live > featureTraveling With Your GadgetsBy Michelle V. Rafter Craig Cohen flies to China and Europe a half dozen times a year in his job as a vice president at a Portland, Ore., boot manufacturer. His secret to a successful trip: a little satchel that never, ever leaves his computer bag. Inside the satchel are power cords, adapters and flash drives -- everything Cohen needs to keep his Dell laptop and Blackberry 8800 charged and going while he’s on the road. Whether work takes you around the globe like Cohen or just across town, chances are, you haul around more electronic gadgets than road warriors of yesterday. Between laptops, cell phones, Bluetooth earpieces, digital cameras, iPods and the like, it’s a lot to keep organized, charged up and safe from being lost or stolen. Managing all those gadgets can be overwhelming, but it doesn’t have to be. Besides keeping all his supplies in one place, Cohen saves himself time and trouble by leaving headphones and external CD or DVD drives back at the office. “They’re added weight and space in my pack,” he says. In addition to ditching nonessentials, here are some other suggestions for keeping mobile gadgets juiced, close by and safe: Charged In the car, use an “octopus” charger with one end that plugs into the power adapter and multiple adapters for recharging hand-held devices. One example: Callpod’s Chargepod, a star-shaped charger with six ports, that the company claims works with more than 1,000 mobile devices. The charger costs $40. Individual adapters are $10 to $30 each and ordered à la carte, so you only buy the ones you need. Purchase a spare cell phone battery and keep it charged and in your car, briefcase or purse at all times. That way, if your phone battery dies, you can pop in the spare, says Lerner. Need your laptop for a long flight? You could carry a spare battery. Or compromise and get one high-voltage laptop battery, which lasts six hours or more, Lerner suggests. “The extra weight is worth it,” he says. Organized Another Lerner tip: Don’t stick thumb drives in your wallet. The drives are great for swapping files between computers or taking work files on the road, but they’re easy to lose or damage. Instead, use a thumb-drive wallet. Computer media storage companies, such as Case Logic and USB, sell wallets that hold two to six thumb drives and cost $3 to $6. Safe Thanks to Apple’s iPhone and its smartphone rivals, more people use their phones like mini computers -- a handy but dangerous practice if you don’t back up the data. “My friend lost a Treo and she lost all of her data,” Lerner says. “She had nothing backed up.” He suggests using software such as DataPilot’s Universal PRO, which retails for about $80, to sync information between a smartphone and a computer. According to Cohen, the Portland executive, the most important thing to remember when keeping gadgets organized is simplicity. “I’m not about the latest and greatest unless it truly adds value to my work,” he says. Michelle V. Rafter is a journalist based in Portland, Ore. She has spent more than 20 years writing about business and technology for magazines, newspapers, wire services and Web sites.
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