logo
Amazon's Choice TP-Link Newest WiFi Travel Router Is Back Down to Its Lowest Price Just in Time for Summer

Amazon's Choice TP-Link Newest WiFi Travel Router Is Back Down to Its Lowest Price Just in Time for Summer

Gizmodo10 hours ago

Use of public Wi-Fi is always a risk. Joining a public network can expose your data to being intercepted by nefarious actors whether you're joining at an airport, a cafe, or a hotel. By using hotspot mode on the TP-Link Wi-Fi 6 AX3000 travel router, you can convert public Wi-Fi into a private, secure network. Any devices like your phone or laptop will be securely connected, reducing the risk for your data and privacy when in public spaces. Right now, the TP-Link Wi-Fi 6 travel router is discounted down by 20%. That brings the price from $100 to just $80, saving you a cool $20.
See at Amazon
Powerful & Secure Wi-Fi for Remote Work & Travel
Don't have Wi-Fi access? You can use USB tethering mode to use your smartphone's cellular data to convert it into a stable Wi-Fi network for all your devices. This is ideal for camping or RV trips as you can set up your laptop or even a smart TV to have internet access when on the road.
When at home, the TP-Link router can still be put to good use. It can be used as a Wi-Fi range extender to eliminate Wi-Fi dead zones on your home network throughout your house.
The TP-Link Wi-Fi 6 AX3000 travel router is supported as a VPN client or server. So you can keep your network private and secure from anywhere in the world. Supported VPN services include NordVPN, Surfshark, OpenVPN, WireGuard, and more. So any device you have accessing the internet while connected through the travel router will be going through the VPN should you choose to do so.
The speeds are fast too. The TP-Link travel router supports dual-band Wi-Fi 6 and can handle speeds of over 2,400 Mbps when using the 5 GHz band or up to 574 Mbps when using the 2.4 GHz band.
Traveling with the router is super easy as the thing can fit right in your pocket. It measures across at 3.5 inches by 4.1 inches and is just over an inch thick. It only weights about 5 ounces. You can connect to it over USB-C or USB-A 3.0 along with a 1 Gbps LAN port or 2.5 Gbps WAN/LAN port. It's also got a microSD slot to work as a mobile home media hub.
You can connect up to 80 devices at once. That means even with a phones and laptops for everyone in the house as well as smart TVs, Alexa-devices, gaming consoles, and even your doorbell, you'll never have any trouble having them all connected at once.
Say goodbye to sketchy public Wi-Fi because, for a limited time, you can get the TP-Link Wi-Fi 6 travel router for the reduced price of just $80.
See at Amazon

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Why this key chip technology is crucial to the AI race between the US and China
Why this key chip technology is crucial to the AI race between the US and China

CNN

time23 minutes ago

  • CNN

Why this key chip technology is crucial to the AI race between the US and China

In the largest single foreign investment in US history, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company has unveiled a $100 billion investment, drawing global attention and prompting concern in Taiwan. TSMC, which produces more than 90% of the world's advanced semiconductor chips that power everything from smartphones and artificial intelligence (AI) applications to weapons, will build two new advanced packaging facilities in Arizona, among others. Here's everything you need to know about advanced packaging technology, which has seen exponential demand growth along with the global AI frenzy, and what that means for the struggle between the US and China for AI dominance. While the two countries have announced a temporary truce that rolled back disruptive three-digit tariffs for 90 days, the relationship remains tense because of ongoing feuding over chip restrictions imposed by the US and other issues. Last month at Computex, an annual trade show in Taipei that has been thrust under the limelight because of the AI boom, the CEO of chipmaker Nvidia, Jensen Huang, told reporters that 'the importance of advanced packaging for AI is very high,' proclaiming that 'no one has pushed advanced packaging harder than me.' Packaging generally refers to one of the manufacturing processes of semiconductor chips, which means sealing a chip inside a protective casing and mounting it to the motherboard that goes into an electronic device. Advanced packaging, specifically, refers to techniques that allow more chips — such as graphic processing units (GPU), central processing units (CPU) or high bandwidth memory (HBM) — to be placed closer together, leading to better overall performance, faster transmission of data and lower energy consumption. Think of these chips as different departments within a company. The closer these departments are to each other, the easier it is, and less time it takes, for people to travel between them and exchange ideas, and the more efficient the operation becomes. 'You're trying to put the chips as close together as possible, and you're also putting in different solutions to make the connection between the chips very easy,' Dan Nystedt, vice president of Asia-based private investment firm TrioOrient, told CNN. In a way, advanced packaging keeps afloat Moore's Law, the idea that the number of transistors on microchips would double every two years, as breakthroughs in the chip fabrication process become increasingly costly and more difficult. While there are many types of advanced packaging technologies, CoWoS, short for Chips-on-Wafer-on-Substrate and invented by TSMC, is arguably the best known that was thrown under the limelight since the debut of OpenAI's ChatGPT, which sparked the AI frenzy. It has even become a household name in Taiwan, prompting Lisa Su, CEO of Advanced Micro Devices (AMD), to say that the island is the 'only place that you can say CoWoS and everybody would understand.' Advanced packaging has become a big deal in the tech world because it ensures AI applications, which require a lot of complex computing, run without delays or glitches. CoWoS is indispensable to producing AI processors, such as the GPUs produced by Nvidia and AMD that are used in AI servers or data centers. 'You could call it the Nvidia packaging process if you want to. Almost anyone making AI chips is using the CoWoS process,' said Nystedt. That is why demand for CoWoS technology has skyrocketed. As a result, TSMC is scrambling to ramp up production capacity. In a visit to Taiwan in January, Huang told reporters that the amount of advanced packaging capacity currently available was 'probably four times' what it was less than two years ago. 'The technology of packaging is very important to the future of computing,' he said. 'We now need to have very complicated advanced packaging to put many chips together into one giant chip.' If advanced fabrication is one piece of the puzzle in terms of chip manufacturing, advanced packaging is another. Analysts say having both pieces of that jigsaw in Arizona means the US will have a 'one-stop shop' for chip production and a strengthened position for its AI arsenal, benefitting Apple, Nvidia, AMD, Qualcomm and Broadcom, some of TSMC's top clients. 'It ensures that the US has a complete supply chain from advanced manufacturing to advanced packaging, which would benefit the US' competitiveness in AI chips,' Eric Chen, an analyst with market research firm Digitimes Research, told CNN. Because advanced packaging technologies key to AI are currently only produced in Taiwan, having it in Arizona also reduces potential supply chain risks. 'Instead of having all eggs in one basket, CoWoS would be in Taiwan and also the US, and that makes you feel more safe and secure,' said Nystedt. While CoWoS got its moment recently, the technology has actually existed for at least 15 years. It was the brainchild of a team of engineers led by Chiang Shang-yi, who served two stints at TSMC and retired from the company as its co-chief operating officer. Chiang first proposed developing the technology in 2009 in an attempt to fit more transistors into chips and solve bottlenecks in performance. But when it was developed, few companies took up the technology because of the high cost associated with it. 'I only had one customer … I really became a joke (in the company), and there was so much pressure on me,' he recalled in a 2022 oral history project recorded for the Computer History Museum in Mountain View, California. But the AI boom turned CoWoS around, making it one of the most popular technologies. 'The result was beyond our original expectation,' Chiang said. In the global semiconductor supply chain, companies that specialize in packaging and testing services are referred to as outsourced semiconductor assembly and test (OSAT) firms. In addition to TSMC, South Korea's Samsung and America's Intel, as well as OSAT firms including China's JCET Group, America's Amkor and Taiwan's ASE Group and SPIL are all key players in advanced packaging technologies.

United Airlines Turns Off Starlink Access Amid Interference Concerns
United Airlines Turns Off Starlink Access Amid Interference Concerns

Yahoo

time43 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

United Airlines Turns Off Starlink Access Amid Interference Concerns

PCMag editors select and review products independently. If you buy through affiliate links, we may earn commissions, which help support our testing. United Airlines' plans to retrofit its entire regional fleet with Starlink connectivity have hit a roadblock, at least temporarily. United first started rolling out Starlink access using a free-with-ads model in May, becoming one of a select club—including Hawaiian Airlines and the boutique air carrier JSX—to offer flyers access to SpaceX's satellite broadband service. Its speed and performance proved a hit with PCMag when it debuted, and United announced plans to install Starlink in its entire two-cabin regional fleet by the end of 2025. However, Starlink has been turned off on almost two dozen Embraer E175 regional jets, according to air industry publication The Points Guy. The issue stems from static interference between the antennas that pilots use to communicate with air traffic controllers and Starlink's antennas. United confirmed the reports in a statement, saying that this type of radio interference is 'fairly common with any new airline Wi-Fi provider' and that the issues are not a flight safety risk. 'We expect the service to be back up and running on these aircraft soon,' a spokesperson said. According to The Points Guy, roughly a third of the impacted planes have already had a fix applied. United doesn't expect to cancel any flights as a result of the issue and will instead wait until each aircraft's scheduled maintenance to fix the interference issue. Though Starlink may be off the table for many domestic fliers, at least in the short term, United has introduced new ways for travelers to distract themselves in recent weeks. The Chicago-based carrier announced earlier this week that it's bringing the streaming-audio service Spotify to the on-demand entertainment displays of over 680 of its aircraft, offering 'specially curated versions of Spotify's most popular playlists.' The new Spotify integration will replace the 'Audio' option on the home-screen menu of those displays.

Woman rips into 'stupid showers at hotels' and those responsible for designing them
Woman rips into 'stupid showers at hotels' and those responsible for designing them

Fox News

timean hour ago

  • Fox News

Woman rips into 'stupid showers at hotels' and those responsible for designing them

A thread on Reddit has gone viral as a woman is criticizing the designers, installers and others responsible for "the stupid showers at hotels," saying she cannot step into a shower today while traveling and not "be blasted by cold water that gets my head wet." Over 6,000 people reacted to the post to date and nearly 1,000 comments have come in, with commenters sharing their own frustrations about the hotel travel experience. "Who designs the stupid showers at hotels?" the woman wrote in her post on social media, addressing her note to "male hotel room designers." She wrote, "I'm a woman. I don't wash my hair every day. Please give me a way to turn on the shower without having to get in and be blasted by cold water that gets my head wet." She also said, "I miss shower curtains, and now we have glass walls that don't move." She closed her post with, "Signed, A Traveler with Loyalty Status." In an edit, she later added, "Wow, the number of times I have been called bleeping feminist (or worse) on this post is kinda s-----. I have no problem being a feminist, thank you." The woman then offered more context. "The start of this was a conversation I had with a male colleague who has opened eight hotels (under different flags), and he had never considered that not all people wash their hair every day," she wrote. "We also talked about rain showerheads," she wrote, "and [the] lack of other amenities geared toward women travelers." People who responded to the post shared their own ideas for improving the hotel room experience. "I want a door on my shower." "Please make sure there are hooks in the bathroom," wrote one person. For more Lifestyle articles, visit Wrote another person, "I want a shower that is fully enclosed so that I'm not cold and there isn't water all over the floor after the shower! I also want counter space to set [up] my toiletries! Is that so hard?" Said another commenter, "Expensive hotel doesn't mean great shower design." Another person wrote, "I want a door on my shower." She added, "In the long run, I am certain the money they saved [by] not putting a door on the shower is wasted in energy costs as I have to turn up the hot water during the shower." Said another person, "Do not make me climb into the shower to turn the water on. Have the faucet on the same side as entry so we can reach in."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store