Showing posts with label Travel Charger. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Travel Charger. Show all posts

26.11.14

Get More Battery Life on the Go

photo credit: faveable.com
Nothing makes a heart skip a beat like a red-flat battery icon: "How will I finish off that text, email, presentation, photo or ebook?" The tricks below will let you power your devices and gadgets while travelling without adding much bulk to your baggage – but the best way to avoid a battery emergency may also be to practice power-saving habits.

Charge on the go

Portable battery chargers are little boxes, smaller than a deck of cards, that can give you hours of extra phone, iPad, Kindle, camera or gaming juice while on the go; some are even solar powered. Pop one of these in your bag or pocket on a night out in your own town as a handy backup. For iPhone users, slim phone cases are available that hold hidden battery packs to double your usage time, so you don't even have to think about recharging.

Keep a wall charger in your bag to refuel your device at common chains such as Starbucks, which often offer power points and free wi-fi.

A lighter choice

Most Kindles and other ebook readers have a battery life of a month – much more convenient than the iPad's daily charging demands. So if you just only care about reading books (and not watching videos or surfing the net), ask yourself if you really need that iPad or if a cheaper, lighter and more efficient ebook reader will be a better fit.

Now may also be the time to dust off an old backup phone. Remember when phones without touchscreens lasted for days without having to recharge? If you have one lying around, take it with you on holiday so you can stay in touch without battery stress.

Perhaps the most battery-efficient device may be the one that boots instantly and has a paper-thin display: the printed book. Using a travel guidebook, map or notebook (the pen and paper kind) can be more stress-free than relying on an internet connection, Google Maps or a keyboard.

How to save your phone or gaming device's battery

Most modern phones and gaming devices such as the Sony Playstation Vita devour their battery life on the two things that make them wonderful – the monitor-like displays and the internet connection. We wouldn’t expect any phone junkie to cut these features out completely, but dialling it back can help you get through a whole day without a battery icon freak-out. Some other good tips for lightening the load on your battery:


  • Turning the screen to its dimmest setting saves a lot of energy, as does not using your phone to read the time – use a watch, not the battery-hungry phone display. 
  • Turn off GPS and wi-fi when you’re not using either of these draining features. Data use is even more power-hungry, so in the phone’s settings, select the option not to sync automatically in the background – that way you'll only use power to check for emails or run internet apps when you manually choose to do so. If you turn off data use altogether (crazy, we know) you’ll notice that your battery life will double. An app like Advanced Task Killer (Android; play.google.com) can turn off sneaky background apps to prevent them from sapping your power. 
  • Turn off 3G in areas where you can’t get a signal (like underground), otherwise the phone will constantly seek a signal, which will exhaust your battery. 
  • Phone calls use more power than texts, so communicate by SMS if possible.


How to save your camera's battery

Any task that involves the LCD screen will chew through your battery, so don’t spend too long looking through the photos you've taken if you can wait until you get home.

Similarly, if your camera has an optical viewfinder, use this and turn off the LCD screen – or at least turn down its brightness, since a dimmer screen uses less power. Turn on the camera screen’s sleep settings so that the display dims quickly after inactivity.

Use a memory card reader to download photos to your computer, making your computer do all the work, rather than burdening your camera’s battery.

How to save your notebook or iPad's power

Just as a hot day will make any traveller drag their feet slowly through the heat, the cold helps electronic devices run more efficiently, preventing battery-hungry features (such as fans in laptops) from kicking in. So try to keep laptops cool with airflow beneath them, and keep phones out of the sun. Also, don’t make your device work harder than it needs to: go easy on watching video and turn off background applications that aren’t essential – you'll often find items that you don’t even realise are running, such as Desktop Search, iTunes or Skype.

On an iPad, also turn off sync, push notifications, location services and data if you don’t need them.

Pack a spare

With the exception of iPhones, iPods and iPads, most cameras, laptops and phones allow you to swap the battery yourself in seconds, so buy a spare battery of the same make and keep it charged up and ready to go.


-XoXo
post credit: http://bit.ly/1xFCsy0

30.10.14

Travel Smart With The Best Tech Gear for Traveling


Traveling can be the best thing that could ever happen to you. Not only can you learn new experiences but you also get to get the thrill of seeing the world with your very own eyes. With that being said, here are smart ways that can help you make your traveling escapade worth the jet-lag!

Laptop bag or backpack:
You’ll need something to carry all your gadgetalia. Checkpoint-friendly bags let you zoom through airport security without having to remove your laptop--just open the bag, place it on the conveyor belt, and let the TSA’s X-ray machines do the rest. Be a fan of light, easy-to-carry backpacks. 

Laptop:
Weight and size are typically a traveler’s most pressing concerns. A solid netbook addresses both issues, giving you all the computer you need without hurting your back. Compact components also mean that the machine has less room for parts to wiggle around, which means there’s less to break while you’re trekking around the world.

Ethernet cable:
Many hotels have ethernet jacks that allow you to bypass all of the potential flakiness of so many wireless connections. Many airports (hint, hint: JFK) don’t advertise that they too have their fair share of jacks hiding around certain terminals, opening up the possibility of free Internet via wire. A handy little retractable ethernet cable could be just what you need. 

Power Bank:
Need to use a backup battery during the day? Have to recharge your phone when it’s out of juice? A portable battery can charge up to five USB devices at one time, even when you have no access to a plug.

USB drive:
Keep all of your important digital documents and files in a separate USB drive (16GB should cover you) in case your laptop's hard drive dies on the road. You should encrypt passport scans, client documents, and the like to protect yourself even further. On USB drives you can also carry around portable operating systems, which give you a safe virtual environment in many Internet cafés.

Microfiber cloth:
The world is a dusty place; unless you regularly clean your devices, they’ll accumulate grime quickly, increasing the chance that a rogue dust particle will ruin your best gadgets. A proper microfiber cloth and cleaning solution (less than 3 ounces, of course) are the only things you should use to wipe down your sensitive screens.

All-in-one plug adapter:
Rather than wasting your time looking up outlet types or taking the risk of forgetting an outlet adapter altogether, throw one of these in your bag and leave it there. It will cover you for plugging in just about anywhere in the world.

USB light:
A lightweight, LED light illuminates your e-reader or laptop--it's a useful accessory, since you’ll never know what kind of lighting conditions you’ll encounter.

USB travel charger adapter:
Chances are, your laptop doesn’t have more than a few USB ports. These adapters let you plug in your USB-charged devices directly into a wall socket. Another benefit: faster charge times.

Individual power adapters:
Why do you need these if you already have an all-in-one adapter? Because sometimes you’ll need to plug in more than one device. Also, many wall sockets aren’t completely firm, and individual adapters are usually light enough to prevent your charger from continually falling out of the outlet.

Unlocked mobile phone:
Though unlocking a phone will typically break your manufacturer’s warranty, a locked phone means you’ll pay for roaming charges internationally. An unlocked phone allows you to swap out any old SIM card around the world, saving you considerable money for talking and browsing the Web anywhere.

Extra SD Card for your camera:
SD Cards, like all other storage devices, have a limited life span, and like many electronic devices they tend to go bad at the worst possible time. An extra, emergency card will set you back about $10 to $20, but it could save you the nightmare of missing wonderful opportunities to catch, say, a sunset in Fiji. 


 -XoXo