In 2014, back when the iPhone 5 was the hot tech of the moment, an image of Rihanna began circulating online. The singer had been photographed walking out of a bar in New York talking on a basic flip phone. It struck a chord: To see one of the most famous—and arguably coolest—women in the world rejecting constant internet connection gave the dumb phone, as they’ve become known, cachet. The internet-less phone never went out of production, and in recent years, as smartphones have encroached ever more on our time, sales of old-school phones have risen in tandem, driven by a consumer desire to be less dependent on apps, 4G and Wi-Fi. The prospect might initially elicit alarm (being off-line while out of the house is becoming less and less feasible), but the rewards are unarguably appealing: The gift of extra time usually given over to scrolling through This story is from Kinfolk Issue Forty-Two Buy Now Related Stories Arts & Culture Issue 42 Anna Wiener Anna Wiener was on the path to Silicon Valley success. Then she pivoted. Allyssia Alleyne charts the making of a tech-skeptic. Arts & Culture Issue 42 Influencers Anonymous Instagram content creators answer a short survey about the influencer industry. Arts & Culture Issue 42 Rage Against the Machine A conversation about the influence of invisible algorithms. Arts & Culture Issue 42 Computed Emotion On the rise of chatbot therapy. Arts & Culture Issue 42 Brewster Kahle The tech idealist archiving the internet. Arts & Culture Issue 42 Captcha This Prove you're not a robot.
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