Home Industry Market Wireless recharger for Samsung Galaxy released
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Android mobile accessories specialist, Droidax, has launched its new EzyCharge device which recharges a Samsung Galaxy S III handset without using cables.

The wireless recharger – a four-in-one charging pad and receiver combo - allows users to wirelessly recharge their Samsung by placing it on the charging pad.

The EzyCharge receiver also acts as a protective case and contains a built-in 1200mAh battery pack, adding more battery life to the phone with minimal extra bulk.

And, with looks important to most mobile users, the slim-line EzyCharge protective case, with cutouts for handset ports, comes in either anti-scratch UV Pearl White or rubber-coated Deep Blue to match the colouring of the Samsung Galaxy S III smartphone.

The EzyCharge costs $79.95, and if you so desire, Droidax is also selling the EzyCharge Pad separately, for $59.95, so you can have charging pads to recharge your handset wirelessly at both work and home.

Droidax CEO, Raaj Menon, said the EzyCharge complies with the global QI wireless charging standard, “so increasingly you’ll be able to recharge your phone at places such as cafes that install QI-rated charging pads. What I really like is that EzyCharge has an LED to confirm it’s charging.”

Droidax expects to begin shipping EzyCharge within the next two weeks.

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Peter Dinham

 

Peter Dinham is a co-founder of iTWire and a 35-year veteran journalist and corporate communications consultant. He has worked as a journalist in all forms of media – newspapers/magazines, radio, television, press agency and now, online – including with the Canberra Times, The Examiner (Tasmania), the ABC and AAP-Reuters. As a freelance journalist he also had articles published in Australian and overseas magazines. He worked in the corporate communications/public relations sector, in-house with an airline, and as a senior executive in Australia of the world’s largest communications consultancy, Burson-Marsteller. He also ran his own communications consultancy and was a co-founder in Australia of the global photographic agency, the Image Bank (now Getty Images).

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