Parents seek tech independence for children this summer

A gadget that simply works, offline and quietly, has become countercultural.
Parents are rejecting screens in favor of practical tech that functions independently without notifications or connectivity.

À medida que o Dia da Criança se aproxima em Portugal, os pais revelam uma preferência crescente por tecnologia que liberta em vez de prender — gadgets que funcionam sem ligação à internet, sem notificações, sem contas para gerir. Câmaras, auscultadores e escovas de dentes eléctricas lideram as vendas não pelo que fazem, mas pelo que recusam ser. Neste movimento silencioso, emerge uma questão mais ampla sobre o que significa, afinal, oferecer tecnologia a uma criança.

  • Os pais portugueses estão a rejeitar activamente ecrãs adicionais para os filhos, preferindo gadgets com utilidade real e funcionamento autónomo.
  • Os produtos mais vendidos — câmara instantânea, auscultadores sem fios e escova de dentes eléctrica — partilham uma característica decisiva: nenhum depende de dados móveis ou subscrições.
  • A aproximação do verão e das viagens em família intensifica a procura por soluções práticas que ocupem as crianças sem exigir conectividade constante.
  • O mercado começa a responder a esta tendência, sinalizando uma possível reconfiguração de como as empresas tecnológicas concebem produtos para os mais novos.

Com o Dia da Criança a aproximar-se, os padrões de compra em Portugal contam uma história diferente da que seria de esperar. Na loja online da iServices, os produtos mais vendidos não são consolas nem tablets: são uma câmara que imprime fotos a preto e branco, auscultadores sem fios, auriculares com fio de pescoço e uma escova de dentes eléctrica em forma de dinossauro.

O que une estes produtos é aquilo que recusam ser. A câmara infantil funciona como câmara instantânea, grava vídeo, reproduz música e inclui quatro jogos — tudo sem ligação à internet. Para muitas crianças, representa o primeiro contacto genuíno com a fotografia nos seus próprios termos. Os auscultadores, adequados a partir dos seis anos, e os auriculares com corrente de pescoço — um detalhe que evita que desapareçam numa mochila — respondem à necessidade prática das longas viagens de verão.

A escova de dentes eléctrica ocupa uma categoria diferente: não é entretenimento, é infraestrutura. Disponível em três designs de animais a partir de 9,95 euros, oferece três velocidades de limpeza e resistência à água IPX7. A lógica é simples — as crianças escovam os dentes com mais regularidade quando gostam da ferramenta.

Os retalhistas observam que a maioria dos pais não quer dar mais um ecrã aos filhos. Quer dar-lhes algo que possam usar de forma independente, sem conectividade constante nem notificações. As ausências — o que estes produtos deliberadamente não fazem — tornaram-se o argumento de venda. Num momento em que a relação das crianças com a tecnologia é cada vez mais complexa, um gadget que simplesmente funciona, em silêncio e sem rede, tornou-se quase um acto de resistência.

As June 1st approaches—Children's Day in Portugal—a clear pattern is emerging in what parents actually want to buy their kids. It's not the latest gaming console or a tablet loaded with apps. Walk into iServices' online store these days, and the bestsellers tell a different story: a camera that prints photos in black and white, wireless headphones, earbuds with a neck strap, and an electric toothbrush shaped like a dinosaur.

The shift is unmistakable. Parents are moving away from toys with a short shelf life toward equipment that does something real, something their children can use without borrowing a phone or logging into an account. The four products leading sales share a crucial trait: none of them require mobile data or a streaming subscription. None of them ping with notifications.

The children's camera is drawing the most attention. It works as an instant camera with black-and-white printing, records video, plays music, and includes four built-in games—all without an internet connection. The design is ergonomic for small hands, and it comes in pink or blue. For many children, it represents a first genuine encounter with photography on their own terms: the act of capturing something that matters, rather than scrolling through what someone else has already captured.

As summer travel season looms, wireless headphones and earbuds serve a practical purpose. Long car rides, flights, and train journeys with children require something to occupy their attention. The wireless headphones, suitable from age six onward, come with removable magnetic tags for personalization. The earbuds, designed for children eight and up, include a neck chain—a small detail that dramatically reduces the odds of them vanishing into a backpack, never to be seen again.

The electric toothbrush occupies a different category altogether. It's not entertainment; it's infrastructure. Available in three animal designs—dinosaur, giraffe, crocodile—starting at 9.95 euros, it offers three cleaning speeds matched to different stages of tooth development, water resistance rated IPX7, and comes with four replacement heads. The logic is straightforward: children brush their teeth more consistently when they actually like the tool.

What unites these products is what they refuse to be. Most parents, retailers observe, don't want to give their children another screen. They want to give them something they can operate independently, something that doesn't demand constant connectivity or engagement. A camera without social media. A toothbrush that doesn't send alerts. These absences—the things the products deliberately don't do—have become the selling point. In a landscape where children's relationships with technology are increasingly fraught, a gadget that simply works, offline and quietly, has become countercultural. As summer begins and families prepare for travel, this preference suggests something deeper: a recalibration of what technology for children should actually accomplish.

The majority of parents don't want to give another screen. They want to give something the child can use with autonomy.
— iServices retail observation
A Conversa do Hearth Outra perspectiva sobre a história
Inventor

Why are parents suddenly rejecting screens for their kids? Is this a backlash, or something else?

Model

It's less a backlash than a clarification. Parents aren't anti-technology—they're anti-distraction. They want tools, not platforms. A camera teaches composition. A toothbrush teaches routine. Neither one is designed to keep a child's attention as long as possible.

Inventor

But couldn't a parent just... not give their kid a tablet?

Model

Of course. But that requires constant vigilance, constant saying no. These products say yes to something specific instead. The child gets autonomy without the trap door of notifications and algorithms.

Inventor

Is this trend actually changing how companies design for kids, or is it just marketing?

Model

Both, probably. But the fact that a dinosaur toothbrush outsells a gaming device tells you something real about what families actually need right now.

Inventor

What happens when these kids grow up? Do they end up wanting screens more, or less?

Model

That's the question nobody can answer yet. But at least for this summer, parents are choosing tools over toys. That's a choice worth noticing.

Quer a matéria completa? Leia o original em Pplware ↗
Fale Conosco FAQ