Nothing Phone (1) comes to the US as a $299 hamstrung beta

Shawn Knight

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Staff member
Facepalm: Nothing is bringing its inaugural smartphone to the US, albeit not in the traditional sense. The London-based tech firm has announced a beta membership program for its US audience. In exchange for $299, members will receive a final model of the Phone (1) featuring 8GB of RAM and 128GB of onboard storage (the same one that is sold globally). It'll come loaded with Nothing OS 1.5, which is powered by Android 13, and you'll also have the opportunity to claim a Nothing Community Black Dot.

Nothing is quick to note that its handset might not work with all US carriers and since the software is still in beta. In the FAQ for the beta program, the company said 5G is not supported on AT&T. T-Mobile does support 5G on the Phone (1), but not across all bands. Compatibility with Verizon is listed as "very limited" as 5G and CDMA networks are not supported.

Nothing further points out that some apps, including Netflix and YouTube, might not function properly with Nothing OS 1.5. "The OS can hinder the use of the phone in ways we can't predict," the company added.

The beta program will run until June 30. After that, the phone is yours to keep and you can upgrade to the final version of the operating system. There is a 14-day return period but after that, you're stuck with the device with no additional warranty coverage.

Nothing's Black Dot is simply an NFT gifted to early supports that can be used to unlock access to Nothing's official Discord channel.

Nothing launched its Phone (1) last July but only in Asia, Europe and the Middle East. In December, founder Carl Pei told CNBC that they didn't launch in the US out of the gate due to all of the additional technical support needed such as unique carrier customizations on top of Android. "We felt that we weren't ready before," Pei noted.

It's great to see Nothing find its way to the US but we wish it was with a phone sporting proper support for carriers and apps. As it stands, the beta offering certainly isn't a candidate for a daily driver.

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So you pass $300 over the counter, asking for nothing, they just wave at you, and there you have it.
 
not quite like the Asian nor European market where you get a ranging choice for every 20$ ladder.
Having a million different choices isn't always better. Sometimes it just creates confusion. I live in Canada and any store that sells phones will have at least 40-50 different models on display. Would having 200+ models on display be better? I doubt it.
 
Having a million different choices isn't always better. Sometimes it just creates confusion. I live in Canada and any store that sells phones will have at least 40-50 different models on display. Would having 200+ models on display be better? I doubt it.
that's a heavy exaggeration of what I'm saying. by the same logic, you'd argue that having less choice are better as it means less confusion.

that's not what I argue. a lot of those budget phones or budget flagsgip are online only and not available at retail. those phone cater to people who cares about specific requirements, such as cheap flagship SoC, overkill camera, barebone Android OS, etc. etc.

if you don't want to get confused, simply go to retail as they're meant to help themselves selling you products and not to overwhelm you with choice.
 
Not bad, but you can also install Lineage OS or Graphene OS on an old, used smartphone you can get for under $100. It takes some work, but works okay. I wouldn't mind considering Nothing OS since Samsung and Apple are totally compromised.
 
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