Going retro: Commodore strips the smartphone back to essentials

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The dumbphone revival has been gathering momentum in recent years, and the newly revived Commodore brand wants in. The computing icon, best known for the machines that defined a generation of 1980s bedroom keyboard warriors, has unveiled the Callback 8020, a retro flip phone built around a simple idea: keep the parts of a smartphone you actually need, and strip out the ones designed to keep you hooked.

It's a space we've explored plenty before, from the minimalist Light Phone III to Fairphone's clever dumbphone switch, and Commodore is approaching it from a fresh angle. Rather than going fully bare-bones, the Callback positions itself as the middle ground between a smartphone that's too smart and a dumbphone that's too dumb.

The company calls it the "not dumb dumbphone," and the pitch leans heavily on nostalgia, with Y2K styling, a flip-to-close design, and the kind of friendly, character-rich hardware that...

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