pcmag.comLight Phone 2 Cracks the Simple Phone Code - PCMag UK " /> Skip to main content PCMag UK Palm Phone By Sascha Segan 4 Sep 2019, 2 p.m. This stripped-down, e-ink based phone can make voice-over-LTE calls on three different US networks—something that competitors like Punkt and Nokia haven't been able to accomplish. We review products independently, but we may earn affiliate commissions from buying links on this page. Terms of use. I get a lot of emails from people looking for a break from the noisy chaos of their smartphones. They don't have a lot of good options, but now there's an encouraging one: the $350 Light Phone 2 from TheLightPhone.com. I've been following New York-based Light and its founder, Kaiwei Tang, for a few months now, and I really like how the company seems to understand what it takes to get an innovative new phone out in the US. Product designer Tang and his co-founder, artist Joe Hollier, met at a Google incubator in 2014 and had a now-familiar realization: the endless scroll is eating our minds. Engagement-based social media apps are fragmenting our attention and making us frustrated and depressed. "How do we inspire people to take a break?" Tang asked, and the result became a massively successful 2015 Kickstarter project, the Light Phone 1. That first attempt was a $149, 2G-only phone that eventually came out in 2017. It just made calls. Light sold about 15,000 of them, sold out, and moved on, Tang said. Too many people said they needed texting to be able to replace their smartphones, and by 2017, 2G networks were on their way out. That meant Light needed to build a more complicated simple phone that supported texting and 4G calling. The company's next Indiegogo campaign, for the Light Phone 2, raised $3.5 million in 2018. I don't like crowdfunding hardware. There are too many failures. It's like throwing money into a trash can and setting it on fire. So I'm breathing a sigh of relief that this phone is now available at regular old retail. At $350, the Light Phone 2 isn't cheap, much like the Palm phone wasn't at launch. These unusual, small-batch phones can't take advantage of the economies of scale in a supply chain geared to big screens and similar black plastic housings. It's much cheaper to build something bigger, because other people are building hundreds of millions of 'em. At least Tang has powerful friends. His message of putting your damn phone down resonated with manufacturer Foxconn, which invested in his firm and now produces his phones. That's helped him dodge a little bit of the difficulty with building a phone that's mostly made of custom components. The menu button is flanked by volume buttons. The "premium river stone" aesthetic differentiates the Light Phone 2, Punkt MP02, and Palm from cheaper-feeling traditional phones like Alcatel and Kyocera flips. The Light Phone doesn't have Punkt's hardware keypad, which makes it a squat little rectangle; I worry a little about microphone quality because it doesn't reach all the way down my face, but that's just something I'll have to test. The phone uses a 2.8-inch frontlit e-ink display and runs a custom version of Android on a Qualcomm Snapdragon 210 chipset. The interface is extremely stripped-down. Hit the big side button, and right now, you're presented with options to go to your address book, alarm clock, or settings. This is the main menu. All of it. From the address book, you can summon a dialpad or dial your contacts; dipping into a contact shows you your text message history with them. There's a web interface to let you fill in the contact book from Google or Apple contacts, and, for now ... that's it. If you want to do more, there will be a hotspot mode, and you can go do it on another device. Texts appear threaded by person. You type texts on this very tiny touch keyboard. Tang said Light is looking at adding a small number of other apps to the phone, focusing on ones that have an "endpoint"—not an endless scroll but a defined use that relates to the real world. Text directions, from Google, are coming first. Then, probably, Lyft; one of Lyft's co-founders is a Light Phone investor. The phone will have a local music player, and Tang said the company is looking at playing defined Spotify playlists over-the-air—no discovery, just playing through a playlist you set up on another device. There will also be a calculator and a "find my phone" dashboard. Contacts Since calling is the central feature here, there are plenty of options. There's a 3.5mm headset jack for wired connections, Bluetooth, 2G, 3G, and 4G calling (but no Wi-Fi calling.) The phone will run on the AT&T, T-Mobile, and Verizon networks. It can be attached to existing accounts as a secondary phone sharing an existing number, it can be a primary phone on a mainstream plan, or it can work with Light Phone's own AT&T-based MVNO network for $30/month. Reception should be good. The US model has bands 2/4/12/13/17/25/26. That includes primary urban bands but also bands 12, 13 and 17, which T-Mobile, Verizon and AT&T (respectively) use in more rural areas. The only coverage it's really lacking is extremely rural reach from T-Mobile's Band 71. Nice headset jack you got there. What Light Phone gets right, and some other simple phone makers like Punkt got wrong, is that its US-based founders understand US carrier requirements—specifically, VoLTE. All of our carriers are in the process of winding down their 2G and 3G networks, focusing on 4G and 5G in the future. But to make phone calls on AT&T's and Verizon's 4G networks, phones need to be pre-approved. That's a complicated, expensive process, Tang said. He had to fly five engineers from Asia to Verizon's New Jersey headquarters for two weeks to figure it out. Punkt has been working on certification all year for its MP02 simple phone, and now says it may be available this fall. Light Phone tops Palm in a few ways, most notably on battery life. The little Palm phone tries to run full Android with a color screen on a tiny battery, and its stamina really suffers. But Light Phone 2, which is, well, light, gives you seven to nine days of standby and three days of use, Tang said. I'm still going to hope for more voice phone options out there beyond the Light Phone 2. At $350, it's out of reach for most kids and seniors, although it could be a boon for folks who are just trying to disconnect a little more. We'll have a review of the Light Phone 2 soon. Crowdfunded backers will get their phones starting today, and retail orders will ship in October. Next Article More Inside PCMag.com About the Author PCMag.com's lead mobile analyst, Sascha Segan, has reviewed hundreds of smartphones, tablets and other gadgets in more than 9 years with PCMag. He's the head of our Fastest Mobile Networks project, one of the hosts of the daily PCMag Live Web show and speaks frequently in mass media on cell-phone-related issues. His commentary has appeared on ABC, the BBC, the CBC, CNBC, CNN, Fox News, and in newspapers from San Antonio, Texas to Edmonton, Alberta. Segan is also a multiple award-winning travel writer, having contributed to the Frommer's series of travel guides and Web sites for more than a decade. Other than his home town of New York, his favorite ... See Full Bio Please enable JavaScript to view the comments. Ad Product designer Tang and his co-founder, artist Joe Hollier, met at a Google incubator in 2014 and had a now-familiar realization: the endless scroll is eating our minds. Engagement-based social media apps are fragmenting our attention and making us frustrated and depressed.\n\"How do we inspire people to take a break?\" Tang asked, and the result became a massively successful 2015 Kickstarter project, the Light Phone 1.\nThat first attempt was a $149, 2G-only phone that eventually came out in 2017. It just made calls. Light sold about 15,000 of them, sold out, and moved on, Tang said. Too many people said they needed texting to be able to replace their smartphones, and by 2017, 2G networks were on their way out. That meant Light needed to build a more complicated simple phone that supported texting and 4G calling. The company's next Indiegogo campaign, for the Light Phone 2, raised $3.5 million in 2018.\n \nI don't like crowdfunding hardware. There are too many failures. It's like throwing money into a trash can and setting it on fire. So I'm breathing a sigh of relief that this phone is now available at regular old retail.\nAt $350, the Light Phone 2 isn't cheap, much like the Palm phone wasn't at launch. These unusual, small-batch phones can't take advantage of the economies of scale in a supply chain geared to big screens and similar black plastic housings. It's much cheaper to build something bigger, because other people are building hundreds of millions of 'em.\nAt least Tang has powerful friends. His message of putting your damn phone down resonated with manufacturer Foxconn, which invested in his firm and now produces his phones. That's helped him dodge a little bit of the difficulty with building a phone that's mostly made of custom components.\n The menu button is flanked by volume buttons.\nThe \"premium river stone\" aesthetic differentiates the Light Phone 2, Punkt MP02, and Palm from cheaper-feeling traditional phones like Alcatel and Kyocera flips. The Light Phone doesn't have Punkt's hardware keypad, which makes it a squat little rectangle; I worry a little about microphone quality because it doesn't reach all the way down my face, but that's just something I'll have to test.\nThe phone uses a 2.8-inch frontlit e-ink display and runs a custom version of Android on a Qualcomm Snapdragon 210 chipset. The interface is extremely stripped-down. Hit the big side button, and right now, you're presented with options to go to your address book, alarm clock, or settings.\n This is the main menu. All of it.\nFrom the address book, you can summon a dialpad or dial your contacts; dipping into a contact shows you your text message history with them. There's a web interface to let you fill in the contact book from Google or Apple contacts, and, for now ... that's it. If you want to do more, there will be a hotspot mode, and you can go do it on another device.\n Texts appear threaded by person.\n You type texts on this very tiny touch keyboard.\nTang said Light is looking at adding a small number of other apps to the phone, focusing on ones that have an \"endpoint\"\u2014not an endless scroll but a defined use that relates to the real world. Text directions, from Google, are coming first. Then, probably, Lyft; one of Lyft's co-founders is a Light Phone investor.\nThe phone will have a local music player, and Tang said the company is looking at playing defined Spotify playlists over-the-air\u2014no discovery, just playing through a playlist you set up on another device. There will also be a calculator and a \"find my phone\" dashboard.\n Contacts\nSince calling is the central feature here, there are plenty of options. There's a 3.5mm headset jack for wired connections, Bluetooth, 2G, 3G, and 4G calling (but no Wi-Fi calling.) The phone will run on the AT&T, T-Mobile, and Verizon networks. It can be attached to existing accounts as a secondary phone sharing an existing number, it can be a primary phone on a mainstream plan, or it can work with Light Phone's own AT&T-based MVNO network for $30/month.\nReception should be good. The US model has bands 2/4/12/13/17/25/26. That includes primary urban bands but also bands 12, 13 and 17, which T-Mobile, Verizon and AT&T (respectively) use in more rural areas. The only coverage it's really lacking is extremely rural reach from T-Mobile's Band 71.\n Nice headset jack you got there.\nWhat Light Phone gets right, and some other simple phone makers like Punkt got wrong, is that its US-based founders understand US carrier requirements\u2014specifically, VoLTE. All of our carriers are in the process of winding down their 2G and 3G networks, focusing on 4G and 5G in the future. But to make phone calls on AT&T's and Verizon's 4G networks, phones need to be pre-approved.\nThat's a complicated, expensive process, Tang said. He had to fly five engineers from Asia to Verizon's New Jersey headquarters for two weeks to figure it out. Punkt has been working on certification all year for its MP02 simple phone, and now says it may be available this fall.\n\nLight Phone tops Palm in a few ways, most notably on battery life. The little Palm phone tries to run full Android with a color screen on a tiny battery, and its stamina really suffers. But Light Phone 2, which is, well, light, gives you seven to nine days of standby and three days of use, Tang said.\nI'm still going to hope for more voice phone options out there beyond the Light Phone 2. At $350, it's out of reach for most kids and seniors, although it could be a boon for folks who are just trying to disconnect a little more.\nWe'll have a review of the Light Phone 2 soon. Crowdfunded backers will get their phones starting today, and retail orders will ship in October.\n\n", "image": [{"url": "https://sm.pcmag.com/pcmag_uk/news/l/light-phon/light-phone-2-cracks-the-simple-phone-code_9ps9.jpg", "width": 1920, "caption": "Light Phone 2 Cracks the Simple Phone Code", "@type": "ImageObject", "height": 1080}], "datePublished": "2019-09-04 13:00:00+00:00", "publisher": {"url": "https://uk.pcmag.com", "logo": {"url": "('https://uk.pcmag.com/s/',)pcmag/pcmag_logo_micro.png", "width": 245, "@type": "ImageObject", "height": 60}, "@type": "Organization", "name": "PCMag UK"}, "about": {"@type": "Thing", "name": "Palm Phone"}, "author": {"jobTitle": "Lead Analyst, Mobile", "description": "PCMag.com's lead mobile analyst, Sascha Segan, has reviewed hundreds of smartphones, tablets and other gadgets in more than 9 years with PCMag. He's the head of our Fastest Mobile Networks project, one of the hosts of the daily PCMag Live Web show and speaks frequently in mass media on cell-phone-related issues. His commentary has appeared on ABC, the BBC, the CBC, CNBC, CNN, Fox News, and in newspapers from San Antonio, Texas to Edmonton, Alberta.\n \nSegan is also a multiple award-winning travel writer, having contributed to the Frommer's series of travel guides and Web sites for more than a decade. Other than his home town of New York, his favorite cities are Barcelona and Hong Kong. While he's a fourth-generation Manhattanite, he now lives in Queens with his wife and daughter.", "@type": "Person", "image": "https://assets.pcmag.com/media/images/248865-sascha-segan.jpg?thumb=y&width=85&height=85", "name": "Sascha Segan"}, "headline": "Light Phone 2 Cracks the Simple Phone Code", "@type": "NewsArticle", "mainEntityOfPage": {"@id": "https://uk.pcmag.com/palm-phone/122406/light-phone-2-cracks-the-simple-phone-code", "@type": "WebPage"}, "@context": "https://schema.org", "dateModified": "2019-09-04 14:50:41+00:00"} Light Phone 2 Cracks the Simple Phone Code - PCMag UK " /> Skip to main content PCMag UK Palm Phone By Sascha Segan 4 Sep 2019, 2 p.m. This stripped-down, e-ink based phone can make voice-over-LTE calls on three different US networks—something that competitors like Punkt and Nokia haven't been able to accomplish. We review products independently, but we may earn affiliate commissions from buying links on this page. Terms of use. I get a lot of emails from people looking for a break from the noisy chaos of their smartphones. They don't have a lot of good options, but now there's an encouraging one: the $350 Light Phone 2 from TheLightPhone.com. I've been following New York-based Light and its founder, Kaiwei Tang, for a few months now, and I really like how the company seems to understand what it takes to get an innovative new phone out in the US. Product designer Tang and his co-founder, artist Joe Hollier, met at a Google incubator in 2014 and had a now-familiar realization: the endless scroll is eating our minds. Engagement-based social media apps are fragmenting our attention and making us frustrated and depressed. "How do we inspire people to take a break?" Tang asked, and the result became a massively successful 2015 Kickstarter project, the Light Phone 1. That first attempt was a $149, 2G-only phone that eventually came out in 2017. It just made calls. Light sold about 15,000 of them, sold out, and moved on, Tang said. Too many people said they needed texting to be able to replace their smartphones, and by 2017, 2G networks were on their way out. That meant Light needed to build a more complicated simple phone that supported texting and 4G calling. The company's next Indiegogo campaign, for the Light Phone 2, raised $3.5 million in 2018. I don't like crowdfunding hardware. There are too many failures. It's like throwing money into a trash can and setting it on fire. So I'm breathing a sigh of relief that this phone is now available at regular old retail. At $350, the Light Phone 2 isn't cheap, much like the Palm phone wasn't at launch. These unusual, small-batch phones can't take advantage of the economies of scale in a supply chain geared to big screens and similar black plastic housings. It's much cheaper to build something bigger, because other people are building hundreds of millions of 'em. At least Tang has powerful friends. His message of putting your damn phone down resonated with manufacturer Foxconn, which invested in his firm and now produces his phones. That's helped him dodge a little bit of the difficulty with building a phone that's mostly made of custom components. The menu button is flanked by volume buttons. The "premium river stone" aesthetic differentiates the Light Phone 2, Punkt MP02, and Palm from cheaper-feeling traditional phones like Alcatel and Kyocera flips. The Light Phone doesn't have Punkt's hardware keypad, which makes it a squat little rectangle; I worry a little about microphone quality because it doesn't reach all the way down my face, but that's just something I'll have to test. The phone uses a 2.8-inch frontlit e-ink display and runs a custom version of Android on a Qualcomm Snapdragon 210 chipset. The interface is extremely stripped-down. Hit the big side button, and right now, you're presented with options to go to your address book, alarm clock, or settings. This is the main menu. All of it. From the address book, you can summon a dialpad or dial your contacts; dipping into a contact shows you your text message history with them. There's a web interface to let you fill in the contact book from Google or Apple contacts, and, for now ... that's it. If you want to do more, there will be a hotspot mode, and you can go do it on another device. Texts appear threaded by person. You type texts on this very tiny touch keyboard. Tang said Light is looking at adding a small number of other apps to the phone, focusing on ones that have an "endpoint"—not an endless scroll but a defined use that relates to the real world. Text directions, from Google, are coming first. Then, probably, Lyft; one of Lyft's co-founders is a Light Phone investor. The phone will have a local music player, and Tang said the company is looking at playing defined Spotify playlists over-the-air—no discovery, just playing through a playlist you set up on another device. There will also be a calculator and a "find my phone" dashboard. Contacts Since calling is the central feature here, there are plenty of options. There's a 3.5mm headset jack for wired connections, Bluetooth, 2G, 3G, and 4G calling (but no Wi-Fi calling.) The phone will run on the AT&T, T-Mobile, and Verizon networks. It can be attached to existing accounts as a secondary phone sharing an existing number, it can be a primary phone on a mainstream plan, or it can work with Light Phone's own AT&T-based MVNO network for $30/month. Reception should be good. The US model has bands 2/4/12/13/17/25/26. That includes primary urban bands but also bands 12, 13 and 17, which T-Mobile, Verizon and AT&T (respectively) use in more rural areas. The only coverage it's really lacking is extremely rural reach from T-Mobile's Band 71. Nice headset jack you got there. What Light Phone gets right, and some other simple phone makers like Punkt got wrong, is that its US-based founders understand US carrier requirements—specifically, VoLTE. All of our carriers are in the process of winding down their 2G and 3G networks, focusing on 4G and 5G in the future. But to make phone calls on AT&T's and Verizon's 4G networks, phones need to be pre-approved. That's a complicated, expensive process, Tang said. He had to fly five engineers from Asia to Verizon's New Jersey headquarters for two weeks to figure it out. Punkt has been working on certification all year for its MP02 simple phone, and now says it may be available this fall. Light Phone tops Palm in a few ways, most notably on battery life. The little Palm phone tries to run full Android with a color screen on a tiny battery, and its stamina really suffers. But Light Phone 2, which is, well, light, gives you seven to nine days of standby and three days of use, Tang said. I'm still going to hope for more voice phone options out there beyond the Light Phone 2. At $350, it's out of reach for most kids and seniors, although it could be a boon for folks who are just trying to disconnect a little more. We'll have a review of the Light Phone 2 soon. Crowdfunded backers will get their phones starting today, and retail orders will ship in October. Next Article More Inside PCMag.com About the Author PCMag.com's lead mobile analyst, Sascha Segan, has reviewed hundreds of smartphones, tablets and other gadgets in more than 9 years with PCMag. He's the head of our Fastest Mobile Networks project, one of the hosts of the daily PCMag Live Web show and speaks frequently in mass media on cell-phone-related issues. His commentary has appeared on ABC, the BBC, the CBC, CNBC, CNN, Fox News, and in newspapers from San Antonio, Texas to Edmonton, Alberta. Segan is also a multiple award-winning travel writer, having contributed to the Frommer's series of travel guides and Web sites for more than a decade. Other than his home town of New York, his favorite ... See Full Bio Please enable JavaScript to view the comments. Ad Product designer Tang and his co-founder, artist Joe Hollier, met at a Google incubator in 2014 and had a now-familiar realization: the endless scroll is eating our minds. Engagement-based social media apps are fragmenting our attention and making us frustrated and depressed.\n\"How do we inspire people to take a break?\" Tang asked, and the result became a massively successful 2015 Kickstarter project, the Light Phone 1.\nThat first attempt was a $149, 2G-only phone that eventually came out in 2017. It just made calls. Light sold about 15,000 of them, sold out, and moved on, Tang said. Too many people said they needed texting to be able to replace their smartphones, and by 2017, 2G networks were on their way out. That meant Light needed to build a more complicated simple phone that supported texting and 4G calling. The company's next Indiegogo campaign, for the Light Phone 2, raised $3.5 million in 2018.\n\nI don't like crowdfunding hardware. There are too many failures. It's like throwing money into a trash can and setting it on fire. So I'm breathing a sigh of relief that this phone is now available at regular old retail.\nAt $350, the Light Phone 2 isn't cheap, much like the Palm phone wasn't at launch. These unusual, small-batch phones can't take advantage of the economies of scale in a supply chain geared to big screens and similar black plastic housings. It's much cheaper to build something bigger, because other people are building hundreds of millions of 'em.\nAt least Tang has powerful friends. His message of putting your damn phone down resonated with manufacturer Foxconn, which invested in his firm and now produces his phones. That's helped him dodge a little bit of the difficulty with building a phone that's mostly made of custom components.\nThe menu button is flanked by volume buttons.\nThe \"premium river stone\" aesthetic differentiates the Light Phone 2, Punkt MP02, and Palm from cheaper-feeling traditional phones like Alcatel and Kyocera flips. The Light Phone doesn't have Punkt's hardware keypad, which makes it a squat little rectangle; I worry a little about microphone quality because it doesn't reach all the way down my face, but that's just something I'll have to test.\nThe phone uses a 2.8-inch frontlit e-ink display and runs a custom version of Android on a Qualcomm Snapdragon 210 chipset. The interface is extremely stripped-down. Hit the big side button, and right now, you're presented with options to go to your address book, alarm clock, or settings.\nThis is the main menu. All of it.\nFrom the address book, you can summon a dialpad or dial your contacts; dipping into a contact shows you your text message history with them. There's a web interface to let you fill in the contact book from Google or Apple contacts, and, for now ... that's it. If you want to do more, there will be a hotspot mode, and you can go do it on another device.\nTexts appear threaded by person.\nYou type texts on this very tiny touch keyboard.\nTang said Light is looking at adding a small number of other apps to the phone, focusing on ones that have an \"endpoint\"\u2014not an endless scroll but a defined use that relates to the real world. Text directions, from Google, are coming first. Then, probably, Lyft; one of Lyft's co-founders is a Light Phone investor.\nThe phone will have a local music player, and Tang said the company is looking at playing defined Spotify playlists over-the-air\u2014no discovery, just playing through a playlist you set up on another device. There will also be a calculator and a \"find my phone\" dashboard.\nContacts\nSince calling is the central feature here, there are plenty of options. There's a 3.5mm headset jack for wired connections, Bluetooth, 2G, 3G, and 4G calling (but no Wi-Fi calling.) The phone will run on the AT&T, T-Mobile, and Verizon networks. It can be attached to existing accounts as a secondary phone sharing an existing number, it can be a primary phone on a mainstream plan, or it can work with Light Phone's own AT&T-based MVNO network for $30/month.\nReception should be good. The US model has bands 2/4/12/13/17/25/26. That includes primary urban bands but also bands 12, 13 and 17, which T-Mobile, Verizon and AT&T (respectively) use in more rural areas. The only coverage it's really lacking is extremely rural reach from T-Mobile's Band 71.\nNice headset jack you got there.\nWhat Light Phone gets right, and some other simple phone makers like Punkt got wrong, is that its US-based founders understand US carrier requirements\u2014specifically, VoLTE. All of our carriers are in the process of winding down their 2G and 3G networks, focusing on 4G and 5G in the future. But to make phone calls on AT&T's and Verizon's 4G networks, phones need to be pre-approved.\nThat's a complicated, expensive process, Tang said. He had to fly five engineers from Asia to Verizon's New Jersey headquarters for two weeks to figure it out. Punkt has been working on certification all year for its MP02 simple phone, and now says it may be available this fall.\n\nLight Phone tops Palm in a few ways, most notably on battery life. The little Palm phone tries to run full Android with a color screen on a tiny battery, and its stamina really suffers. But Light Phone 2, which is, well, light, gives you seven to nine days of standby and three days of use, Tang said.\nI'm still going to hope for more voice phone options out there beyond the Light Phone 2. At $350, it's out of reach for most kids and seniors, although it could be a boon for folks who are just trying to disconnect a little more.\nWe'll have a review of the Light Phone 2 soon. Crowdfunded backers will get their phones starting today, and retail orders will ship in October.\n\n", "image": [{"url": "https://sm.pcmag.com/pcmag_uk/news/l/light-phon/light-phone-2-cracks-the-simple-phone-code_9ps9.jpg", "width": 1920, "caption": "Light Phone 2 Cracks the Simple Phone Code", "@type": "ImageObject", "height": 1080}], "datePublished": "2019-09-04 13:00:00+00:00", "publisher": {"url": "https://uk.pcmag.com", "logo": {"url": "('https://uk.pcmag.com/s/',)pcmag/pcmag_logo_micro.png", "width": 245, "@type": "ImageObject", "height": 60}, "@type": "Organization", "name": "PCMag UK"}, "about": {"@type": "Thing", "name": "Palm Phone"}, "author": {"jobTitle": "Lead Analyst, Mobile", "description": "PCMag.com's lead mobile analyst, Sascha Segan, has reviewed hundreds of smartphones, tablets and other gadgets in more than 9 years with PCMag. He's the head of our Fastest Mobile Networks project, one of the hosts of the daily PCMag Live Web show and speaks frequently in mass media on cell-phone-related issues. His commentary has appeared on ABC, the BBC, the CBC, CNBC, CNN, Fox News, and in newspapers from San Antonio, Texas to Edmonton, Alberta.\n \nSegan is also a multiple award-winning travel writer, having contributed to the Frommer's series of travel guides and Web sites for more than a decade. Other than his home town of New York, his favorite cities are Barcelona and Hong Kong. While he's a fourth-generation Manhattanite, he now lives in Queens with his wife and daughter.", "@type": "Person", "image": "https://assets.pcmag.com/media/images/248865-sascha-segan.jpg?thumb=y&width=85&height=85", "name": "Sascha Segan"}, "headline": "Light Phone 2 Cracks the Simple Phone Code", "@type": "NewsArticle", "mainEntityOfPage": {"@id": "https://uk.pcmag.com/palm-phone/122406/light-phone-2-cracks-the-simple-phone-code", "@type": "WebPage"}, "@context": "https://schema.org", "dateModified": "2019-09-04 14:50:41+00:00"}

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