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IXI raises $36.5M from Amazon and others to bring autofocus to prescription glasses

28 April 2025 at 23:27
Blink and you’ll miss it: A startup out of Finland is taking a new look at the market for prescription eyewear. Tapping into innovations in eye-tracking and liquid crystal lens technology, IXI is building low-power glasses that will invisibly and automatically adjust to account for a wearer’s presbyopia (far-sightedness). Four years into its life, Helsinki-based […]

Nokia’s Weird Y2K Designs Show the Future We Could Have Had

16 January 2025 at 08:04
Nokia’s Weird Y2K Designs Show the Future We Could Have Had

One of my first cellphones was a Nokia 3310. I still miss it: Launched in 2000, it was a solid worry-stone of a phone with rubbery keys that I could text my friends on during class from under the desk without breaking eye contact with my math professor. I played Snake when I felt awkward at parties and hearing the β€œkick” ringtone in 2025 is like hearing an ancient folk song. Playing Snake, texting, and scrolling through ringtones was pretty much all I could do with that phone, actually. It was plenty.

The iPhone was still seven years away, and for that reason, mobile phone aesthetics were still finding themselves. On Wednesday, Aalto University in Finland introduced the Nokia Design Archive, an β€œuncurated repository” containing 20,000 items and 959GB of files showing the designing process, imagining and ideating, and often wacky concepts for how we might use communications devices on the move in the then-future. The contentβ€”spanning from the mid-90s to 2017 according to a press release from the universityβ€”was licensed from Microsoft Mobile for research and education purposes, but is now open to the public to peruse.Β 

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