Every day, we check our phones an average of 47 times—every 19 minutes of our waking lives—and spend roughly five hours total peering at their silvery glow. There's no good consensus about what all this screen time means for children's brains, adolescents' moods or the future of our democratic institutions. But many of us are seized these days with a feeling that it's not good. A small tech startup run out of a one-car garage just a few blocks from California's Venice Beach, Boundless Mind, wants to disrupt America's addiction to technology. On the morning our reporter visited in March, it was populated by a dozen screens—phones, tablets, monitors—and half as many 20-something engineers, all of whom were male and bearded, and one of whom wore a cowboy hat. Someone had written in blue marker across the top of a whiteboard in all caps: "You're building amazing sh-t." But that, more or less, is where the #SiliconValley stereotypes end. Ramsay Brown, 29, and T. Dalton Combs, 32, the co-founders of Boundless Mind, are hardly the college dropouts of tech lore; they're trained neuroscientists. And unlike most tech entrepreneurs, they are not trying to build the next big thing that will go viral. In fact, Boundless Mind's mission is almost the opposite. "It used to be that pathogens and cars were killing us," Brown says. "Now it's cheeseburgers and social media. It's our habits and addictions." Read the full story in this week's magazine and on TIME.com. Photograph by Scott Witter (@witterphoto) for TIME

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TIME Magazineのインスタグラム(time) - 4月14日 00時32分


Every day, we check our phones an average of 47 times—every 19 minutes of our waking lives—and spend roughly five hours total peering at their silvery glow. There's no good consensus about what all this screen time means for children's brains, adolescents' moods or the future of our democratic institutions. But many of us are seized these days with a feeling that it's not good. A small tech startup run out of a one-car garage just a few blocks from California's Venice Beach, Boundless Mind, wants to disrupt America's addiction to technology. On the morning our reporter visited in March, it was populated by a dozen screens—phones, tablets, monitors—and half as many 20-something engineers, all of whom were male and bearded, and one of whom wore a cowboy hat. Someone had written in blue marker across the top of a whiteboard in all caps: "You're building amazing sh-t." But that, more or less, is where the #SiliconValley stereotypes end. Ramsay Brown, 29, and T. Dalton Combs, 32, the co-founders of Boundless Mind, are hardly the college dropouts of tech lore; they're trained neuroscientists. And unlike most tech entrepreneurs, they are not trying to build the next big thing that will go viral. In fact, Boundless Mind's mission is almost the opposite. "It used to be that pathogens and cars were killing us," Brown says. "Now it's cheeseburgers and social media. It's our habits and addictions." Read the full story in this week's magazine and on TIME.com. Photograph by Scott Witter (@witterphoto) for TIME


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