Simple, Not Easy

Purposeful Work | Personal Finance | Pragmatic Minimalism

Follow publication

Member-only story

Why the New iPhone SE is the Perfect Phone for Those Who Want to Stay Off their Phone

Yesterday, I received my new phone — the base model of the iPhone SE 2020. Aside from the reasonable price tag and solid build quality that Apple products are known for, Apple has constructed a smartphone that strikes the right balance between utility and passivity. In other words, it allows me to do everything that I need to do but its constraints make it much easier for me to put the phone away after I’ve completed specific tasks. This is the perfect phone for digital minimalists.

I estimate that the iPhone SE 2020 has about 90% of the functionalities of the iPhone 11 Pro for less than half the price. This is tremendous value. You can easily make calls, send and receive text messages, listen to podcasts and audiobooks, capture beautiful photos, and access all the other standard applications that you rely on. Unless you need night sight capabilities (which, unless you’re a professional photographer, no one needs) or a few other niche offerings only available in the top tier smartphones, the iPhone SE 2020 will more than suit your needs.

As someone working towards decluttering their digital life, the few limitations of the phone are actually useful. Some critics have touted the mediocre battery life but in my limited usage of the phone, I’ve found that it can easily last a whole day. For digital maximalists who play games or stream media on their smartphones for hours on end (e.g. Candy Crush or Youtube), you will likely need to plug it into a charger within 4 or 5 hours. But for digital minimalists, — even fellow lawyers who have multiple phone conversations throughout the day — the battery life is not a concern.

Another stated limitation is that portrait mode only works on people, not pets or inanimate objects. But there’s an easy solution: download the Focos App. It’s a free computational photography application that uses machine learning to create real bokeh effects after you take a picture.

The argument to purchase the iPhone 11 or iPhone 11 Pro at more than double the price to

Create an account to read the full story.

The author made this story available to Medium members only.
If you’re new to Medium, create a new account to read this story on us.

Or, continue in mobile web

Already have an account? Sign in

Simple, Not Easy
Simple, Not Easy

Published in Simple, Not Easy

Purposeful Work | Personal Finance | Pragmatic Minimalism

Jennifer Chan
Jennifer Chan

Written by Jennifer Chan

Productivity, craftsmanship, and the pursuit of excellence at work. Writing now at jennifertchan.substack.com.

Responses (3)

Write a response