Since launching in 2014, PopSockets have always been a quirky (and slightly bulky) grip for phones. They're adored by those who love to accessorize their phones with their swappable designs and people who love to fidget with their accordion-style pop-out piece. But the company is now hoping to attract a new clientele with the Low-Pro, a new grip design that's so thin that when collapsed, it sits lower than the camera bump on my iPhone 17 Pro Max.
The Low-Pro goes on sale Tuesday for $40, launching first at Apple Stores and at PopSockets.com, with additional retailers at the end of July. You can see more of how it works in the latest episode of One More Thing, embedded below:
Watch this: Flat PopSockets Might Lure More Men: Hands-On With Low-Pro Grips 05:28
I've been using the MagSafe Low-Pro for the past week, and I can see the appeal this will have for those folks who just want something that slips effortlessly into their pants pockets. Like other PopSockets, it still attaches with the MagSafe magnetic backing. The front has a soft matte finish, and although it doesn't make a "pop," a finger nudge in any direction will raise the disk to reveal a slitted, flexible single piece of polymer. A metal ring around the edge becomes an adjustable swing-out stand to prop up your phone in portrait and landscape mode.
When opened, the Low-Pro grip is designed to handle fidgeters who want to twist, poke and pull at it (well, up to about 30 lbs of pulling). PopSockets
When the Low-Pro is expanded, it reminds me of a kid's paper lantern craft project. Thinner materials give the impression that it will be weaker, but no matter how I twist, tug or try to poke at the holes, the material holds up. Good news for fidget-lovers: This seems to be able to handle all my stretching -- and the PopSockets team tells me it was designed to withstand more than 30 pounds of pulling pressure in testing.
Apple Stores will carry the Low-Pro in four exclusive colors to start: Blue Aura, Electric Fuchsia, Black and Navy.
PopSocket is not the first to come up with a flush magnetic phone grip. The company OhSnap gained popularity for its Snap Grip, priced at $30, which uses a metal hinge to fold flat. But since using both, I prefer the PopSocket design because it's easier to open with one finger from any angle, and it has the extra kickstand.
I sat down with PopSocket inventor and founder David Barnett to learn more about the pivot to the Low-Pro. Although the PopSockets company will continue making the existing design (the one that actually pops), Barnett said the big motivator here for a new model was to lure in men who told him over the years they never gave PopSockets a chance because of their size.
PopSocket inventor David Barnett didn't start off with a goal making phone grips. Here, he holds the creation that inspired the PopSocket: giant buttons on the back of an iPhone 3GS to help wrap long headset cords. Carly Marsh/CNET
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