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PopSockets’ new ultrathin grip is the product its founder wanted to make all along
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PopSockets’ new ultrathin grip is the product its founder wanted to make all along

Fast Company · Jun 16, 2026, 1:30 PM · Also reported by 2 other sources

David Barnett was working as a philosophy professor in 2015 at the University of Colorado when he came across a problem. His headphones kept getting tangled up. He ventured to a Joann fabrics store, where he bought two buttons he glued to the back of his phone; he would wrap the wire around them. Problem solved! Or at least he thought so—until he realized how ridiculous it looked, and searched for a more elegant solution. When he couldn’t find one, he created it himself. That solution was PopSockets, the phone grips that have since sold more than 275 million products and expanded into other upgraded versions of the original idea—grips that use magnets to attach to phones and cases rather than adhesive, plus wallets and chargers with grips. But all of these have a bulkier profile than what Barnett envisioned. The latest product from the brand—the Low-Pro Grip—gets as close to his original idea as possible. At roughly 2.5 mm (0.10 inch) thick when collapsed, it’s nearly the exact height of the first PopSocket prototype. But unlike that version, this one works. [Photo: PopSockets] “I was excited to get it from the mail, opened it up, and it was like a silver dollar, just rock hard,” Barnett said of the first prototype, noting that it never opened up. This failed prototype led him to create the original accordion-style PopSocket, and is now coming full circle with the Low-Pro Grip. The product launches today exclusively at Apple stores and will expand to more retailers July 29. Thinner than ever The original PopSocket, Barnett acknowledges, had the reputation of being “bulky,” with some complaining about the product getting stuck in a pocket, for example. Barnett’s team is hoping to change that narrative with this new design. The original PopSocket contained an accordion grip that used multiple rings to expand. After realizing the difficulties with converting the original design into the new product, they landed on a different m

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