
I've been using this 3-in-1 wireless charger for 2 weeks — and it's a must-have for travel
No matter how great the battery life is on a smartphone, smartwatch or pair of earbuds, they'll all bite the dust and need some juice eventually — and I usually turn to wireless chargers to get the job done.
It's a convenient, cordless way to give your devices a battery boost, and if it means having a cleaner desk setup without a mess of cables scattered around a surface, I'm all for it.
Nope, it's not as fast as plugging in a wire and seeing battery percentage go from 0% to 100% in 30 minutes or less, even with upgraded 25W MagSafe and the Qi2 standard offering 15W speeds. But it sure it a stylish, clutter-free way to charge your devices on a desk or nightstand.
But what about when you're traveling? Of course, there are some very power-packed power banks out there that also include MagSafe (I have an Anker one myself), but there are only so many devices they can charge simultaneously, and there are only so many USB cables I want to see tangled in my bag.
A minor nuisance, to say the least, but I've found a solution: the Satechi OntheGo Charger. Coming in both a 2-in-1 and 3-in-1 design, these wireless chargers aren't just made for organized traveling for your tech, but they also make for suitable chargers at home or in an office. Why? Well, they're just so damn flexible and compact.
These aren't trailblazers in what they do; you'll find many of the best wireless chargers can power up your iPhone, Apple Watch and AirPods at the same time. But Satechi's OntheGo is far more travel-friendly, and because of that, it's the one charger I've been bringing everywhere over the past two weeks.
Satechi's OntheGo 3-in-1 Charger lets you wirelessly refuel your phone, smartwatch and earbuds in a foldable, travel-friendly design. Supporting Qi2 charging, it offers 15W speeds for phones and a 5W charge for wearables and earbuds. Right now, there's a $10 discount!
Don't need the extra charging pad? The Satechi OntheGo 2-in-1 Charger delivers an even more compact design to charge your phone and smartwatch, and it comes with the same scratch-resistant material with vegan leather accents. It's more affordable and, right now, also comes with a price cut.
If you enjoy a wireless setup even when you're traveling for work, to events or abroad on vacation, the Satechi OnetheGo wireless charger can be a great companion — and there are a few reasons why.
Many wireless or MagSafe chargers come with three pads to charge different devices, but one thing you'll notice is that they're all quite solid and sturdy. They're made to be this way as permanent fixtures on your desk or nightstand, so they aren't exactly portable.
Satechi takes that concept and loosens things up with its OntheGo chargers. Keeping the same 3-in-1 (or 2-in-1) simultaneous charging capabilities but allowing the pads to fold up like a tech sandwich, the wireless chargers become compact enough to easily slip into a laptop bag or even a pocket.
Coming in at 9.5 x 2.6 x 0.4 inches and weighing 5.1 ounces for the 3-in-1 charger, it's incredibly lightweight to carry around. Plus, it doesn't take up too much space when storing it away. I never had to worry about the vegan leather straps flopping about either, as the pads are magnetically attached when folded on top of one another.
This kind of flexibility also leads to other use cases. Of course, I could completely lay it out to charge an iPhone 16, Apple Watch Series 10 and AirPods Pro 2, but it can also be used as a stand to watch shows on the phone while it charges, all while the Apple Watch puck juices up the smartwatch right behind it.
That especially comes in handy when I'm traveling on a train or plane with a fold-down table I can lay my devices on. It's similar to a MagSafe power bank with a stand, but I get to charge both of my devices wirelessly. Yes, there's still a cable attached to power the OntheGo wireless charger (included in the box, no less)
Speaking of, you can also plug it into a power bank to charge while you're set up somewhere without an outlet.
This isn't to say there aren't other travel-friendly wireless chargers out there, as the Twelve South Butterfly 2-in-1 MagSafe Charger is one of the smallest around, but the OntheGo also offers a splash of style. To me, it almost looks like a tech-savvy macaroon when all folded up, and the charger comes in various colorways: Black, an off-white Sand and pinkish Desert Rose.
Depending on your desk setup or style, these can really add to the color scheme you're keen on. I was able to get my hands on the 2-in-1 and 3-in-1 OntheGos in Black and Sand, and while the black option compliments my devices, I'm a big fan of how the lighter option looks.
While it's aimed to be used for travel, Satechi's OnetheGo chargers also make for fitting tabletop accessories. Whether that be on your office desk, nightstand or anywhere you prefer to charge your devices.
I'm all about a clean desk setup while working (and relaxing) at home, one without cables coming out of every port on all the devices that are stuffed on my desk (a laptop, monitor, tablet stand, headphones holder, controllers — you get the gist). So, having a place to wirelessly charge three of my generally on-person devices aids in the bliss of an organized desk space.
Always having a place to put my phone, smartwatch and earbuds on charge just by placing them on the pads is a boon for my day to day, and being able to pick it up and slip it into my bag before heading out is an extra bonus.
Look, chargers are simple accessories. If they can give your devices the battery boost they need, then they're doing their job right. But if you're looking for the added convenience of a wireless charger in a lovely, compact design to easily take along with you on all your journeys, then it's hard to go wrong with the Satechi OntheGo Charger.
For me, the 3-in-1 OntheGo wireless charger has benefited my travels to work and events, and it also makes for a nice addition to my desk. At $99/£99, it's not exactly cheap, but it's still more affordable than other chargers on the market (even the Twelve South Butterfly 2-in-1 is $129 / £129).
If you don't need the extra pad and prefer to save a little, the OntheGo 2-in-1 for $79/£79 is also an excellent option.

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Tom's Guide
21 hours ago
- Tom's Guide
This RTX 5090 Corsair gaming PC has redefined gaming for me - here's why
I've spent the last two weeks testing the new Corsair Vengeance i8300 ($7,399) gaming PC, and the experience has redefined how I approach playing games. Corsair sells Vengeance gaming PCs in a variety of configurations and prices, but the company sent us its most expensive model for review — and you can feel the luxury you're paying for in how reliably every game I tested on this machine booted up quickly and ran like a dream, with almost zero noticeable fan noise from the case. The case itself is so heavy, however, that I didn't trust any of my desks with it and instead kept it on the floor next to my 4K TV. But since it makes so little noise the Vengeance i8300 actually turns out to be a great gaming PC for the living room, and it's opened my eyes to a new dream: 4K PC gaming on the big screen, from the comfort of my couch. If you can handle the weight and you're willing to pay the eye-watering price, I think the Corsair Vengeance i8300 is easily one of the best gaming PCs I've ever tested. Here's why. Corsair Vengeance i8300 (2025) Price $7,399 CPU Intel Core Ultra 9 285K GPU Nvidia GeForce RTX 5090 RAM 64GB DDR5 Storage 2TB SSD + 4TB SSD Ports (front) 4x USB 3.0 Type-A, 1x USB 3.1 Type-C, headphone/mic jack Ports (rear) 4x USB 2.0 Type-A, 2x USB 5Gbps Type-A, 1x USB 10Gbps Type-A, 1x USB-C 10Gbps Size 25.6 x 24.3 x 13.8 inches Weight ~32 pounds I've really enjoyed my time gaming on the Corsair Vengeance i8300, and there are a few key strengths I want to highlight so you know what you're buying. As I mentioned earlier, I decided to leave our Corsair Vengeance i8300 review unit on the floor next to my LG C2 OLED TV for the majority of the review period because I just didn't trust my flimsy sit/stand desk with this 30-pound beast. But that was only part of the reason I kept the Vengeance in the living room — the rest of it was that I wanted to see how the best PC games look running at max settings on a 65-inch 4K OLED display, and I had a hunch this $7,400 gaming PC could handle it. Sure enough, I was blown away by the experience of PC gaming on the couch with the power of an RTX 5090, a top-tier Intel Core Ultra 9 CPU and 64GB of RAM at my beck and call. Games like Alan Wake 2, Cyberpunk 2077, Star Wars Outlaws and Red Dead Redemption 2 ran beautifully, though I had to enable Nvidia's DLSS tech where possible to iron out occasional stutters that caused the framerate to dip below 60 FPS. The results from our testing lab back up my anecdotal experience, as the Corsair Vengeance i8300 performed better in our tests than any gaming PC I've reviewed to date. Alienware Area 51 Corsair Vengeance i8300 Corsair Vengeance a7500 Assassin's Creed Shadows (Ultra High) 76 64 40 Black Myth Wukong (Cinematic) 59 60 32 Cyberpunk 2077 56.7 57.5 29.2 Red Dead Redemption 2 (Ultra) 84.6 64.4 36.6 To show you what I mean, I've charted some key gaming benchmarks above against a cheaper Corsair Vengeance a7500 (AMD Ryzen 7 9800X3D, Nvidia GeForce RTX 5070 Ti, 32GB RAM, ~$3,399) and our current pick for best premium gaming PC, the Alienware Area 51 (Intel Core Ultra 9 285K, Nvidia GeForce RTX 5090, 64GB of RAM, $5,699). As you can see, the Corsair Vengeance delivers nearly flawless 60+ FPS performance in some of the latest and most demanding PC games. This is raw performance too, without any upscaling tech like Nvidia DLSS or AMD FSR enabled. When I enabled DLSS on games like Cyberpunk, I was able to enjoy full path-traced lighting and incredible visual effects while framerates hovered consistently in the 70-90 FPS range. But you can also see that despite our Corsair Vengeance i8300 review unit costing thousands of dollars more than our Alienware Area 51 review unit, the Alienware PC actually delivers better performance in some games. And where the Corsair does outperform the Alienware, it's only by a matter of a few extra frames per second, which makes the nearly $2k price difference between the two hard to swallow. However, the Corsair performed better than the competition across the board in our general performance tests. Alienware Area 51 Corsair Vengeance i8300 Corsair Vengeance a7500 Geekbench 6 single-core 3148 3303 40 Geekbench 6 multi-core 21786 23328 32 SSD speed test 1898.2 2480.5 2659.9 Video editing test (mm:ss) 1:53 1:47 3:02 As you can see from the chart of results above, the Corsair Vengeance i8300 outperformed the competition in both the single-core and multi-core Geekbench 6 CPU benchmarking tests, despite the fact that the Alienware Aurora has the same Intel Core Ultra 9 285K CPU. The Vengeance i8300 also burned through our custom video editing test (which times how long the PC takes to transcode a 4K video down to 1080p using Handbrake) faster than the rest, though the far cheaper Corsair Vengeance a7500 actually had a faster SSD than the more expensive i8300 I'm reviewing here. So whether you're gaming, editing video or doing other computationally-intensive tasks, you can count on the Corsair Vengeance i8300 delivering best-in-class performance. However, our testing reveals that you aren't actually getting much better gaming performance than our current pick for best premium gaming PC, the cheaper Alienware Area 51. Since I was PC gaming in the living room without headphones it was key that the PC not make too much noise, so I was paying close attention to how loud the Corsair Vengeance i8300 got during intense gaming sessions. After two weeks of testing I'm pleased to report that even after hours of playing Cyberpunk 2077 or Doom with all settings cranked to max, the PC's fans never made more than a low hum. So while there definitely is some fan noise, especially when sustaining peak performance, it's quiet enough that you barely notice the sound from 8 feet away. While I don't expect you would need to upgrade this machine for years to come, I appreciate that our Corsair Vengeance i8300 review unit has an easy-to-access case that's roomy and well-organized inside. To get in you just have to pull the see-through glass panel on one side of the Corsair iCUE 5000T RGB case open, no screwdriver required. You can also pretty easily remove the mesh covering on the top and rear of the case, again with no tools required. Inside the case everything is neatly organized and cables are routed using Corsair's hidden cable channel, which keeps the case clean but does mean you'll have to fiddle with all this stuff if and when you decide to start replacing and upgrading components. RGB LED light strips are practically de rigueur for gaming PCs these days, and while I loved them in the '90s these days I've grown tired of seeing my PC and peripherals lit up like cheap glowsticks. But when I started playing around with the iCue software to control and customizing the 200+ RGB LEDs on the case of our Corsair Vengeance i8300 review unit, I was genuinely impressed. The RGB lighting on this machine stands out to me for two reasons: it has a more eye-catching LED strip layout than most PCs, and the customizable lighting patterns are more beautiful than anything I've seen on other PCs. Obviously none of this matters as much as how capable, quiet and easy-to-access this PC is, but I wanted to also shout out the lighting because I love how the 5000T RGB case looks when the LED strips at bottom and top are running a smooth, shifting pattern. It sort of reminds me of how the engine rooms were lit up in Star Trek, and every time I look over at it I'm happy I have the lighting on — and it's been decades since I felt that way about a PC case. As much as I love our Corsair Vengeance i8300 review unit, I have to admit I have a quibble with (and one serious warning about) this premium 4K gaming PC. Let's get the quibble out of the way first: this beast is hefty and hard to move. Partly that's because it weighs over 30 pounds, and partly it's because the case is roughly two feet tall. The thing is heavy enough that I was scared to leave it on my Uplift V2 standing desk, because even though I'm pretty sure the desk could handle the burden, it wobbled in a concerning fashion every time I raised or lowered it with the Corsair onboard. That said, once you get it set up you probably won't be moving it around as much as I did during the review process. So this is less a serious concern and more a warning: be ready to move a big, hefty box when this thing shows up. Luckily, I will say that the process of unboxing the Corsair Vengeance i8300 was relatively straightforward, thanks to the company's streamlined bag-it-and-box-it approach. The most painful part of buying a Corsair Vengeance i8300 is its eye-watering price tag, so you expect to get best-in-class performance in return for spending over $7,000 on a PC. And for the most part, you get it. As you can see from our test results, our Corsair Vengeance i8300 outperforms almost every other PC I've ever tested, including recently-released gaming PCs that cost thousands of dollars. But as you also saw, the Alienware Area 51 costs almost $2,000 less than the Corsair Vengeance i8300 yet delivers equal or better performance in many games. And where it does fall behind the Corsair, it's only by a handful of frames, which probably isn't worth the premium you're paying for the Vengeance over the Area 51. Now, FPS isn't the only thing that matters when buying a gaming PC. Despite its heft, the Corsair Vengeance i8300 is actually significantly lighter than the Alienware PC and comes with 3x the storage space (6TB vs. 2TB). So there are other benefits you're getting for that sky-high price. But for most of us framerates and graphical performance are the #1 reason to invest in a gaming PC, and our testing reveals you can often get equal or better performance in those areas from the Area 51 for much less cash. If you've read this far you can probably understand why I think our Corsair Vengeance i8300 review unit is one of the best gaming PCs of 2025, and one of the best ways to play PC games period. I'll be sorry to ship it home after this review goes live, but it really has sparked a quiet revelation in how I think about gaming in the living room. I've owned an Xbox Series X since launch and use it as my main gaming machine since it's quiet, quick to boot and runs games decently on my 4K TV. I know PCs are more capable gaming machines, but I've been leery to build a living room gaming PC because they can be so loud and unsightly. The Corsair Vengeance i8300 is the exception that's given me pause, because despite its size it looks great lit up next to my TV and it runs games far better than my Xbox while remaining whisper-quiet the whole time. Obviously I can't afford a $7,000 gaming PC on a journalist's salary, but I'm seriously considering buying one of these Corsair iCue 500T RBG cases and building a cheaper gaming PC of my own inside. So while I still think you get a better deal out of the Alienware Area 51 and would recommend it over the Corsair for those on a budget (not just a tight budget but any budget), I have to report that the Vengeance i8300 is the best gaming PC I've tested this year.


Gizmodo
a day ago
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Renowned for their reliability and value, Anker's power banks consistently deliver better performance, smarter features, and greater durability than most alternatives on the market. The current deal on Amazon for the Anker 10,000mAh 30W Power Bank is a perfect example of why so many users trust this brand for their charging needs. Not only does this model offer an unbeatable price but it also strikes the ideal balance between affordability and high-powered performance. Right now, this power bank is available for just $16 which is a 38% discount off the original list price of $25. This is the exact same price seen during last Black Friday. See at Amazon Good Capacity, 30W Fast Charging Tech With its compact size and powerful 10,000mAh capacity, this Anker power bank is meant for traveling and it will fit to anyone that needs power while out of the house. The 5.4 inch built-in USB-C cable is also made to last, and it is guaranteed to last for over 10,000 bends. This power bank snuggly fits into a pocket or bag, and wherever you go is where it goes, which makes it a true travel essential. What makes this Anker portable charger unique and certainly awesome is its 30W fast charging technology: It can recharge your device at the double the speed of the traditional 5V/3A charger. For example, my iPhone 16 Pro Max can get to 50 percent in only 27 minutes with this power bank and a USB-C to Lightning cable, whereas with a typical power bank it would be a little over an hour. This charging capability is especially useful when you are in a time crunch and need some top-up juice before you leave or starting your busy day. It can charge various devices including, iPhone 15 or 16 generations, MacBook, iPad, Galaxy smartphones, Google Pixel and even gaming devices like the Nintendo Switch and Steam Deck, etc. It is a good multi-purpose power bank for basically… anyone. Knowing that it has an 18-month warranty and that the customer service is on your side gives you more than peace of mind it also means that you have a cushion if something uncommon happens and you have to worry about what to do. They built a quality and durably thoughtful product such as the built-in wire that can be used as a handle, which makes this power bank fun to use every day. Don't miss out on the Amazon deal to put this product in your pocket. See at Amazon

Engadget
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PlayStation's DualSense Edge wireless controller drops to a record-low price
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