Home Office Power Brokers on the Open Road
Uncategorized July 8th, 2008Are you a power broker? You have your laptop and broadband wireless card that provide access to the connected world. You may even have a back-up laptop battery in case your first does during the middle of a major project or especially thoughtful missive.
But what about the power that empowers you? Whether you’re in an RV or a hotel room, the stuff we use — our laptops, portable printers, iPods and cell phones — invariably require more power than some measly little two-plug wall outlet will provide.
I’m using a variety of tools that bring power to peak performance. My Targus Travel Power Outlets with Surge Protection ($19.99) turns one outlet into four, and includes a reset button should a power surge knock it out. What’s really cool is spacing between outlets and the butt-end outlet ensure my oversized power bricks won’t block one another from finding a home. Plus, it’s small (5.5 inches with an 8-inch cable) and light enough (5.6 oz) to fit in your laptop back. Also pretty cool, its plug fits into one of its outlets — making for a tidy, secure device. It even has its own Velcro cable tie (and we all know how I feel about Velcro).
Another simple power tool is my Ikea power strip. The Koppla five-inch, three-plug power strip (two per pack) is wicked in its austerity – and el cheapo in its $3.99 price tag.
No big find, you say? My home office is starved for convenient power. With PCs, accessories and the like, the outlets never seem to be enough – and they’re never where you need them. The same is true in an RV. Sure, I have an APCC eight-plug electrical and cable/DSL surge suppressor on my desktop, and another six-plug suppressor underneath.
But convenient power’s key. Even when I travel, that measly plug in the desklamp is woefully insufficient. So something like MonsterPower’s three- or six-plug Outlets To Go travel power strips ($14.95 and $29.95, respectively) are light, compact and convenient. Widely spaced outlets promise room for space-hogging transformers for camera, phones and other accessories. Be sure to look for cord management solutions so accessories in your laptop bag won’t become a tangled mess.
This way, whether you’re at home or in an RV somewhere along I-26, you’ll have ample convenient power.
Just dawned on me as hurricane season approaches (and predictions for blackouts elsewhere due to energy shortages) that the laptop does you no good without the wireless card in a power failure– and that with analog TV going away those battery operated black and white rabbit’s ear TVs from Walgreens won’t be of much use either. The key will be iPhones and batteries and the former founder of Sharper Imagine is betting a million of his $30 million stock buyout windfall on the power of power. For he who powers the mobile revolution, truly will: http://fragerfactor.blogspot.com/2008/06/richard-solo.html
Stock up. And have a GREAT trip.