SAVE $50: Keep your electronics going with the portable Anker 747 power bank on sale for $99.99 at Amazon, down from $149.99. That's a discount of 33%.
The anxiety of electronics running out of battery is something none of us need to deal with in our daily lives. We not only rely on our phones and laptops for work tasks, but we also can't afford to miss the dopamine hit from the picture doggy daycare just sent over. Never run out of juice again with a quality power bank that can power all your tech for 33% off today.
As of Oct. 18, grab the Anker 747 power bank for $99.99. That's a savings of $50 off the list price of $149.99 (which is the true base retail price at Anker's store), or a discount of 33%. The power bank has two USB-C and two USB-A connections and is compatible with devices like the iPhone 13, MacBook Pro, Dell XPS, Samsung S21, iPad Pro, and many more.
The power bank comes in a bundle with a 65W wall charger that Anker says recharges the power bank in 2.5 hours, compared to over 17 hours it would take with a regular 5W charger. The power bank itself has room to charge up to four devices at once and comes with one USB-C to USB-C cable and a travel pouch.
Anker says the 747 power bank can charge a MacBook Pro 13.4-inch laptop in 2 hours and 14 minutes, while a Dell XPS 13 9380 takes 2 hours and 54 minutes to recharge. If you're charging your iPhone 13 Pro, the Anker 747 Power Bank can re-juice your phone five times on one charge thanks to its 25,600mAh capacity. You can also charge lower-power devices like headphones and Bluetooth speakers with the power bank's trickle-charging mode.
Melt away the stress of a low-battery warning with the Anker 747 power bank and power up through the holidays.
文章
4
浏览
93
获赞
93247
Mia Farrow's Twitter account is joyfully bizarre
Stream of consciousness writing made for great 20th century fiction, and now it's coming for 21st ceAmazon, Google, Microsoft and more have pulled out of CES 2022
Back in April, the Consumer Technology Association (CTA), the association that puts on the ConsumerCreator of the Twitter account @ElonJet gets take
Elon Musk slipped into the DMs of the creator of the Twitter bot @ElonJet last month.That was the stStop what you're doing and check your Ticketmaster account
Live music is better when it's free.A $400 million, class-action lawsuit against Ticketmaster,SchlesGoFundMe bans anti
GoFundMe is cracking down on anti-vaxxers.The popular fundraising website says it will no longer allHave a home office? You need these accessories.
Essentials Week spotlights unexpected items that make our daily lives just a little bit better.My moApple's contactless payments system is coming later in 2022
The rumors were true: Apple is launching a system that lets businesses process contactless paymentsTwitter is working on an edit button
Twitter is finally giving in.The social media giant announced Tuesday that, yes, it's actually for rTim Cook calls out 'senseless killing' of George Floyd in WWDC opening remarks
Tim Cook took the stage this morning at Apple's Steve Jobs Theater in Cupertino, California to talkRepublicans are shaking their heads at Trump, but won't withdraw support
Presumptive Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump is saying whatever he wants, regardless ofHillary Clinton's Blackberry meme led to initial questions about her email
State Department open records staffers under Hillary Clinton reportedly didn't have a clue that theFacebook's 'News Feed' is now just 'Feed.' Reactions are mixed.
Facebook's feeding the meme beast. The company that keeps trying to make Meta happen announced TuesdThe new specialty Reese's cups are perfect for the nuanced Reese's palate
The only good news is candy news, so it's wonderful that two new Reese's cups will hit shelves soon.TV writers worry online backlash could have a negative effect on LGBTQ character representation
AUSTIN, Texas -- The figures don't lie: Television has been burying its gay characters at startlingTwitter's new 'private' media policy takes down tweets from true crime author
Maura Murray seemingly vanished from the face of the earth after a car accident on February 9, 2004.