Sujet : Re: Suggestions for suitable screen sharing when in hotels
De : aero.spike (at) *nospam* mail.com (Spike)
Groupes : uk.telecom.mobile misc.phone.mobile.iphone comp.mobile.ipadDate : 14. Apr 2024, 22:28:53
Autres entêtes
Message-ID : <l8304lFkil4U1@mid.individual.net>
References : 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
User-Agent : NewsTap/5.5 (iPhone/iPod Touch)
Alan Browne <
bitbucket@blackhole.com> wrote:
On 2024-04-13 20:37, Ant wrote:
In misc.phone.mobile.iphone Alan Browne <bitbucket@blackhole.com> wrote:
...
About 175g - 200g or so. Given the functionality, that's quite light.
Of course re-charging will be an issue - so add a small solar panel to
your burden if out for more than 2 days.
Can those portable solar panels recharge iPhones fast though? I read that they don't.
I read that when hiking I won't find hot and cold running water and nice
clean porcelain toilets along the trail either.
When hiking one would not normally deplete the iPhone battery on a daily
basis. Or even close. If one is doing so, maybe they should re-think
their hiking goals.
Hiking panels (20 - 30W) run 600 - 700g. It's in that zone of "I'll
bring it if I _have_ to, not want to." Depending on rest time, you'd
probably be able to keep the battery up.
There are higher power portable panels - of course (shocking revelation
ahead) they are heavier and bulkier.
All that said, I've never brought a solar panel hiking - this summer
camping trip (drive in) I may acquire 100 or 200W of solar capacity - TBD.
Soldiers backpacks on D-Day could weigh 70 to 100lbs…and that was before
they were soaked in sea-water.
Some paratroops equipment weighed 150lbs, if they were also carrying
base-plates, tubes, or ammunition for mortars, and they had to be shoved up
the ladder into their C-47s.
-- Spike