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  2. Schools are spending millions to keep kids' phones locked up

    www.aol.com/news/schools-41-states-spent...

    Graham Dugoni, the CEO of Yondr, invented the pouches in 2014 when there was less anxiety about the amount of time kids spent on phones. “At the time, I was going around door-to-door.

  3. Yondr - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yondr

    Yondr's core product is the Yondr Pouch, a magnetic pouch in which a person's cell phone may remain in their possession but unusable within a designated phone-free area (such as a school, performance venue, meeting room, etc.).

  4. Cell Phone Pouches Promise to Improve Focus at School. Kids ...

    www.aol.com/cell-phone-pouches-promise-improve...

    A phone being stored in a Yondr pouch at the Brooklyn Museum in 2019 in New York City. Many schools have bought Yondr pouches in order to help students focus. Credit - Angela Weiss/AFP- Getty Images

  5. Brockton High to become a 'cell phone-free environment' with ...

    www.aol.com/brockton-high-become-cell-phone...

    Schools across the country have introduced these pouches to create cell phone free environments. Here an Akron, Ohio student unlocks his cell phone from the Yondr pouch at the end of the school day.

  6. Mobile phone accessories - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mobile_phone_accessories

    Leather cases; Cases with integrated kick stands; Battery cases; Cases with protection devices; Holsters are commonly used as third-party cases for devices, and/or are made of plastic and without exposed rigid corners. Heavy duty cases are designed to protect from drops and scratches. A standing (or kickstand) case keeps the device standing ...

  7. Protective equipment in gridiron football - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Protective_equipment_in...

    This gave teams an "unfair advantage" in the eyes of the NFL. The new rules let each team know who is wearing a headset and who is hearing the plays being called. In 2008 the NFL changed the rules to allow one player for the defense, usually a linebacker, but sometimes a defensive back, to wear a radio helmet with a green dot. [5]

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