Skip to main content

Upgrade, repair, and modify your smartphone bit by bit with Phonebloks

phonebloks video phoneblok concept smartphone
Image used with permission by copyright holder

What is more important to you in a mobile phone, looks or upgradability? If you picked the latter, then you’ll probably get excited about a new phone concept called Phonebloks. It’s a modular smartphone made up of separate, interchangeable blocks that are easily upgraded or replaced if they break. You can design your phone with the components you care about or need, leave off those you don’t, and you only have to upgrade bits one at a time. An awesome idea, right? Yeah, but you’re going to need to put up with one ugly phone to get it.

Look-aside, the basics behind Phonebloks are solid. The whole venture is very Maker-inspired and will appeal to Do-It-Yourselfers and hardcore phone geeks. Consumers will be able to buy pre-made phones or assemble their own, blok by blok, using components found in the Blokstore. Here, both large and small hardware makers will get the chance to sell you components ranging from processors and internal storage to cameras and speakers. It’s akin to an app store, not just because of consumer choice but because anyone will be able to make hardware bloks. The entire platform is open source.

Recommended Videos

A Phonebloks phone is based around a single pegboard. To add components, you have to fit them, puzzle-like, on the back. The display goes on the front and is also modular and easily replaceable. Once all your components are on, lock them in place with two screws. Some have pointed out that this kind of construction is likely to mean a phone that will easily fall apart if dropped. This may or may not be true, but if you put a case on it, you’re probably fine.

Cases may end up being the real key component. Like it or not, phones are fashion statements and status symbols. But under that case, does it really matter the exact model of phone you’re carrying? Generally, no. Gather some licensing deals and a handful of great designers together, commission some great-looking cases, and most people won’t care if the Phonebloks itself doesn’t look that great.

In fact, this is the perfect type of phone for people in low-income communities or places with a small but growing economy. The idea that smartphones should only last a year or two before you replace them because they’re obsolete or break is pretty ridiculous, if you stop and think about it. Most of the time, the obsolete or broken bits could be replaced and the phone itself would still work just fine. But good luck upgrading the CPU, adding more RAM, or getting a bigger battery. With Phonebloks, you can do exactly that.

Right now, Phonebloks is still in the concept stage. So concept-y that the inventor isn’t even asking for money yet, just attention. He’s gathering people for a crowdspeaking campaign (like a small version of Kony 2012) that will send out a huge burst of social media noise about the phone all at once to prove there is great interest. The thunderclap is scheduled to happen on October 29. The website and YouTube video aren’t too clear on the next steps. Will they try a Kickstarter campaign? Raise venture capitalist money? Bring the idea to an existing manufacturer? Maybe all of the above.

No matter how it comes about, we wouldn’t mind trying to build our own phone. Would you?

K. T. Bradford
Former Digital Trends Contributor
K. T Bradford is a lover of gadgets and all things geek. Prior to writing for Digital Trends she cut her teeth on tech…
My lack of self-control is a warning not to upgrade your phone this year
iPhone 14 Pro in Deep Purple, held in a mans hand.

There’s one thing almost all the smartphones released in 2022 have in common: if you’ve got a 2021 smartphone, or in some cases even a 2020 smartphone, there’s absolutely no need to upgrade this year. This isn’t to say you shouldn’t buy a new phone, or that there’s anything wrong with the phones out this year -- it's more a statement that the two-year upgrade cycle is now relevant to us all as tech fans.

I’m aware I’ve got to back all this up, and luckily I’m not short of examples. But this isn’t just the result of a spec sheet comparison. I’m speaking with authority because I’ve paid to upgrade several phones this year, and I can tell you it’s absolutely not worth it. I’m not just looking at specs on paper and telling you not to bother — I’m actually living with (and paying for) it. Please learn from my lack of self-control.
The iPhone, upgraded?

Read more
The Nothing Phone 1 thinks your smartphone should be a brash, distracting toy
Someone holding the Nothing Phone 1, showing the front of it and its display.

Carl Pei, former founder of OnePlus and now the face of the Nothing brand, has been hyping up the company's Nothing Phone 1 for what feels like ages. You'd think the smartphone world has seen it all, but Nothing has a brilliant plan to bring the fun back to phones. No, it's not with foldables. It's also not mini phones, nor is it the camera-centric madness that has gripped both Western and Eastern smartphone brands.

With the Nothing Phone 1, Pei wants to bring back beeps and bloops to your smartphone in an attempt to make your phone the most distracting thing in your life (more so than it is already), and it's not exactly clear Nothing has something here.
Making your phone the center of attention

Read more
New A.I. system could upgrade smartphone cameras
Hand holding the DISH Celero 5G smartphone, showing a closeup of the camera module

Your smartphone camera might soon be getting a big upgrade thanks to the power of artificial intelligence.

A startup is using new technology to pack the power of a DSLR into phones. Glass Imaging wants to boost smartphone camera quality using deep neural networks and a new kind of sensor.

Read more