I remember when the razer(or w/e) came out, it was pretty much a guaranteed invitation to the cool kids club growing up.
I still have my first Alltel (bought out by T-Mobile) cell phone. I don't use it, but figured it would be a collector's item someday. Served me well for years. Gotta love the fake plastic antenna that is connected to absolutely nothing in the phone. It's only purpose was to satisfy customers who at the time believed that cell phones MUST have an antenna for good reception. The Spongebob cover set was perfect for the times, as well. It was hell to text on these phones.

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Late night high thought: texting with these to a zoomer is like rotary phones to millennials.
 
My first phone was a pre-iPhone "smartphone" and it kinda sucked, the screen cracked because it was a soft plastic thing so I replaced it by doing it myself and the fucking screen cracked in under a week. I got extremely pissed off and grabbed what looked to be the most indestructible phone of the lot. I had this piece of shit T-mobile Gravity phone for years, long after the smart phone had become dominate. The only thing that really made me switch to smart phones was the GPS and being able to stream music. I don't really use my phone for time wasting like the teenagers do, its always been a tool, and the smartphone was just condensing all of my tools into one. Mp3 player, GPS, Internet for figuring out public transit schedules, phone and texting. The only thing that irks me is the lack of FM radio, the past few phones I've had did have the chips on it but the FM radio was disabled for the American consumers for ~reasons.~


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I really miss Blackberry-styled phones. I used to have a Samsung phone styled like a Blackberry. I could play mp3s, UNO, and change the wallpaper. I thought it was super cool.

Samsung's foldable phones may have sparked a nostalgia craze with the Flip, the best selling of the folding phones. People re-experience flipping phones open and crave the old simplicity.
 
Samsungs Razr was my shit. That thing was stylish.
My company I work for forbids any smartphone for anyone not working in administrative level.
Guess what phones they get from the company to be able to take calls while on the go on work?
Phones without cameras that’s what they get.
 
I never got a smartphone just wasn't worth it. I mostly just email rather than text or call when I home and only need it when I out the house, so the cost for my usage isn't worth having a contract or a smartphone.

Are a handful of times the internet/gps on my phone would have been useful but would just be a handful of times over of the past few years and still don't make the extra cost worth it. Also I like to own a seperate music as they are nearly always better than what a phone can do, so would still be doing that even with a smartphone.

Only people who need one are those that travel a lot or need it for job reasons, most other people lives would be better without it. Nothing more than I hate than hanging out friends talking then one pulls out their smartphone and spends 5+ minuters just looking at the screen seeing what other people are posting on social media.
 
I hate how the beginning of the article is written, trying to explain phones like you've only ever heard of a smartphone, almost like they're something on a museum tour
Reminds me of the time a few years backbefore corona blew my chances at any semblance of success in life to hell some security guy stopped me at a convention solely because I had a normal camera and a flip phone instead of taking pics with an iphone. He didn't do it because he was suspicious of me, no no. It was that he was "impressed" and started fucking going off asking about how I got them like I was some kinda fucking savant of keeping old tech when both were literally modern shit from a fucking year or so before this encounter. Ironically, everything on the flip phone is high ass quality save for the camera which is inexplicably doodoo fart levels of crust if you try to do a video. It's part of the way they try to get you to buy smartphones, I'd guess.

I also fucking hate the term "dumb phones" in the same way I fucking hate how modern clickbait shit about star wars calls the non-dark side force "the light side" when it's established in the actual movies it's just "the force" and the dark side is literally the forbidden path of manipulating it for your own selfish/immoral goals.
 
I've got a blackberry type samsung phone that's been chugging along for almost a decade. Battery life lasts a week. I've dropped it. Left it out in the rain, The thing will not die. When I took it in once, the guy said that they weren't even activating phones like that anymore. If you came in with an old working one, they wouldn't set it up. Which is SUCH BULLSHIT. If I bring in a phone that works, and some people in your network still have and use them, I want YOU to turn this one on.

Dumb phones are beautiful, and it makes me sad how many were put out to pasture with years of working life left just because someone wanted an easily breakable skinner box.

Knew a truck driver that wouldn't let go of his flip phone because he could open it with his mouth one handed to answer calls.
 
It would be heaven for a phone without a dreaded e-mail ping.
 
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Too bad many dumbphones are still being made exclusively for 2G and 3G where they would be forced into a shorter lifespan, and "feature phones" have become gimped smartphones that come with Facebook preloaded. Pozzed to shit. You need at least VoLTE to work on most if not all networks now. What the hell? Why can't we just have an LTS network to fall back to, and that dumb phones can work off of?

Oh right.

Smartphones.
Even non-pozzed smartphones have this kind of issue
I've used one of their phones once, at the time I had T-Mobile, which was one of the accepted carriers for these due to the type of SIM cards they use (the big ones, not the mini-ones). AT MOST you would be able to get a 2.5G experience, meaning 3G calls fucking sucked and sounded "robotic" unless you switched to 2G to make the calls clearer, but then your signal would act like you're in the middle of the woods because even calls from people two houses down from you wouldn't connect to your phone and would immediately go to voicemail. Oh and don't try to call anyone while you're driving or else you'd have on-off-on-off signal and your calls will be instantly dropped. So you're only other choices was to either invest in signal boosters, or get a phone that has better reception.
 
If I didn't need a smartphone for work then I'd drop it in an instant. Dumbphones were great.

I miss not having to charge my shit every 5 hours. Most of my older phones lasted for weeks at a time
 
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I had three dumb phones through my teenage years, one was an hand down from a relative and I later gave it to a friend when I switched phones, the second broke after 3 or 4 years of having it and the last one still works to this day. It wasn't amazing for the time and I was always wanting something better but it played MP3s and shitty quality videos.
Got my first smartphone in 2012 and it was a disappointment in many ways: It was the time where specs were changing every few months and so my phone became outdated FAST, I had to clear cache anytime i wished to update freaking whatsapp.
Only lasted me four years despite taking great care of it, the touchscreen stopped working one day. After that i got a samsung J7, probably one of the last good models they released before going to shit and I loved that thing. Since then i have gone through three more phones in four years: one was stolen, one started having battery issues a little over a FREAKING YEAR IN, one started being slow as shit despite having fuckall apps in it because "hahhaa bro turns out 3 gb of ram is too little now :^)"
Mainly use mine to watch video and read stuff but I'm really irked at how little they last and some assface had the gal to tell me my phones lasted little because I gave them too much use, yeah ok I forgot you are supposed to discard your device every year and buy a new one.
That's another thing that bothers me about people, even in the dumb phone era they would change it every few months because they kept breaking them or wanted a better one, companies sure as shit noticed that and began making phones with planned obsolence in mind.
Lastly, fuck android and fuck google, also fuck apple.
 
I've been on my s8 for ages and for my needs it'll last a while yet.

I remember my early android phone with 3 hour battery life and having to be tethered like an EVA. Also the muscle memory of popping the battery in and out after it froze.

I had a Nokia 3200 with a transparent skin as my first phone and it kicked ass.
 
2 years ago I made a thread about finding a dumbphone on one of the other boards. Are zoomers actually finding out the supposed usefulness of the smartphone is actually not true and wasting money on paying a monthly bill for the phone is a bad idea?
 
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