How one tiny phone is helping Americans do more with less

TL;DR: Switch to the NanoPhone, a mini smartphone that will slice your screen time this summer, for only $109.99 (reg.$199.99).Everyone’s always talking about reducing their screen time.

For most of us, picking up our phones is a bad habit.One that can feel harder to quit than cigarettes.

Before you know it, you’ve wasted hours scrolling and shot your attention span to hell.Sound familiar? If your thoughts are scattered, focusing feels impossible, and you just can’t seem to lock in, it might just be that big distracting phone of yours.Life is hard enough.

It’s even harder to get everything done when we’re glued to our phones.If you want to cut back without cutting yourself off, check out the NanoPhone.

It’s a tiny smartphone that’s a lot harder to get glued to, and it’s on sale for $109.99 (reg.$199.99).

And shipping is free.Hear us out: The easiest way to cut back on your screen time is to cut the size of your phone in half.This credit-card-sized phone is a game changer.

Sleeker than a smartwatch and smaller than a smartphone, the NanoPhone looks like a mini iPhone but works like an Android.The result? A streamlined device that gives you everything you need without the distractions.Yes, you can still get apps like Instagram and YouTube on the NanoPhone.

But the smaller screen and stealthy size keep you from reaching for that familiar weight in your pocket.Basically, it’s a nicotine patch for your phone addiction.

It does all the things you actually need a phone for, but helps you break your smartphone dependency.The NanoPhone is more efficient than many smartphones.It supports not just one, but two SIMs, while boasting a 2000mAh battery that actually lasts — that’s what happens when you don’t have a thousand battery-draining apps or those tricky iPhone batteries.Of course, the NanoPhone has all the necessary phone capabilities, too.

It comes with 4G and Wi-Fi, plus cameras for video calls.The only thing it doesn’t have is all...

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Disclaimer: This story is auto-aggregated by a computer program and has not been created or edited by PaprClips.
Publisher: New York Post

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