Energizer Keeps Phones Going and Going

energizer.pngThe Energizer Inductive Charger keeps your phone going, and going, and going, just like that rabbit!

A wireless induction pad, the charger works with all Qi-enabled devices. Not quite a square, the charge plate measures about 7-inches by 8-inches, and is less than a half an inch thick. With two large inductive charging areas on the pad and one USB charging port, the cord-free station can power three devices at once.

You can place the phone anywhere on the circles that mark charging area. There are no magnets or hidden docks, or rules about where exactly the phone needs to be within the circle. Put it down and you are set.

The Qi-enabled sleeve for the iPhone 3G/3GS and batery door for the BlackBerry Curve 8900 are also available separately.

Pricing and availability information has not been disclosed.

Mobee’s inductive Magic Charger for Apple’s Magic Mouse really is magical

If you look deep enough into the halls of IFA, if you can see through the 3D television murk and tablet hype, you might be lucky enough to find a few gems. Like the Mobee Magic Charger for Apple’s Magic Mouse making its worldwide debut today. So, what’s the “magic?” Well, if you own a wireless Apple Magic Mouse then your biggest complaint is without a doubt battery life. That means you’re either purchasing (and tossing) alkaline after alkaline or you’re constantly swapping in a fresh pair of rechargeables to keep the juice flowing. The Mobee Magic Charger does away with that nonsense with its inductive charging mini-USB base station and battery pack that slots into Apple’s mouse — no special sleeve or bulky appendage required unlike many after-market inductive charging solutions. Oh, and the 1.30oz / 37g battery pack — developed in-house by Switzerland-based Mobee — is actually lighter than a pair of AAs thereby reducing the overall weight of the mouse.

Regarding specs, we’re told that a Mobee charged Magic Mouse will last for 6 days under constant use. After that, it requires 6 hours to reach a full charge. Otherwise, the idea here is to park the mouse on its dock when not in use. While the company has considered an inductive charging mouse pad, they opted against it so that people can mouse on the surface of their choice and to keep the whole package portable and inconspicuous. The Magic Charger itself matches the materials, look, and feel of Apple’s Magic Mouse perfectly. Oh, and the blue charging light you see above will be green once the product ships worldwide in mid-October for €49.90 (with tax) / $49.90 (before tax). At that price, it offers a 6-8 month break-even for the typical Magic Mouse user relying on disposable batteries. Honestly, the Mobee Magic Charger is an idea so good that it makes you wonder, why didn’t Apple think of that?

Expect to see a “few more” Mobee products launch for Apple products before the end of the year and into 2011. While Mobee wouldn’t tell us exactly what products are coming, it did admit to looking at Apple’s new Track Pad, the iPhone 4 (we expect to see a case), and wireless keyboard. We look forward to it.

Mobee’s inductive Magic Charger for Apple’s Magic Mouse really is magical originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 03 Sep 2010 05:19:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Pikachu Wants to Charge Your Nintendo DSi

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This is Pikachu. He is a Pokemon. Perhaps you have seen and/or caught one at some point in the past. If Pikachu is one thing (besides, you know, adorable), it’s helpful. In fact, Pikachu wants to help you thiiiiiiiis much. If you have a Nintendo DSi, Pikachu will use his electric-type Pokemon powers to help charge it up for you.

For 3,981 yen (around $50), you can pick up arguably the most adorable Nintendo DSi charger of all time (mine’s a lame little plug–it does fold up though, which is handy, if not especially cute). The DSi or DSi XL slips into the Pokeball and Pikachu starts to work his magic.

It’s just one step closer to what we all want most in this world–a Jigglypuff alarm clock iPod dock.

San Francisco Bay Area gets $5 million for EV chargers, Detroit will charge $40 per month

Electric vehicles are inching closer, with several already priced and rearing to go, but so far would-be owners won’t have to pay for the devices to charge their cars. Free charging stations are popping up at every red dot on this map, and apparently not satisfied with the 1,600 that Coulomb’s installing in California and the three at City Hall, San Francisco and neighboring cities have just approved $5 million for over 5,000 more chargers — of which only 50 will appear along public highways, for some reason. Meanwhile, the state of Michigan has approved the first standardized rate for EV charger use — a pilot program by provider DTE Energy will see 2,500 customers paying $40 per vehicle per month (or a variable off-peak rate) through December 2012. Gotta wonder how those grey states are feeling right about now.

San Francisco Bay Area gets $5 million for EV chargers, Detroit will charge $40 per month originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 12 Aug 2010 02:04:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Scosche Announces reVIVE II Dual USB Chargers Available Now

Scosche - Dual ChargersIf you have more devices that charge over USB than you know what to do with or have outlets near your desk to support, Scosche’s new reVIVE II Dual USB Chargers can help. The company unveiled two models, the reVIVE II Dual USB Home Charger and Car Charger, both of which can support two devices at once, even if one of them is a power hungry device like an iPad and the other is slightly less so like an iPod or a mobile phone.

The home charger plugs into a standard wall outlet, and the car charger plugs into the 12v DC adapter in most vehicles. Both the home and car models are available now at Scosche’s Web site. The home charger retails for $29.99 and the car charger for $24.99. 

Battery Boost Has Power to Spare

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These days, you’d better have a battery charger somewhere close at hand because mobile devices have a way of running down before the day is through. To help you out, Technocel has released the Sprint Battery Boost, a portable solution and SD card reader in one. Use it for your phone, Bluetooth headset, or just about any micro-USB device.

The Battery Boost can give your phone up to 1 hour of additional talk time. While there are many compact chargers on the market, this one’s micro SD card reader sets it apart. Use it to store and transfer files when you’re away from your computer. Its built-in carabineer clip lets you secure it to any bag, and the battery status indicator light shows you how much juice you have left. Pick it up now for $29.95 at any Sprint Store.

Apple ordered to make public iPod nano battery fix in Japan

We had an eerie feeling it’d come to this, and come it has. Nearly two full years to the day after the government of Japan began a thorough investigation into the spontaneous combusting of iPod nano devices, that same entity is now mandating that Apple publish an “easy to understand” statement on the web that explains how customers can “receive replacement batteries and obtain advice.” So far, these volatile Li-ion cells have been blamed for four cases of minor burns in the Land of the Rising Sun, and while Apple has been replacing first-generation iPod nano batteries since 2008 for those that complained, it seems that Japan wants the company to make the option readily apparent to consumers. Be sure to keep an eye on Apple’s Japanese site for more, but as of now, we’re not seeing any such PSA posted.

Apple ordered to make public iPod nano battery fix in Japan originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 06 Aug 2010 08:51:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Hacker reveals how Apple artificially restricts iPhone chargers (video)

Most cell phone manufacturers have charging standards these days, even if they can’t always agree on which version of USB to use, but as the hair-tearing message above shows, third-party renditions of Apple’s proprietary dock connector haven’t always been universal solutions for iPods and iPhones. Now we know another important reason why — secret resistors placed on the data lines in connectors for each iDevice. Minty Boost creator ladyada recently reverse-engineered the chargers for a variety of Apple gadgets, and discovered that iPhones in particular don’t draw electricity until they detect 2.8V and 2V signals when they attempt to charge. At that voltage, the handsets suck down about one amp, leading to a rapid filling of your device’s Li-ion belly, but by adding additional resistance to drop the voltage further, the iPhone can be coerced into accepting 500mA instead — perfect for the set of AAA batteries you stashed away in that Altoids tin. Video after the break, full explanation at our source link.

Continue reading Hacker reveals how Apple artificially restricts iPhone chargers (video)

Hacker reveals how Apple artificially restricts iPhone chargers (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 04 Aug 2010 21:50:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Europeans Realize Dream of a Single Charger for All Cellphones

Cellphone battery dead? No problem: Just borrow a charger from a friend. Oh, wait — you can’t, because your friend doesn’t have the same phone as you, and his charger won’t work with your phone.

That annoyance will end next year, for Europeans at least. Thanks to the efforts of the European Commission, most cellphones sold in Europe will have a one-size-fits-all charger starting in 2011. So far, 10 major cellphone makers, including Apple, Motorola, Samsung and Research In Motion, have signed on to the agreement.

Americans will have to wait. Without a government agency setting a deadline, it’s up to handset makers to make the switch to a single standard. All consumers can do is let their old chargers gather dust in a drawer, while hoping manufacturers will eventually converge on a standardized charger.

“For the FCC, this is probably number 5,000 on their list and it is legislative priority number 10,000 at this point,” says Joe Banos, chief operating officer for Wilson Electronics, which makes cellphone boosters and antennas. “We believe the U.S. will ultimately follow Europe here, but the question is when.”

Today each cellphone ships with its own charger. Different companies use different connectors — and often different models from the same company do too, making it difficult for users to borrow a charger. And when it’s time to toss the phone, the charger also goes into the bin.

A universal charger means consumers don’t have to get a new charger with every mobile phone. As a bonus, it’ll be easier to borrow a charger when in need.

And if all that isn’t enough, there’s the green aspect. One-size-fits-all means fewer chargers will wind up in the landfill, less electronic waste, and fewer resources consumed in manufacturing chargers.

In 2009, the European Commission said it reached a voluntary agreement with handset manufacturers to use the micro-USB connector for the charger. Starting in 2011, all phone models sold in Europe would then have compatible chargers. Now, that agreement is taking effect.

Changing the rules in the U.S.

Smartphone makers in the United States are moving toward something similar, but more slowly. Motorola and Samsung have said they will offer a standard charger here but haven’t committed to a deadline. It’s a complex game where each handset maker is optimizing for itself, but collectively those decisions might help realize the goal of having a universal charger, probably centered on micro-USB.

“For the most part it is already happening here with smartphones,” says Michael Gartenberg, an analyst at the Altimeter Group. “An HTC Evo charger will charge a Nexus One or Incredible, as long as it has a micro-USB connector.”

The major holdouts in the U.S. are Apple and Research In Motion. Apple uses a proprietary 30-pin connector for its iPhone, while many BlackBerry chargers and devices are engineered so they will work only when paired together, says Wilson’s Banos.

But even among companies that use micro-USB, it’s still not a standard.

“There’s the flat, wide mini-USB connector; the short, squat micro-USB; and different versions in between,” says Allen Nogee, an analyst at In-Stat research. “They are all still using different versions of the USB connector.”

But if you can get a connector to fit into the phone, it doesn’t matter which model it is for or which company made it, because all USB-based chargers deliver the same voltage, say experts.

The push to change the situation in the U.S. could come from accessories makers for smartphones, says Nogee. Today, when you buy a new battery pack or car charging kit, it comes with a little bag stuffed with connectors so users can pick the right ones for their phones.

“It is much more expensive for these companies to support different phones and connectors,” says Nogee. “But the problem is that so far, accessories makers haven’t had enough say in the phone manufacturing process.”

Ultimately, economics will force handset makers in the U.S. to change, say industry experts. As companies move to a universal charger in Europe, they will bring the same connectors to U.S. models.

It’s not clear how Apple will make the change, but it is certain that if the company moves to a micro USB-based connector for its new iPhone model in Europe, U.S. customers can expect the same.

“It makes so much sense that I believe the U.S. will follow,” says Banos. “It would be insane not to.”

See Also:

Photo: Jon Snyder/Wired.com


Evatran’s Plugless Power gives your wheels a wireless proximity-based charge

Trading gas nozzles for electric sockets may be the green thing to do — in more ways than one — but wouldn’t plug-in hybrids and electric vehicles be that much sweeter if you could just forget about the plug? That’s what Evatran is trying to do with its Plugless Power technology, shown off at Plug-In 2010 in San Jose, which charges your car automatically when you pull up to the company’s specially-designed curb. The “station block” above is a wireless induction charger (yes, a car-sized Powermat) that beams electricity to a shoebox-sized device you mount to the undercarriage of your vehicle, magnetically detecting and gravitating towards said shoebox even if you park somewhat crooked. The system presently works with 80 percent efficiency when firing electrons across a two-inch gap (engineers are shooting for 90 percent by the time it hits production) but of course the base station itself doesn’t get power from the ether — it requires one of the company’s own Level 2 wired chargers (and compatible wiring) to run. Should your residence or place of business be equipped, the 240 volt towers will set you back $3,245 this December, and the proximity charger will be available to early adopters in Q2 2011 (we’re hearing April) for the bargain price of $800.

Evatran’s Plugless Power gives your wheels a wireless proximity-based charge originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 28 Jul 2010 22:10:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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