A screen that wants nothing from you.
The internet made reading feel like being advertised at. This screen has no feeds, no ads, no comments, and no algorithm. A search box, nearly 400 GB of things worth knowing, and the good kind of rabbit hole: the kind you feel great about afterwards.
No notifications. Not silenced: structurally impossible
There is no radio to receive one and no account to send one. Nothing tracks you, because there is nothing to connect to. The device waits until you pick it up, then it does exactly one thing: whatever you were curious about.
Screen time, repaired
Instead of the evening scroll
Same couch, same half hour. You come away having read something instead of having refreshed something.
Wandering, restored
Wikipedia the way you remember it: one article leads to another, and nobody interrupts to sell you socks.
Reading together
The Thousand-Year Calendar puts the same book, article, and work of art on every everething, the same day. A book club with no thread to keep up with.
Grounded, not cut off
Disconnecting doesn't have to mean losing access to knowledge. Take the answers with you and leave the noise behind.
The Thousand-Year Calendar
A shared reading list, a thousand years long. The same book, the same article, the same art, on every everething, the same day.
12,000 books · 156,000 articles · 365,000 works of art
Quiet is a feature
There is no pull-to-refresh because there is nothing to refresh. No badge counts, no streaks, no autoplay. The device has one opinion: whatever you were curious about is enough.
Reserve yours
Tablet, solar panel, batteries, Faraday bags, full library. Ready out of the box.
$599 for Batch 1, then $899.