There's an "anti-smartphone" called John's Phone which can only make and receive calls.
John's Phone: The Anti-Smartphone That Only Makes Calls
In a world where smartphones can order pizza, track your sleep, and probably file your taxes, one Dutch company decided to ask a revolutionary question: what if a phone just... made phone calls?
Enter John's Phone, created by Amsterdam-based design company John Doe in 2011. This gloriously stubborn device does exactly two things: make calls and receive them. That's it. No texting. No apps. No camera. No internet. Not even a screen beyond a tiny number display.
Weaponized Simplicity
The phone's features read like a parody of modern tech specs:
- Physical number buttons (remember those?)
- A paper address book stored in the back
- A pencil slot for writing in said address book
- Three-week battery life
- No charger anxiety whatsoever
The designers weren't being ironic. They genuinely believed people were drowning in digital complexity and needed an escape hatch. The slogan? "The world's most basic cell phone."
Who Actually Bought This Thing?
More people than you'd think. Parents loved it as a first phone for kids—no social media drama, no addictive games, just a way to call home. Festival-goers appreciated the marathon battery life and the fact that dropping it in a mosh pit meant losing $100, not $1,200.
Some buyers were digital detoxers seeking a weekend escape from notifications. Others were elderly users frustrated by touchscreens. A few were just delightfully contrarian.
The phone came in various colors and even designer editions, because apparently minimalism still needs to be stylish.
The Ultimate Tech Rebellion
John's Phone represents something bigger than quirky design. It's a physical manifesto against feature creep. While every smartphone manufacturer races to add the 47th camera lens and AI-powered whatever, John's Phone asked whether we really needed any of it.
The answer, for most people, is yes—we do want maps and music and messaging. But the existence of John's Phone reminds us that we're choosing complexity, not being forced into it.
The phone's tiny paper address book might be the most subversive feature. In an era of cloud backups and synced contacts, there's something almost rebellious about writing names down with a pencil.
Still Available?
John Doe Amsterdam still sells the phone, and it still works on modern GSM networks. It won't connect to 4G or 5G—it doesn't need to. The three-week battery life remains its killer feature, outlasting any smartphone by roughly 2.9 weeks.
For $99, you can own the phone that proudly does less than a device from 1995. And somehow, in 2024, that feels revolutionary.