I was underwhelmed by the updates. Not the latest chips. A TouchBar that feels more gimmick than innovation. Simple stated, I’m disillusioned with the status quo thought that Apple makes the best devices for geeky work.
After investigating the Surface Book, which is an amazing feeling device from demoing in store, I ended up going with Dell’s new 13-inch XPS 13 2-in-1 device. The keyboard folds completely back to go into tablet mode, Intel i7 7th generation chips, good price, with Thunderbolt 3 support on the USB C ports.
I’m reserving final judgement, but so far, it isn’t as elegant as what Apple once was (the new MacBook Pro’s doggle-city puts this in the past tense). I purchased a power companion which acts as a power adapter, battery back-up, and USB charging device in one. As advertised, it is great for plugging into the laptop while it is in the bag from one place to the next, charging on the go.
I haven’t had a chance to put it through a real-world scenerio, but it was painful once I realized how it all fit together.
First, in comes inย five parts. 1, 2, 3 are the power companion components, which requires a power adapter as it does not include any way to plug into the wall.
- Item 1 plugs into the computer and into the battery pack.
- Item 2 is the battery pack itself, includes 2 USB ports for charging phones, etc.
- Item 3 is the Dell propritary power connector to USB C adapter.
- Item 4 is the USB 3 power adapter that shipped with the laptop.
- Item 5 is the North American power cord for the adapter.
To make this device functional on the road, I need to haveย all five items in my bag.
I’m trying to be optimistic and remind myself that my first days on OS X felt strange as I figured out the operating system and the various must-have apps and utilities.
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