Going retro: Commodore strips the smartphone back to essentials
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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