Good idea, however the plugs seem a little close... How about this? (excuse my terrible cutting & pasting)
If you search eBay they have some for 240 outlets but I didn't see any 120 ones. Odd...
Gary
Good idea, however the plugs seem a little close... How about this? (excuse my terrible cutting & pasting)
Maybe I'm missing something, but I've got a solution that saves you $35 plug the iPad into the USB port on the laptop you're charging.
Don't the wall outlets provide more power than the regular USB ports on laptops? Not sure if that's true. If it is, your iDevice would charge faster on the wall outlet than the port in your laptop.
Nope. Unless you got an iPad and an old mac, but new Mac charges iPad at wall charger speed.
iPhone + iPod touch charges fine on most computers.
When did Apple start making computers that do this? I have a late 2008 Macbook and it might only charge my iPad 10% in an hour.
Nice design but I think they missed a trick here (being from the UK)... Why didn't they have the same interchangeable connector on the end of the PlugBug, so it worked fully internationally? Pull the UK plug off the end, attach the PlugBug and then attach the UK plug from the Apple charger onto the PlugBug... That would've been awesome.
As it is, I can only use the PlugBug if I'm travelling in the US... I love how they make this a 'feature'...![]()
Just for the record, this is HUGE since it's a surge suppressor too. But I love mine. I take it on trips (lots of brownouts in Costa Rica), but I don't keep it in my normal laptop bag.
And it's only $11.60 and qualifies for free super saver shipping. Get 3 for $34.80
And it gives me 2 additional outlets (the MacBook would take one) plus $25,000 of insurance on your products too. And the outlet swivels 360-ish degrees (270?).
But I just went to find mine (to give you the output amperage) and can't find it, so it's clearly not that huge. Someone's on-line review says "5V / 500mA at each port"...
Gary
I've often wondered why people pay extra for travel surge suppressors. The extra outlets are great, but the surge suppression is an unnecessary expense. The transformer in the cord does exactly what a surge suppressor would do so having another is excessive. The manufacturers seem to know this. If you compare the surge suppression in these things to others, you'll find that they are usually going with the least amount of components that would legally allow them to say that they have surge suppression.
Surge suppression was necessary for notebooks when you plugged the computer directly into the wall with no transformer in the middle (think Toshibas circa 1998) but not now when everything has a transformer in the middle. Oh, and try collecting on that $25K insurance policy (actually a connected-equipment warranty). There are lots of caveats in the fine print.
However, if it makes you feel better, by all means pay the extra $11.60. You do get 2 extra outlets and 2 USB charging ports, and that alone is certainly worth the money if you get stuck in airports regularly. ("Hey, mind if I plug this into that outlet you're using so we can share? Thanks!!")
Or...you can still be portable and 1/3 the price of this "BugPlug" with one of these:
http://www.amazon.com/Belkin-Mini-S...YMVO/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&qid=1320172209&sr=8-2
Image
However, if it makes you feel better, by all means pay the extra $11.60. You do get 2 extra outlets and 2 USB charging ports, and that alone is certainly worth the money if you get stuck in airports regularly. ("Hey, mind if I plug this into that outlet you're using so we can share? Thanks!!")
Maybe I'm missing something, but I've got a solution that saves you $35 plug the iPad into the USB port on the laptop you're charging.
Am I the only one who thinks $35 is a kind of high price for such a product? Wouldn't $20 be more reasonable?
This funky $35 USB charger would only be worth the $30 premium over Monoprice USB chargers it if was made in the US and putting my fellow Americans to work. Maybe I'm blind but I couldn't find a listing for the country of origin, which is something I'd like to see MacRumors pay more attention to in the future.What you're missing are: (1) you lose one USB port, (2) charging your iPad via your notebook's USB is *dead* slow, and (3) this device works as a standalone charger as well, so your $35 is worth it.
Your MacBook Air provides 1.1 Amps at the most, not 2.1 Amps.
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Would they make a uk plug version?