The EPA-registered screen protector is designed to kill 99.9% of bacteria from the surface of your phone. Managing Editor Alison DeNisco Rayome joined CNET in 2019, and is a member of the Home team.
Your iPhone is a hotbed of bacteria that sullies your face every time you take a call. But it doesn’t have to be that way, thanks to the world’s first antimicrobial screen protector from OtterBox.
OtterBox teamed up with Gorilla Glass maker Corning on developing a new EPA-registered antimicrobial technology, something that OtterBox CEO Jim Parke describes: "Amplify Glass now features ...
Our phone screens are among the dirtiest things we touch — and we touch them a lot. I mean, how often do you really clean your screen? Luckily the folks over at OtterBox understand this: at CES, the ...
At CES, OtterBox has announced the first glass iPhone screen protector with integrated antimicrobial technology registered with the EPA. The new Amplify Glass screen protector offers protection ...
Otterbox is known for making really durable iPhone cases that are designed to survive all kinds of calamities. Now Otterbox is taking the next logical step: screen protectors for the iPhone and iPad.
CES 2020 has seen tech announcement after tech announcement, including Otterbox’s new Amplify Glass anti-microbial screen protector, which kills 99.9% of the bacteria on your phone and guards your ...
With CES 2019 in full swing and Otterbox busy announcing a partnership with Popsockets, you wouldn’t expect any non-CES announcements to slip out. But Otterbox has been a very busy bee indeed, and ...
The ad is for an OtterBox Kids Bluelight Guard Glass, which is listed as being an antimicrobial screen specifically for the current iPad mini 5 — but, as pictured, will not fit that device. The screen ...
OtterBox is stepping up the benefits it offers with its screen protectors today. Going beyond the lifetime warranty of replacing broken iPhone screen protectors and cases, the company will now ...
Quick! What's the dirtiest thing you have on you right now. No, it's not that set of keys that you dropped in a puddle of slushy grime this morning (though you really should rinse those off), it's ...
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