We are drowning in noise. Smartphones buzz, smartwatches ping, and AI assistants interrupt our train of thought to ask if we want to order the same protein powder we bought three months ago.
But that frustration is the point. By making syncing annoying, Zentis forces you to be intentional. zentis zp-64
Your thumbs will get tired for the first hour. Then, they will get stronger. The muscle memory returns quickly. I type at 90 WPM on a standard keyboard; I hit 60 WPM on the ZP-64 by day two. The most shocking feature of the ZP-64 is what happens when you leave your smartphone in a drawer for a week. By day three, I stopped phantom vibrating. By day five, I remembered what boredom felt like. We are drowning in noise
If you want to reclaim your attention span, get the ZP-64. Just don’t expect to post this review from it. Have you tried a "distraction-free" device? Did it work, or did you run back to your smartphone? Drop your thoughts in the comments (typed from your laptop, I hope). By making syncing annoying, Zentis forces you to
Minus one point for the steep price; half a point for the laggy EPUB rendering.
Enter the .
By: Alex Rivera | Tech Retrospective