I mentioned in my last post that I bought a Light Phone II. It is rare that I buy hardware these days, but I was wanting to get away from my smartphone... and I did not have a good experience with the Nokia bar phone I tried a few years back or the KaiOS phone I tried after that (before I went back to my Nexus 5x). I had known about the Light Phone for years. It had always seemed to expensive for what it was, and they used a pre-order model... which I was too impatient for. When I looked into it, and a few other options (Punkt, Mudita Pure, Minimal Phone), I saw that they had some in stock. After doing a bit more research to see how the system had evolved in the past few years I ended up ordering one, along with a screen protector (they were sold out of the case). I thought I'd share some thoughts on the first day or two with the device and the software it ships with: For those that don't know, the phone features a small eInk touchscreen and four physical buttons (power/screen-on, volume up, volume down, menu). The phone is 2.25" x 3.75" in total and about 0.25" thick. The shell is hard plastic. It feels... alright. I had heard that it feels cheap, but that is not my assessment. It feels like what it is, but I would say it is a solid and reasonably well built phone. The screen is about as responsive as my Kobo ereader. Which I use a lot and have grown used to. The refresh rate may be too slow for many peple (I believe it to be around 2fps), but if you are used to an ereader you should know what to expect. The software, which the call LightOS, is not an OS. You could maybe call it a shell (similar to GnomeShell in terms of my usage of the word) or maybe a launcher (to use more android oriented terms), though it may dig just a bit deeper than a launcher into the guts of the system. It is a fully text based interface, with a few symbols. It supports a decent sized subset of emoji, ascii text, and some extended characters for input. For display, I believe it has full utf-8 support. LightOS is a React Native system built on top of Android (ASOP) with some custom modifications done to allow their shell to deal with low level android stuff that is not usually allowed by third party software. I have found the system very usable. They use a web based dashboard on their website for some things that the phone does not let you modify on it directly, but most of the core functionality is available on the phone. Out of the box it comes with "phone" (which includes both calls and texting in an inline stream, and a contact book), "alarm", and "settings". It has no web browser (a core part of the appeal for me). It supports BlueTooth, WiFi, and GPS. It supports 4G/LTE. From the web dashboard you can add more tools (think apps): - Directions, turn by turn/maps - Directory, look up hours, address, and phone number of various places - Calculator - Notes, take notes locally (you can sync them w/ the web dashboard as well) - Calendar, can sync with remote calendars - Hotspot - Music, a funky music player (I'll talk about it below) - Timer - Podcasts, a podcast player, subscriptions are handled via the web dash, but episodes will autodownload to the device once subscribed. They use the Apple podcasts index. I don't listen to podcasts, so I did not install this and cannot comment on it further. Everything has worked well, with the exception of the directions. I cannot seem to get it to navigate reliably to places outside of my local area. The directory has worked well. I got the hours of a local place, and was able to call to ask a question. You can call direct from the directory app (or kick the address to the directions app). The calculator works as you would expect. Nothing special, but more or less does the job when you need it. For the music tool, it is a single playlist. It supports shuffle. You cannot really sort the songs. You also cannot sideload them. You have to upload them through the web dashboard. They convert to MP3 and in some cases may down- sample. Then they get synced over to the device. This is not a good system. It works, but really annoys me. I will be trying to figure out how to sideload music directly. The speaker on the phone sounds surprisingly good for its size. The phone has a headphone jack or can use bluetooth to go to headphones. I have not really used the calendar yet, so cannot comment. The timer lets you set timers. Pretty basic. The hotspot is just a quick menu item to turn on the hot spot. You do not have to install the tool to do this, but you would have to dig through settings menus otherwise. The alarm is a little basic. You can set any number of alarms. The can be one-offs or daily, but you cannot set certain days and not others. This is annoying, but not a deal breaker. The contacts/phone are fine. They work well. If you do not want to type them all in on the phone itself you can use the web dashboard to import contacts from various sysems or you can manually enter them on the phone or the dashbaord. They sync regularly (I think every 4 hours). So far I really like it. I already feel less of a pull to take out my phone all the time. I like the small form factor. I like the eink screen (super readable, and supports color invert if you want to read white on black instead of black on white). The screen has a backlight available that can be set to "auto" to just sense how much light is available. The phone charges using micro usb, rather than usb c. I'm okay with this, but some will be annoyed. The battery life is not as long as you'd think given the screen and other specs, but has no problem lasting a day or two of reasonably regular use (calls/texts), less if you are playing music and getting gps nav all the time. Let's talk privacy: the company definitely has it in mind, at least as a marketing point, but it feels mixed. They use HERE for their directions app and the GooglePlaces api for their directory app. In both cases they are paying for it, not the user, so you query LightPhone (the company) and they query on your behalf for the data. I know this is supposed to be anonymized, if that exists in the world (I do not believe it does, there is no suchthing as anonymous data, at least in this type of situation), but it feels... suboptimal, but maybe understandable. It is something at least. I do not like at all that they have this "dashboard" setup. I do not want to back up/sync things to them. Even if their privacy policy is solid and makes good attempts to support the owner of the phone... it is an extra attack vector, and their policies could always change. There is no need for my contacts to sync to them, for my notes to sync to them, for my music to go through them, etc. To their credit, there has been talk of making a desktop application available that would allow you to control all of this from your computer, rather than from their servers. The question I have is: will it completely take their system out of the equation? Or will it just be their website loaded in an electron window? They seem aware of these concerns and provide good customer support. I believe they are a team of around 4-6, so when you e-mail and they e-mail back, you are getting someone on the core team to answer you questions. I like that, but it wont survive the sale of the company (if they ever sell). So, I have some concerns. They seem aware of them, and other folks seem to have voiced them as well. I am hopeful that they continue to update their system and eventually provide a way to handle all of these things without needing to interact with them once you purchase the phone. They have been good about sticking by the phone and providing regular system updates/upgrades that do seem to improve the phone consistently. They have a new model coming out soon that includes a camera and an oled screen... which just isn't for me. I don't want a camera, then people expect me to take pictures (something I am not naturally inclined to do). I imagine that that version of the phone will end up more popular. They have stated a commitment to continued updates and support for the LightPhone II. Fingers crossed. So, is it worth the $299 that I paid for it? I suppose that really depends on your financial situation. They are a small company trying to do something a bit different/niche. Their production runs are likely smallish and I do not believe they are likely to have huge margins on these devices. We have been trained to think of price in terms of companies that can produce at scale, and then skew the whole market by that ability. I think it is maybe a little bit expensive. $150-$180 feels like it would be a better sweet spot. This turned into much more of a "product review" than I had intended. I mostly wanted to say that I think it is a cool phone and I am enjoying it. I am not trying to shill for them, and do not care one way or the other whether anyone reading this buys one. Oh! I use MintMobile (US) as my carrier, but found out while looking into this phone that US Mobile has a plan that would be suitable for this phone for $8/mo! Super cheap. Neat!