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Sarah Perez
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Welcome to TechCrunch’s 2021 Holiday Gift Guide! Need help with gift ideas? We’ve got lots of them. Check back from now until the end of December for more!
This is a year where we’ve all had to reconsider our relationship with tech. Social media has finally been put on trial for its potential harms, including to vulnerable adolescents. Algorithms have been accused of dividing us and sending us down rabbit holes of extremism. Even tech companies with sizable “fan” bases, like Apple, have been seen in a new light as they’re challenged by antitrust lawsuits and investigations.
For some, 2022 may mean looking to find a healthier balance with the sort of tech we’re using in our lives. In that light, we present a gift guide that’s focused on tech that allows us to escape tech!
Image Credits: Christoph Wagner (opens in a new window) / Getty Images
AllTrails is a popular guide to over 200,000 outdoor trails, offering detailed maps, photos and reviews curated by millions of hikers and more. But the AllTrails Pro subscription is worth it for any dedicated hiker, biker or climber, as it offers downloadable maps — often necessary for off-the-grid hikes, as well as other handy features, like off-route notifications, a Lifeline feature that keeps safety contacts informed as to your trail progress and access to air quality, pollen and weather details on the maps. The company has big plans for the year ahead, too, thanks to its recent\)"> 29.99 per year or
Image Credits: Opal
Phones can be distracting, taking us out of the moment and back into our screens. While recent updates like Apple’s Focus Mode feature have given us back some control, the Opal app takes things even further. The app, essentially a VPN client, lets you completely disconnect distracting apps so you can focus and easily set automatic schedules for things like work or family time where apps and notifications will leave you alone. Unlike some other tools, which can be disabled by the user, you can even configure “deep focus” sessions in Opal with a timer you can’t bypass for when you really need to not be distracted. You can use the app in a number of ways — on-demand when you need to concentrate or always on to help you craft better routines for your life with more boundaries.
Price: A \)">40 Gift Subscription offers one year of Opal ProThis is a year where we’ve all had to reconsider our relationship with tech. Social media has finally been put on trial for its potential harms, including to vulnerable adolescents. Algorithms have been accused of dividing us and sending us down rabbit holes of extremism. Even tech companies with sizable “fan” bases, like Apple, have been seen in a new light as they’re challenged by antitrust lawsuits and investigations.
For some, 2022 may mean looking to find a healthier balance with the sort of tech we’re using in our lives. In that light, we present a gift guide that’s focused on tech that allows us to escape tech!
AllTrails Pro
Image Credits: Christoph Wagner (opens in a new window) / Getty Images
AllTrails is a popular guide to over 200,000 outdoor trails, offering detailed maps, photos and reviews curated by millions of hikers and more. But the AllTrails Pro subscription is worth it for any dedicated hiker, biker or climber, as it offers downloadable maps — often necessary for off-the-grid hikes, as well as other handy features, like off-route notifications, a Lifeline feature that keeps safety contacts informed as to your trail progress and access to air quality, pollen and weather details on the maps. The company has big plans for the year ahead, too, thanks to its recent
Light Phone
Image Credits: Light Phone
When you really need to get off the grid, the best phone could be no phone. But that’s not always viable in this day and age where we need to be able to reach others in the event of an emergency or have them be able to reach us. Plus, we don’t really want to go back to the days of printing out our MapQuest directions, right?
The Light Phone is another option, which could allow you to take a break without being fully disconnected. The phone allows you to make calls and texts and includes basic utilities like an alarm, calculator, a hotspot feature and a simple music and podcast player. It also just added a directions tool and will soon add support for public transit routes. The idea is to offer a phone that’s “smart” but not filled with addictive apps and games. The Light Phone may not make sense for everyone as their full-time device, but it could be swapped in for your weekend getaway or any other time you’re feeling too overwhelmed. The phone offers its own SIM plans on AT&T starting at
Speechify
Image Credits: Speechify
Listening to podcasts and e-books is already a popular activity, but what if you could reduce your screen time by listening to just about anything with the help of a text-to-speech reader? Speechify makes this possible. The web and mobile app lets you listen to anything with text — documents, news articles, research papers, school assignments, PDFs, emails and more — using a selection of natural-sounding AI voices. The app currently supports Gmail, Outlook, Messenger, WhatsApp, Google Docs, Notion, MS Teams, PDFs, Medium, NYT, BBC, Wikipedia, Twitter, Facebook, Reddit and LinkedIn. You can even snap photos of the pages in your books to have them read aloud. But this solution is not cheap — it’s more of a commitment to shift much of your screen-based reading to audio.
Price: