Some may question the nobility of Mr Silberbauer’s motives – he has admitted that he would “love” to be able to integrate a messaging platform like WhatsApp into Barbie’s phone.
But I spent a day using it, and so far, there’s no doubt that it was definitely effective as a digital detox given its very limited functionality.
It’s a flip phone with no app store or touch screen. I had no social media at all, and the phone can’t receive anything more advanced than SMS.
This means no text messages with “read receipts” or the ability to see if someone is typing. This is the default setting on many smartphones – so I didn’t receive many texts either.
Even with predictive text enabled, I found the number and letter pad to be much slower than the touchscreen keyboard, and as a result I ended up calling more people than usual, which probably wasn’t a bad thing.
And I discovered that you can only play the old Nokia Snake game a limited number of times, even when it’s called Malibu Snake and it’s pink.
But the phone certainly attracted a lot of attention, especially from girls and young women, as I walked around Glasgow city centre with it.
There is, of course, a risk that instead of parents being harassed for a smartphone, they will find themselves being harassed for a piece of Barbie merchandise – which may also be undesirable.
The phone is priced at £99 at launch in the UK – double what you’d pay for a non-Nokia feature phone. There are plenty of other phones on the market that offer the same limited functionality, but without any sort of tie-up with a major company.
“I imagine many people will be tempted to buy this phone as a bit of a pastime, but in reality, everyone is so dependent on their smartphones that anything more than the odd detox day would be overkill,” says Ben Wood, a phone expert who has his own museum of gadgets released over the years.
However, he says there is a market for what are sometimes called “smartphones”. His company, CCS Insight, estimates that around 400,000 such devices will be sold in the UK this year.
“This is an attractive niche for a company like HMD,” he says.
Some experts suggest that taking away smartphones is not a real solution — they are part of our lives, after all — and instead, children should be taught how to use them in a healthy and safe way.
“What we should be doing instead is thinking about how to build really good, long-term sustainable digital literacy skills in this generation,” says Pete Etchells, professor of psychology and science communication at Bath Spa University, who has written extensively on the issue of screen time.
“I think we could all do better at using our phones in a healthier, more flexible way,” he said.
HMD is also working on a separate project, a new device it’s designing in collaboration with parents. The company says more than 1,000 people have signed up to work on the device so far.
Mr. Silberbaum admits that the resulting phone could end up being something that falls somewhere between a dumb phone and a smartphone.
“Do I want a smartphone with all the bells and whistles, or do I want something that can actually help me take a more thoughtful approach to the digital world? That’s the choice we want to offer,” he said.
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