The Gadget That Promises Digital Sobriety
The Xteink X3 is a tiny, MagSafe compatible e ink reader that attaches to the back of your iPhone like a Pop Socket. Priced at $80, it promises to break the doomscrolling cycle by offering a dumb, app free screen for reading ePub files. After two weeks of testing, the device does encourage more reading. It is small, lightweight, and the battery barely drains. But the real question is whether a hardware accessory can truly override the psychological hooks of social media. The answer is no, not without effort from the user.
What It Gets Right And What It Gets Wrong
The X3 works well as a minimalist reading device. The community made CrossPoint open source firmware improves the clunky stock interface, but installing it is not beginner friendly. The lack of a USB C port is annoying, though the magnetic charger is rarely needed. The biggest downside is incompatibility with Libby and Amazon Kindle books due to DRM restrictions. Users must rely on public domain titles or convert files manually. The device feels refreshingly dumb in an era of AI everything, but that also makes it limited.
The Hard Truth About Digital Minimalism
The X3 is a useful tool, but it is not a cure. It helps if you meet it halfway. If you make a conscious choice to pull out the e ink screen instead of Instagram, you will read more. But the device cannot force that choice. It is a reflection of the uncomfortable reality that our attention is a battleground, and no single gadget can win that war for us. The Xteink X3 is a good product. It is just not a savior.
Source: Techcrunch