AI NewsThe slowtech revolution is here to kill your phone addiction and rescue your attention span
The slowtech revolution is here to kill your phone addiction and rescue your attention span
11:53 PM IST ¡ June 17, 2026

When Tony Fadell entered New York Cityâs 28th Street Subway Station, he did not expect to come face-to-face withan advertisementfor a product he designed over 20 years ago. But there it was: a five-by-four-foot poster promoting the iPod Shuffle, luring passersby with the promise of âZero screen time.â âThe first thing was, I thought, âWait a second, did somebody not change the ad?ââ Fadell, known as the father of the iPod, told TechCrunch. âFor somebody like me who knows that thing intimately, itâs like seeing your kidâs picture.â As Fadell stood in the train station, he was surrounded by people wearing wireless Bluetooth headphones to stream music on their phones, effortlessly accessing music libraries with over 100 million songs. This technology that we take for granted makes Steve Jobsâ early iPod tagline ââone thousand songs in your pocketââ sound antiquated. The postage-stamp-sized iPod Shuffle, which relied heavily on shuffle playback and offered little control compared to todayâs streaming apps, should not appeal to a modern audience. But we have become so entrenched in technology that our various devices, apps, and algorithms mediate our every experience, from grocery shopping to dating. Weâve built smartphones that can do almost anything, but weâve also created a constant connectedness that has become more exhausting than enriching. âPeople are very oversaturated and overstimulated, and they really want to have a more mindful approach to what theyâre doing with their tech,â Joy Howard, CMO ofBack Market, an online marketplace for refurbished tech, told TechCrunch. âThereâs this fatigue that we have with the need to optimize every single aspect of our life.â Howard and her team were responsible for the iPod Shuffle ad that Fadell was so shocked to encounter. But Howard says that demand is growing for this supposedly obsolete tech â if these devices werenât driving sales, the company wouldnât have shelled out for a premium ad placement in a hectic New York City subway station. For younger generations who have never known a world without social media and smartphones, thereâs a certain magic to wired headphones, retro gaming consoles, CDs, and digital point-and-shoot cameras. They crave experiences that arenât trying to monopolize their attention. Old-school cameras canât upload photos to your Instagram story, retro games donât spam you with gambling ads, and iPods canât automatically play music that youâre algorithmically destined to enjoy. Thatâs the whole point of this movement, which Howard calls âslowtech.â âThe âfast techâ up until now has been all about eliminating friction⌠[Now], people are seeing friction as a way to create boundaries for themselves,â Howard said. âItâs so stunning to me that now people are wanting to bring friction back into their lives, and see that as a feature, rather than a flaw.â Around the same time that Fadell first pitched the iPod to Steve Jobs,Austin Murrayfounded JAMDAT, one of thefirst mobile gaming companies, which quickly went public and was sold to Electronic Arts for $680 million. âWhen we were pitching our company back in 2000, 2001, people were laughing at us, saying, âWhy would anyone play games on their cell phone?ââ Murray told TechCrunch. Now, investors are just as incredulous when he pitches them on hisscreen-time reduction app, MOQA, which he is building to counteract the very phenomenon he helped create. âItâs watching what happened to my kids and the people around me that hurts my soul the most,â Murray said. âWhen everyone is doing the same thing â meaning everyone, the average screen time is like five hours probably on a phone every day â itâs not a willpower problem. Itâs a product design problem.â This desire to cut back on the time we spend using our phones, computers, and TVs has become ubiquitous âabout 53%of American adults say they want to reduce their screen time. âAt a certain point, I realized that willpower was insufficient to not waste time on my phone,â said writerCalvin Kasulke, whose novel âSeveral People Are Typingâ imagines workers trapped inside a Slack workspace. He now pays forOpalandFreedom, two apps designed to limit his screen time and social media use. âI donât need to limit my time on iMessage â thatâs people who I really know! But I certainly donât want to be wasting my time doomscrolling.â âI want to be very clear⌠I donât feel smug about this. Itâs embarrassing to have two different apps to limit how I use this,â Kasulke said. âI donât think screens are inherently bad. I just think the way I was using [my phone] was worse and dumb, and now itâs a little bit less dumb.â Others have given up their iPhones altogether, opting instead for flip phones,e-ink devicesthat run Android software, or minimalist touch-screen hardware like theLight Phone. âOur customers for the last 10 years are telling us how they feel more free after switching to the Light Phone,â Light co-founder Kaiwei Tang told TechCrunch. âItâs getting more and more attention, especially among young people. We have quite a lot of the community using Light Phone as 20- to 35-year-olds, which surprised us.â Murray isnât as optimistic about the future of âdumb phones,â though. âThereâs certainly a movement of people who are just kind of anti-tech and âget it out of our lives,ââ he said. âThatâs really hard though, because then you realize you canât do things that are now assuming you have a smartphone, like banking, or going into a hotel, or [using] credit cards.â Kasulke said if Apple ever made an e-ink iPhone, he would âfâing donate plasma to be able to afford it.â But thatâs unlikely, so heâs not particularly interested in downgrading his phone. âIâm not like a, âI wish I could throw this thing in the toilet and go live in the woodsâ kind of guy,â Kasulke said. âMy phone has some utility for my personal and professional life, but it also lives in your pocket, and it is very, very easy, and in fact, designed in some ways to be addictive and to mindlessly waste time on it.â Screen time isnât universally bad. Weâre accumulating screen time when we video chat with our family, text our friends, read news articles, maintain our Duolingo streaks, or play Wordle. But for as much as tech brings us closer to one another, it also yanks us out of the present moment. âItâs clear people want the convenience of digital, but they donât want the annoyance of being always connected,â Fadell said. âIâve always been like, âWe need less screens, not more of them.â So to have an Apple Watch with everything, like, no, no, no â I donât want more, I want less.â Itâs not surprising that Fadellâs preferences are a bellwether for the market â heâs a veteran product designer, after all. American spending on fitness trackersgrew 88%year-over-year, according to market research firm Circana, which credits screenless wearables like the Oura ring and Whoop wristband as key sales drivers. Even though these devices donât have screens, you have to use your smartphone to see your data, which would make it even harder for Oura and Whoop users to try out something like the Light Phone. But most consumers arenât looking to make such an extreme change as pivoting to a flip phone â instead, some are embracing even more sophisticated hardware that relies on their smartphone, but cuts down their overall screen time. Mark, a $159 AI bookmark, advertises itself as a tool to help users stop pulling out their phone to take notes while theyâre reading. While some readers might find the idea of an AI bookmark to be symptomatic of the same problem that pushes people toward a digital detox, Mark founder Eason Tang sees it differently. âThe way we try to brand it now is this sort of analog tool, very culturally integrated with design, film, books, and literature,â Tang told TechCrunch. We raised $1M dollars to reinvent how people read. Introducing Mark II â a $159 AI bookmark. Thread belowpic.twitter.com/eL0XsyRlgC Thereâs something undoubtedly absurd about using an AI bookmark to mediate your relationship with your phone, yet there is a bit of truth to Tangâs pitch â when you stop reading to take notes or snap a photo of a key passage on your phone, youâre bound to encounter some other distracting notification that interrupts your reading. Though AI developments are almost synonymous with âfast techâ culture, thereâs a clear allure to the promise that AI agents could simplify our lives and give us more time away from screens. âI think that this idea that people want tools to serve them and not to dominate them is very profound,â Howard said. âI think what the âslowtechâ movement is about is people pushing back against the constant digital fatigue, distraction, overwhelm, so if you can use AI to do that, to kind of protect yourself⌠Thatâs what people want: more control.â The ubiquity of AI turns some consumers off from the latest products, but this isnât their sole grievance with big tech. People are also disillusioned by these companies for continually bricking perfectly good hardware just to make us buy the latest model. Back Market, for example, rehabsdiscontinued laptopsand resells them with USB keys that can install ChromeOS Flex, which turns supposedly obsolete hardware into functioning Chromebooks. âOne of our developers started finding a way to hack things that had their OS sunsetted to bring it new life. And so one of the first things he hacked was a rice cooker,â Howard said. âHis rice cooker didnât have support anymore! This is actually a really cool use of AI â like, vibe coding your own app to keep your hardware alive longer.â While slowtech adherents may not all agree about AI use, the debate is secondary to the bigger problem at play: Weâve created an ecosystem where we are so dependent on smartphones and our various apps that the whims of the tech industry can control how we cook rice. In this reality, itâs no wonder that people are so eager to disconnect that they want to downgrade to an iPod Shuffle. âPeople just really want to take back control of their time, their lives, their attention,â Howard said. âTheyâre down for whatever helps them do that.â
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