![]() ![]() The price is a lot more reasonable this time around. I had no trouble getting a solid charging connection with a relatively thick case on an iPhone XS Max, too. The stand supports 7.5W charging on iPhones, and for Android phones up to 10W, so you get the fastest charging available. It’s comfortable and easy, but it doesn’t exactly look good on your desk. A couple of small LED charging indicator lights are gone, and the finish is matte instead of glossy, but that weird retro-future circular pod design is the same as it ever was. Unfortunately, the design is nearly identical. Instead of a proprietary power adapter that ends in a barrel plug, it uses a standard USB power adapter with micro-USB cable-more modern chargers use the less fiddly reversible USB-C.Īside from the micro-USB, that’s a great shift-there’s no real need for devices like this to give us yet another cable and plug we can’t use with any of our other gear. With this new Boost Charge wireless charging stand, Belkin has made a couple of welcome tweaks. ![]() Belkin’s Boost Up wireless charging stand always worked well, but we weren’t really fans of its high price and proprietary AC adaptor. ![]()
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