A bike ride is a great way to escape the world - but these days it’s hard to totally disconnect from the global binfire, traumas of daily life and people wanting to contact you 24/7, as there’s that slab of technology in your back pocket buzzing and bleeping its constant need for attention. Of course, you also need it to sync your route and watts otherwise it never happened.
While it would be great to leave that needy device at home, there’s the element of genteel safety that a phone offers, and the opportunity to call for the team car if really needed, something that has become increasingly and difficult now that public phoneboxes have disappeared (ironically, thanks to the ubiquity of mobile phones). You can, however, tuck the reassurance of a mobile phone without the heavy weight of All The World in your right rear pocket with the Zanco Tiny T1 Phone.
We first saw what they claim is the world’s smallest mobile phone in a cycling context at the Gravel World Championships this year. Measuring 47mm x 21mm x 12mm and weighing only 13 grams, it’s easy to pop in a pocket and completely forget about until it’s absolutely necessary, and you can’t doomscroll Facebook on it either. The Zanco Tiny T1 also has a standby time of up to three days, so if you’re the type of rider who likes to disappear for days on end, its long battery life makes it even more, um, handy in an emergency.
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Zanco Tiny T1 3G Phone - I thought a lot of UK mobile network operators have been quietly switching off 3G networks to make room for 4G and 5G networks?
According of ofcom, all four networks (and their dependent mvno services) will have switched off 3G by 2025. Currently, EE, Vodafone and Three are off already, with O2 to follow next year. The 2G networks will stay until 2033, I would think there too are many embedded M2M type services that rely on this (GPRS/EDGE) for it to be switched off now (vending machines, smart meters, etc). A phone like this Zanco Tiny T1 will use 2G for its basic voice and SMS functions.
All that said, its small size (enabling it to be easily hidden) and features such as a voice changer leads me to believe that its primary use case was not to allow cyclists to carry it on long rides...
If the Ventoux wine doesn't do it for you, they also grow very respectable wine on the slopes of the Puy de Dome.
https://www.thewinesociety.com/product/pinot-noir-puy-de-dome-cave-saint...