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FindArticles > News > Technology

Boox Palma 2 Pro Emerges as a Minimalist Phone

Gregory Zuckerman
Last updated: November 18, 2025 3:26 pm
By Gregory Zuckerman
Technology
7 Min Read
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The Boox Palma 2 Pro is one of those rare gadgets that, rather than being an answer to a question nobody asked, functions as a “rebuttal to modern phone overload.” With an E Ink color screen, Android 15, and a data-only SIM slot, the gadget provides the barest minimum without the perpetual video allure and feed. It is the most viable middle ground if one has been considering digital minimalism but could not give up dependence on maps, banking, and messaging.

Why an E Ink phone works particularly well now

The maturity of color E Ink has unarguably arrived. Kaleido 3 panels offer soft color for identifying icons, reading maps, and allowing users to outshine the monochrome standard while maintaining the relaxed, reflective paper texture for which E Ink is recognized. This visual tone is essential; it softens the daily hyperstimulation poured into current app and interface design.

Table of Contents
  • Why an E Ink phone works particularly well now
  • What the Palma 2 Pro actually offers minimalist users
  • In daily use: where the Boox Palma 2 Pro truly shines
  • How It Compares To Other Minimalist Phones
  • Trade-offs to know before choosing the Palma 2 Pro
  • Bottom line: why the Palma 2 Pro suits digital minimalists
A black Boox Palma 2 Pro e-reader displayed at a 16:9 aspect ratio on a professional flat design background with soft patterns.

Indeed, the timing is perfect: the Pew Research Center announced that about a third of U.S. people disclose being online “almost constantly,” with younger users claiming even higher percentages. Light Phone II and Punkt MP02 minimalism have proven appealing. However, the restrictions are simply too extreme for the majority. The Palma 2 Pro aims for a compromise rather than abstinence.

What the Palma 2 Pro actually offers minimalist users

Think compact smartphone, restrained by design. You get a 6.13-inch Kaleido 3 color E Ink display, Android 15, 8 GB of RAM, 128 GB of storage, stereo speakers, a fingerprint reader, Bluetooth, Wi-Fi, and a front light. Crucially, there’s a SIM slot for cellular data, so messaging and navigation work away from Wi-Fi. There’s no traditional dialer, but calls via apps like WhatsApp, Signal, or Google Meet cover the basics for many. It runs full Android with Google Play; you keep all your authentication apps, password managers, and banking tools — features that are often dealbreakers on stricter “dumb phones.”

The magic is the friction. Short videos look mediocre; rapid-fire feeds feel clunky. E Ink refreshes require a beat between intent and action, nudging you to think before you scroll. That throttles the dopamine loop without blocking the app entirely.

Organizations like the Center for Humane Technology have long argued for products that prioritize attention, not extraction. The Palma 2 Pro embodies that philosophy in hardware. You can reply to messages, approve a 2FA prompt, or check an address — and then put it away because it never begs to be used for anything more.

E Ink only draws power when it refreshes, so standby drain is low. With light-to-moderate use — messaging, reading, maps — you can expect multiple days on a charge. It won’t match a basic e-reader, since the cellular radios stay active, but it outlasts most OLED phones under similar workflows.

It also makes the display more comfortable. According to the American Academy of Ophthalmology, dimming glare, brightness, and screen contrast can relieve eye fatigue. E Ink’s front light and matte look, along with scalable fonts, can support longer reading sessions more easily than over-bright, glossy LCDs or OLEDs.

Boox Palma 2 Pro minimalist phone with E Ink display

In daily use: where the Boox Palma 2 Pro truly shines

For commuters, parents, and knowledge workers, the equation is straightforward: messaging, email triage, maps, boarding passes, authenticator codes, and some pocketable reading.

Add Pocket or your favorite RSS client, and you have a productive, low-buzz routine. It’s also great for document scanning and quick-reference photos without leading to gallery rabbit holes.

Notifications become easier to swat down because you install fewer apps, and the screen makes it harder for your phone’s display to become a wasted space of idle checks. Consistently, mobile consumer research at Deloitte has demonstrated increasing concern about dwell time and notifications: a device can act as a speed bump on this slippery road — nudging intent toward habit.

How It Compares To Other Minimalist Phones

Compared with the Light Phone II, Punkt MP02, or Mudita Pure, the Palma 2 Pro is far less severe and vastly more capable due to Android 15 and the Play Store. The Hisense A5 has newer software, color E Ink, and a clearer minimalist point than older E Ink phones. It’s not a phone replacement for “you,” exactly, but it’s the most flexible minimalist option you might be able to stand to actually live with.

Trade-offs to know before choosing the Palma 2 Pro

Typing is slower, animations are choppy, and videos look jagged and rough. The color is muted by design. There is no native cellular calling, and the camera is purely functional. It’s pricier than a lot of feature phones, though still a good $650 cheaper than an iPhone X at MSRP.

If you plan to live and die by the refresh rate of your monitor, this is the wrong tool. If your day orbits around the ability to stay reachable, to find yourself in a city, to read more, to be interrupted less — well.

Bottom line: why the Palma 2 Pro suits digital minimalists

The Boox Palma 2 Pro does not expect you to reject modernity. It keeps what you need and scrapes away the noise through intentional constraint. That quality is so rare in a world of maximalist phones swinging from ropes and cracking whips that the “less” begins to feel like an upgrade — minimalism without martyrdom.

Gregory Zuckerman
ByGregory Zuckerman
Gregory Zuckerman is a veteran investigative journalist and financial writer with decades of experience covering global markets, investment strategies, and the business personalities shaping them. His writing blends deep reporting with narrative storytelling to uncover the hidden forces behind financial trends and innovations. Over the years, Gregory’s work has earned industry recognition for bringing clarity to complex financial topics, and he continues to focus on long-form journalism that explores hedge funds, private equity, and high-stakes investing.
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