Tuesday, Apr. 25, 2006
Forget getting away from it all. These 24/7 days, travelers stay plugged in at airports, hotel rooms and, alas, beaches. At least they're tethered to home and office with ever more stylish and functional digital designs. Aiming at the growing army of wired road warriors, even upscale travel-gear makers like Tumi are crafting trendy tech gear. For those who want a Web fix everywhere they go, here are some of the season's most useful travel tools.
Finding the Net Turndown service is nice, but wireless is even nicer. To supplement old-fashioned amenities, some hotels are trumpeting free high-speed Net access that lets you
log in without worrying about wiring. For a list of such hot spots, check wififreespot.com
Surf in Bed
No wi-fi? No problem. This portable Netgear Travel Router converts your hotel Web access into a wireless connection so you can manage work from anywhere in your room.
Plugging In
Tumi is known more for luggage than electronics, but its new travel kit features a handy electric adapter that works for laptops, cell phones and small appliances in 150 countries.
Screen Saver
The newest Mac laptop, the MacBook Pro, has a built-in camera for videoconferencing.
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For the less sure-handed, there's a motion sensor to protect your files if the machine gets bounced in transit. This sleek laptop is 2.5 cm thin and weighs about 2.5 kg.
Bagging It
Shaun Jackson Design's Higher Ground laptop bags are light, compact and cleverly configured to obviate the need for a desk. Several of the small company's cool cases are marketed toward students but serve business travelers equally well.
Retrieving some bytes
Leaving your shoes at home is one thing, but forgetting a critical file can ruin a business trip. Sites such as
GoToMyPC.com can save the day. GoToMyPC.com lets you operate a PC remotely from any Web browser. A new version lets you drag and drop files from home onto your laptop.
Tips for Travel
Don't get squeezed
To avoid sardine-like plane seats and bedbug-ridden hotels, check
seatguru.com,
hotelchatter.com,
tripadvisor.com
Listen In
The Lonely Planet has started offering free, informative Travelcasts,
or travel-related podcasts, at
lonelyplanet.com/podcasts/
Sports to Go
For those who mix business with pleasure, the ESPN sports media empire has recently launched a sports travel site:
sports.espn.go.com/travel/
- Jeremy Caplan
- Trendy tools for hi-tech travelers