[Editorial]
Going On Vacation? Don't Forget Your Battery Charger
Mark David
ED Online ID #16151
August 2, 2007
Copyright © 2006 Penton Media, Inc., All rights reserved. Printing of this document is for personal use only.
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I just returned from a two-week family vacation driving through Italy and Greece,
exploring the roots of Western civilization. While I was on the road, I realized
how power-addicted we Westerners have become, as each night's rest stop included
a ritual of lithium-ion (Li-ion) charge-ups. I remembered to buy a 220- to 110-V
converter before leaving on the trip. But I didn't realize that there was going
to be a nightly "charging queue" with five of us in the family, each with an
average of two personal electronic devices.
We developed a regular rotation for
iPod and PDA top-ups, which sometimes included waking up in the middle of the night to change out devices.
In retrospect, I should have brought a
multi-outlet power strip and/or my
power inverter to plug into the rental
Renault's lighter to keep charging
while driving!
The digital camera had first-charge priority each night, since photos were
the one true trip essential. I bought a new camera before the trip, the Samsung
NV7, picking it because I wanted a small camera with good zoom (7X optical and
5X digital) and high resolution (7.2 Mpixels). The camera has a bevy of sophisticated
digital features I'm still figuring out, from advanced shake reduction to GIF
animation.
POWER FOR PICTURES
The NV7 was fantastic, and its 2Gbyte SD card let me shoot close to 1200 images
at 5 Mpixels— more than enough for the two-week trip. Battery life, though,
was another story. Running out of juice in the middle of the Roman Forum on
day two, I realized I would need to charge the camera every night. The 3.7-V
Li-ion battery has a nice form factor—that is, until you place it side
by side with the 2-Gbyte SD memory card and consider their relative size and
functionality.
Needing to recharge a camera nightly isn't really acceptable
performance. What if I were taking a Bob Pease-like trek across
the backcountry of Nepal? I guess I'd have to outfit my backpack
with a solar panel.
Battery life continues to be the weak link in most portable design. We seem
to be in a race to add digital features at a rate surpassing Moore's Law, as
new generations of consumer products debut every six months. In the meantime,
battery developments move forward at a much slower rate. A New York Times
"Greentech" article notes that Li-ion batteries have gained capacity at
a rate of 8% to 10% a year, doubling their energy storage over the last decade.
It seems the market is ripe for some quantum leaps in portable power and and
energy generation. This issue's Industry Techview story ("Nanowires
Get Bent Out Of Shape For New Technology") looks at nano-piezotronic
transistors that offer the possibility of harvesting energy from pressure changes,
whether they come from walking, airflow, or even thermal noise. Why can't we
power a gaming device or a PDA via energy harvested from all that button-pushing?
POWER DESIGN
The importance of power design is one of the reasons we were so excited about
the expansion of our group of publications via our merger with Prism Business
Media earlier this year. Our new sister publications include Power Electronics
Technology (as well as its trade show), RF Design, Auto Electronics,
and Defense Electronics.
As part of the integration and expansion of Penton's Electronic Design Group, I have been named the group editorial director
and will be focusing on ways to expand and improve our information products. Joe Desposito, formerly editor in chief of EEPN, is
the new editor in chief of Electronic Design.
Prior to seven years at EEPN, Joe was a technology editor at
Electronic Design, where he covered test & measurement, communications, and consumer electronics, reporting on industry
firsts in all of these areas. Before Electronic Design, he was editor of Weka Publishing's Modern Electronics Manual and Electronics Repair Manual. And, he served as one of the original
engineers on the staff at PC Magazine's PC Labs.
We also will be expanding the product and components coverage in Electronic Design with an expanded section edited by Mat
Dirjish, who also joins the staff from EEPN. These changes will
help ensure that you will continue to get the quality, focused editorial you need to do your job right.
You'll still be hearing from me as I'll continue to write occasional columns
for Electronic Design as well as for our sister magazines. You can also
look for my new blog at www.electronicdesign.com.
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