This portable Wi-Fi hotspot is my new favorite travel companion
Briefly

This portable Wi-Fi hotspot is my new favorite travel companion
"In the United States, many workers still don't clock in to a brick and mortar office space. In fact, nearly 35% of employees now do some or all of their work at home. I am in that group, and as someone who travels the country for work, I'm often reminded that some places are not as developed as others, especially from a cellular connectivity perspective. Small towns across the country are trying to remedy this problem, and it's working, but it's going to take time."
"The issue with phone-based internet hot spots is that they actually pull from the cellular service in the area. If you've ever been to an area where you don't have a great signal and found that your iPhone's hot spot was about as useless as a one-dollar coin, you've experienced the downside to this before. The reason for this is that your phone will only pull data from towers that the cellular provider allows it to, like AT&T or T-Mobile."
Nearly 35% of U.S. employees perform some or all work from home, increasing reliance on mobile internet while traveling. Rural and small-town cellular infrastructure remains uneven, creating dead zones where carrier-dependent phone hotspots fail. Phone hotspots pull data only from a single provider's permitted towers, so weak local carrier coverage yields unreliable tethering. The Travlfi JourneyGo offers a portable alternative by scanning and connecting to multiple nearby cell towers, providing broader signal options. The device features a 16-hour battery, a built-in powerbank for charging devices, and supports up to 10 connected devices simultaneously, improving connectivity for on-the-go work.
Read at Pocket-lint
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