Kensington iPhone and iPod battery/charger

Kensington iPhone and iPod battery/charger

Predicament. Away travelling for a couple of weeks without on-site power. Need to have internet access to keep a daily monitor on web servers and urgent business contacts. The iPhone, for me, has been a God send in this respect. I can surreptitiously keep a tab on things without having to carry around a laptop all the time. But, an iPhone needs power (and lots of it, going by the poor battery life so many complain of). Sure, you can disable push and turn the screen brightness down, but you’d still be lucky to get a couple of day’s use out of one full charge. So, back to my predicament, how to deal with powering the mobile device for extended periods away from a power source?

I shudder at the price of chargers for mobile technology. I started looking into car chargers and was shocked to see prices for decent brands at around the £15 mark. There’s no way I’d spend that much, particularly given that it would likely only see use over 3-4 weeks a year, whilst away on holiday etc. Whilst baulking at prices, I happened upon an all-in-one charger and battery pack from Kensington. Nothing special in itself, but a very neat concept. Essentially, it’s a small external battery pack that’s charged from the mains or a car adaptor and then later used to charge an iPhone whenever it runs low. It’s like a portable mains socket; plug your phone in and leave to charge. Kensington claim it ‘extends music playback by up to 100 hours and talk by up to 6 hours’. Now, I’m not convinced that this is realistic but, for checking emails and brief bouts of surfing the web, I’m confident it should provide at least a few extra hours of life.

On-the-go

Personally, I could charge it in the car and then use it to charge my iPhone over days of no mains availability. Also, if I did happen upon a power socket I’m able to use, I’d be happy to leave the battery pack charging and return for it later—something I’d never do with my iPhone itself!

It’s expensive (around £30) and I’ve yet to test it. But, if it works well, the investment will be worthwhile as I will have an on-the-go power source and no need for any other charging devices. I’ve heard some reviews claiming poor power output, but then I’m convinced that some people either (a) leave their iPhone/iPod plugged into it for far too long, thus draining to much juice (b) use their device on full brightness to play games and watch videos, the two things that drain power the fastest.

I just hope it’s as good as the concept suggests…

Twitter Digg Delicious Stumbleupon Technorati Facebook

Comments are closed.