The phone's last job
Two bells and a hammer. Zero distractions.
Goes up to $54.99 on August 1
The phone sleeps on the nightstand because it's the alarm. That's the deal. That's the whole reason it's allowed in the room.
It isn't the alarm. It's the thing that got picked up at 12:47 to check one thing, and it's still going.
The alarm is the errand. The errand is the excuse. And the excuse is why it's still in reach at 11, and at 1, and at 7.
It was never about willpower. It was the alarm.
It doesn't matter whose nightstand it's on. The argument is identical, and it wins every time, because it's true — until it isn't.
Down the hall
“But I need it for my alarm.”
And they're right. That's why it went back in the room. That's why you've lost the argument twice now — once about the phone, once about the alarm.
You're not fighting a kid. You're fighting a job opening nobody else applied for.
Your room
“I'll just check one thing.”
Six feet isn't friction when the alarm is on the other side of it. You had a reason to cross the room, so you crossed it.
You didn't fail. You used willpower where you needed a second object.
You've probably tried three of them.
Six set, six snoozed. Same thumb, same swipe.
A seventh isn't a plan.
Set for 10 p.m. “Ignore Limit” tapped every night since.
A lock you hold the key to isn't a lock.
You got up. You got it. You brought it back to bed.
Distance is not friction when the alarm is at the far end of it.
Same excuse. Same argument. Now with a lockbox and a key.
And the alarm's locked in the box.
It stops the phone bothering you.
It has never been the phone bothering you.
An app. A screen. A login. A thing to charge.
That's solving a phone problem with a phone.
Not a rule. Not a lecture. Not a lockbox. A second object that does the one thing the phone was claiming to be there for — and nothing else.
The excuse doesn't get argued with. It gets made redundant. There's nothing on that phone that needs anyone until morning, so it stays where it's put.
Get the clock — $39.99 →Set the time. Pull the alarm knob. Put it on the nightstand.
No wifi password. No app. No account. No settings menu to renegotiate with yourself at one in the morning, and nothing for anyone to quietly switch off.
The phone charges somewhere else now. It has no errand.
It rings. It keeps ringing. There is no snooze you can reach without opening your eyes and finding it.
Sleep through a phone and you wake up in a feed. Sleep through this and you're just asleep, next to a bell that's still going.
And nobody has to stand in the doorway saying it again.
Mechanical. It's loud on purpose — that's the entire feature list.
Small enough for a nightstand, heavy enough to stay on it.
Not included. No cable, no dock, no port, nothing to charge.
There isn't one. There is no account and nothing to update.
Nothing on it lights up, notifies, or asks for anything.
One colourway for now. It's the only one we're shipping.
About the ticking: some of these tick and some don't, and we haven't held this one, so we're not going to guess for you. If it ticks and you hate it, send it back — 30 days, any reason, no argument.
Dr. Shalini Paruthi, via CNN
A sleep doctor makes the same point in CNN: stop using the phone as the alarm and it gets much easier to get it out of the bedroom — which cuts distraction and putting sleep off.
Johns Hopkins Medicine
Johns Hopkins tells parents to keep tech out of the bedroom, and warns that a summer schedule that slides a long way is much harder to pull back in September.
American Academy of Sleep Medicine
The AASM says 13 to 18 year olds need eight to ten hours, and to shift back gradually — about fifteen minutes earlier a night, not one brutal Sunday.
We're not doctors. This isn't sleep advice.
Sources: CNN · Johns Hopkins Medicine · AASM
Maybe this too, some mornings.
But sleep through a phone and you wake up in a feed. Sleep through this and you're just asleep, next to a bell that's still going.
Probably. That's the point — it isn't for them. It's for every morning after this one.
Then the phone stays. This only takes the alarm job — what else it does is your business.
This doesn't solve that. Where the phone sleeps is your call, and it always was.
One AA. Not included.
No. There isn't one.
30 days, any reason.
We'll email you once, before the price goes up on August 1. That's the only one you'll get.