HMD’s $28 ANC Earbuds Cost The Same As A Movie Ticket, Which Is Ridiculous

Twenty-five euros buys you a decent lunch in most European cities, maybe two movie tickets if you’re lucky, or apparently a pair of true wireless earbuds with active noise cancellation from a company that’s been manufacturing consumer electronics for years. HMD just launched the DUB X50 Pro in India at ₹2,000, which converts to roughly $28.7 USD depending on exchange rates, and the spec sheet reads like someone accidentally typed an extra zero into the pricing database. We are talking ANC, a claimed 60 hours of total battery life, multipoint connectivity, IPX4 water resistance, and a companion app, all at a price point where most brands would be cutting Bluetooth codecs and shipping you mono earbuds in a cardboard sleeve. On paper, this thing looks like a midrange product that woke up in a bargain bin.

The budget TWS space has been heating up for a while, with brands like Baseus and SoundPEATS dragging ANC down into the 20 to 30 dollar range. But HMD is not a random logo slapped on an ODM shell; this is the same outfit that rebuilt Nokia’s phone business and is now pushing its own HMD branded phones and wearables. That context matters, because a known manufacturer shipping €25 ANC earbuds through proper retail channels hits very differently from a mystery brand on a marketplace listing. If these are even moderately competent, they start to reset expectations for what entry level audio should look like. The question becomes less “how are these so cheap” and more “what exactly are the expensive guys charging for”.

Designer: HMD

Specs first, feelings later. HMD claims up to 60 hours of total playback with the case, which likely breaks down to around 9 or 10 hours per charge in the buds and roughly five recharges from the case under ideal conditions. With ANC on and real world volume, you are probably looking at closer to 6 or 7 hours per session and maybe 40 to 45 hours total, which is still excellent at this price. Bluetooth 5.3, multipoint pairing, low latency mode, in ear detection, and voice assistant support round out the feature list. The case is about 51 x 65 x 25 mm and 60 g, so pocketable without feeling like a pebble cosplay of AirPods. IPX4 water resistance covers sweat and rain, not swimming.

ANC is where the fantasy usually cracks – cheap implementations either barely touch low frequency rumble or they attack everything so hard you get hiss and pressure fatigue. HMD talks about ANC plus AI powered four mic ENC for calls, which is the standard 2026 marketing cocktail. Execution is what matters. If this lands in the same effectiveness band as the Baseus BP1 Pro, which genuinely cuts down bus and office noise for around the same money, then HMD has done something very disruptive. If it behaves like the usual budget ANC that flickers every time the wind shifts, you end up with an impressive spec sheet and a feature you toggle off after a day.

The design story is predictably unexciting… but that’s not a bad thing. Stemmed in ear buds, rounded case, muted colors like blue and silver. This is classic HMD: hardware that tries to disappear into your life instead of screaming “new toy”. That fits their broader strategy. They are building an ecosystem now, with HMD phones, DUB earbuds across three series, and new Watch X1 and Watch P1 wearables. Picture a bundle in a Middle Eastern or Indian retail store where you walk out with phone, watch, and ANC earbuds for less than a single pair of AirPods Pro. That is the competitive pressure this kind of product creates.

Whether you should care comes down to your tolerance for compromise. At €25, no one sane expects Sony level soundstage or Bose level cancellation. What matters is whether HMD clears the “good enough to live with” bar: stable connection, non-annoying ANC, tuning that does not turn everything into a muddy mess, and hardware that survives daily abuse. Given their track record with sturdy, sensible phones, I would not bet against them hitting that baseline. If they do, the DUB X50 Pro becomes less of a curiosity and more of a line in the sand for what budget ANC has to look like from here on.

The post HMD’s $28 ANC Earbuds Cost The Same As A Movie Ticket, Which Is Ridiculous first appeared on Yanko Design.

Vagabond Haven’s Evergreen Trades Wheels for Space in Modular Tiny House Debut

Vagabond Haven has stepped away from wheels with the Evergreen, their first modular tiny house that prioritizes space over portability. The Swedish company, known for its mobile tiny homes built for Scandinavian conditions, designed this two-module dwelling for those who want the tiny house lifestyle without the constraints of road-legal dimensions. The Evergreen represents a deliberate shift in the tiny house market, acknowledging that not everyone needs mobility but still wants the benefits of compact, efficient living.

The difference is immediately apparent in the measurements. While the Evergreen’s length sits at a modest 8.3 meters, the width stretches to 6 meters, more than double what you’d find in a towable tiny house. This generous footprint translates to 41 square meters of living space, making it the largest offering in Vagabond Haven’s modular category. The two seamlessly connected modules create an interior that feels surprisingly conventional rather than cramped, offering room to breathe and move without the spatial compromises typical of road-restricted designs.

Designer: Vagabond Haven

The layout takes full advantage of this extra room with a single-floor design that avoids the loft bedrooms common in mobile tiny houses. The living area features an L-shaped sofa arrangement with space for both a coffee table and entertainment center. The kitchen doesn’t skimp on storage, offering more cabinetry than you’d typically find in compact homes of this size. Two bedrooms occupy separate zones of the house. The master bedroom accommodates a double bed with integrated storage, while the smaller second bedroom fits a single bed with a lifting frame, desk, armchair, and bookcase. This makes the Evergreen practical for couples, small families, or anyone needing dedicated office space alongside sleeping quarters.

Vagabond Haven carried over the same craftsmanship and attention to sustainability that defines their mobile homes. The technical specifications include LED lighting with dimmers, options for solar systems, and a rainwater harvesting setup. Ventilation runs through the living room, kitchen, and bathroom, with a recuperator system managing air quality. Buyers can choose between electric or gas water heaters, and the plumbing uses stainless steel pipes throughout. These features ensure the home performs well in various climates while maintaining eco-friendly credentials.

The company offers full customization of furniture colors and flooring, letting owners personalize the aesthetic to match their preferences. The home arrives via truck and sits on a concrete platform rather than a trailer foundation. For those curious about the space before committing, Vagabond Haven provides a virtual 3D tour on their website. Ready-built models are available with delivery times ranging from two to four weeks when units are in stock.

The Evergreen splits the difference between mobile tiny houses and traditional construction, offering factory-built quality and relatively quick installation without the permanent commitment of conventional building. Some buyers simply want efficient, well-designed small homes that maximize every square meter without the engineering compromises required for highway travel. The modular approach delivers exactly that, creating homes where space and comfort take priority over portability.

The post Vagabond Haven’s Evergreen Trades Wheels for Space in Modular Tiny House Debut first appeared on Yanko Design.

Aghsan Reimagines the Umbrella Stand as a Quiet Ritual After Rain

There is something quietly poetic about the moment you return indoors after the rain. Shoes pause at the threshold, umbrellas drip in silence, and the air briefly carries that unmistakable scent of wet earth. Yet in most homes and public spaces, this moment is interrupted by clutter. Umbrellas are stacked awkwardly in corners, water pools on the floor, and metal stands tip or rust over time. Aghsan enters this overlooked scene not simply as a solution but as a reimagining of the experience itself.

At its core, Aghsan is an umbrella stand. In spirit, it is an experience that transforms rainwater into something sensory, calm, and intentional. The name Aghsan, meaning branches, refers to the limbs of a tree reaching between earth and sky, a symbol tied to life, growth, and connection. This metaphor forms the foundation of the design, guiding both its form and its function.

Designer: Samir Hossam

Visually, Aghsan resembles an abstract cluster of intertwining branches rising upward with lightness and balance. Each element feels deliberate, avoiding visual chaos while still expressing movement and vitality. Umbrellas are held individually rather than compressed into a single container, allowing them to dry naturally and remain visually organized. The design recognizes that disorder often comes not from excess but from poor structure, and here that structure is inspired directly by nature.

What truly sets Aghsan apart is how it engages the senses. At the base of the stand lies a water-sensitive aromatic sponge. As rainwater drips from umbrellas, it is absorbed into this layer, triggering the release of a subtle, refreshing fragrance inspired by rainfall. The result is a soft, calming scent that fills the entryway, echoing the feeling of stepping outside just after a storm. Rain is no longer treated as an inconvenience but as part of the atmosphere of the space.

This sensory layer also plays a quiet functional role. Over time, the association between the scent and the presence of an umbrella becomes ingrained. The fragrance serves as a gentle reminder to take the umbrella when leaving, relying on memory rather than instruction. It is designed to work at a subconscious level, supporting everyday behavior without demanding attention.

Functionally,y Aghsan resolves many frustrations associated with traditional umbrella stands. A heavy metal base anchors the design, ensuring stability and preventing tipping, a common issue with lightweight stands. The open perforated structure encourages airflow, while the raised edge of the base keeps umbrellas securely in place even when the stand is partially full or slightly moved. Long umbrellas can be leaned comfortably while smaller ones find their place within the branching openings above, creating intuitive organization without visual clutter.

Material choices further support durability and ease of maintenance. Unlike many metal stands that rust or lose their finish over time, Aghsan is designed to age gracefully. The sponge layer is replaceable, allowing users to refresh the fragrance or change it entirely, adding a personal and almost ritual quality to the object.

By blending organic inspiration with simple technology, Aghsan challenges expectations of everyday household products. It suggests that even the most practical objects can carry emotional value. By turning rainwater into scent clutter into order and routine into experience, Aghsan elevates the umbrella stand from a background object to a thoughtful design presence that brings calm to the threshold of daily life.

The post Aghsan Reimagines the Umbrella Stand as a Quiet Ritual After Rain first appeared on Yanko Design.

Meta blocks links to ICE List, a Wiki that names agents

Meta has started blocking links to ICE List, a website that compiles information about incidents involving Immigrations and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and Border Patrol agents, and lists thousands of their employees' names. It seems that the latter detail is what caused Meta to take action in a move that was first reported by Wired

ICE List is a crowdsourced Wiki that describes itself as "an independently maintained public documentation project focused on immigration-enforcement activity" in the US. "Its purpose is to record, organize, and preserve verifiable information about enforcement actions, agents, facilities, vehicles, and related incidents that would otherwise remain fragmented, difficult to access, or undocumented," its website states.

Along with notable incidents, the website also lists the names of individual agents associated with ICE, CBP and other DHS agencies. According to Wired, the website's creators said much of that information had come from a "leak," though it appears to be based largely on public LinkedIn profiles. As Wired notes:

The site went viral earlier this month when it claimed to have uploaded a leaked list of 4,500 DHS employees to its site, but a WIRED analysis found that the list relied heavily on information the employees shared publicly about themselves on sites such as LinkedIn.

Links to ICE List have been spreading widely for several weeks, including on Meta's platforms. There are numerous links to the website on Threads, some of which go back several weeks. Now though, clicking on previously-shared links instead results in a message that the link can't be opened. Users who try to share new links on Threads or Facebook also see error messages. "Posts that look like spam according to our Community Guidelines are blocked on Facebook and can't be edited," the notice says.  

When reached for comment, a Meta spokesperson pointed to the company's privacy policy barring the disclosure of personally identifiable information (PII). The company didn't address why it chose to start blocking the website after several weeks, or whether it considers public LinkedIn profiles to be in violation of its rules against doxxing.

It is, however, not the first time Meta has opted to remove users' posts tracking information about ICE actions. The social network previously took down a Facebook group that tracked ICE sightings in Chicago after pressure from the Justice Department.

Have a tip for Karissa? You can reach her by email, on X, Bluesky, Threads, or send a message to @karissabe.51 to chat confidentially on Signal.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/social-media/meta-blocks-links-to-ice-list-a-wiki-that-names-agents-231410653.html?src=rss

Mark Zuckerberg was initially opposed to parental controls for AI chatbots, according to legal filing

Meta has faced some serious questions about how it allows its underage users to interact with AI-powered chatbots. Most recently, internal communications obtained by the New Mexico Attorney General's Office revealed that although Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg was opposed to the chatbots having "explicit" conversations with minors, he also rejected the idea of placing parental controls on the feature.

Reuters reported that in an exchange between two unnamed Meta employees, one wrote that we "pushed hard for parental controls to turn GenAI off – but GenAI leadership pushed back stating Mark decision.” In its statement to the publication, Meta accused the New Mexico Attorney General of "cherry picking documents to paint a flawed and inaccurate picture." New Mexico is suing Meta on charges that the company “failed to stem the tide of damaging sexual material and sexual propositions delivered to children;” the case is scheduled to go to trial in February.

Despite only being available for a brief time, Meta's chatbots have already accumulated quite a history of behavior that veers into offensive if not outright illegal. In April 2025, The Wall Street Journal released an investigation that found Meta's chatbots could engage in fantasy sex conversations with minors, or could be directed to mimic a minor and engage in sexual conversation. The report claimed that Zuckerberg had wanted looser guards implemented around Meta's chatbots, but a spokesperson denied that the company had overlooked protections for children and teens. 

Internal review documents revealed in August 2025 detailed several hypothetical situations of what chatbot behaviors would be permitted, and the lines between sensual and sexual seemed pretty hazy. The document also permitted the chatbots to argue racist concepts. At the time, a representative told Engadget that the offending passages were hypotheticals rather than actual policy, which doesn't really seem like much of an improvement, and that they were removed from the document. 

Despite the multiple instances of questionable use of the chatbots, Meta only decided to suspend teen accounts' access to them last week. The company said it is temporarily removing access while it develops the parental controls that Zuckerberg had allegedly rejected using.

"Parents have long been able to see if their teens have been chatting with AIs on Instagram, and in October we announced our plans to go further, building new tools to give parents more control over their teens’ experiences with AI characters," a representative from Meta said. "Last week we once again reinforced our commitment to delivering on our promise of parental controls for AI, pausing teen access to AI characters completely until the updated version is ready."

New Mexico filed this lawsuit against Meta in December 2023 on claims that the company's platforms failed to protect minors from harassment by adults. Internal documents revealed early on in that complaint revealed that 100,000 child users were harassed daily on Meta's services.

Update, January 27, 2025, 6:52PM ET: Added statement from Meta spokesperson.

Update, January 27, 2025, 6:15PM ET: Corrected misstated timeline of the New Mexico lawsuit, which was filed in December 2023, not December 2024.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/social-media/mark-zuckerberg-was-initially-opposed-to-parental-controls-for-ai-chatbots-according-to-legal-filing-230110214.html?src=rss

Japan’s Pokémon Hotel Rooms Put 100+ Characters on Your Ceiling (And Gyarados in Your Bathroom)

Snorlax is napping on your bed. Rayquaza soars across the ceiling. Gyarados splashes through your bathroom walls. This is not a fever dream—this is checking into a MIMARU Pokémon Room, where over 100 beloved characters have escaped their Poké Balls to transform apartment-style hotels across Japan into immersive wonderlands.

Since their 2019 debut, these themed accommodations have evolved from a novel concept into a hospitality phenomenon, now spanning 10 properties in Tokyo, Kyoto, and Osaka. The latest renovation doubles down on what made them irresistible: more Pokémon, more family-friendly spaces, and meticulous attention to detail. Water-types gather in bathrooms. Food-loving characters populate kitchens. Even the dining table and tableware echo the iconic Poké Ball design. For families seeking more than generic hotel rooms and Pokémon fans wanting to live inside their childhood obsession, MIMARU has created something genuinely special.

Designers: Nintendo & Mimaru Hotels

Most themed hotels give you a logo on the wall and call it a day. MIMARU went full maximalist and put 100+ Pokémon across every available surface including the ceiling, which most designers treat like dead space. The apartment format solves the actual problem of traveling with kids or groups: you need a kitchen, you need separate sleeping areas, you need room to exist without climbing over each other. Scaling from the 2019 launch to 10 properties across Tokyo, Kyoto, and Osaka means this concept is making serious money. Hotels kill ideas that don’t work. They expand what drives bookings.

Custom Poké Ball plates and mugs mean you’re eating breakfast off themed dinnerware. The dining table itself has the circular red and white design built in. These aren’t afterthought details or cheap branded merchandise they threw in a gift shop basket. The tableware extends the experience into every meal without being obnoxious about it. You’re drinking coffee from a Poké Ball mug while surrounded by wall art of Charizard and Dragonite. The layering works because each element reinforces the others instead of competing for attention.

You walk in and there’s a massive Snorlax plushie sprawled across Poké Ball bedding. Every guest photographs this thing. Every review mentions it. It’s become the signature element that people specifically request when booking. The plushie works because it’s tactile, huggable, and perfectly in-character for Snorlax to be permanently napping on your bed. It’s also shameless Instagram bait, which means free marketing from every family that stays there. The design team knew exactly what they were doing when they made this the centerpiece.

Water-types live in the bathroom. Food-obsessed Pokémon populate the kitchen. Flying and legendary types take over the ceiling murals. Someone actually thought about spatial logic instead of randomly slapping characters everywhere like a kid with stickers. Lapras and Magikarp around the bathtub makes intuitive sense. Pikachu hanging out near the dining table with other food-loving characters feels natural when you’re making breakfast. This kind of ecosystem thinking is rare in themed spaces, which usually prioritize maximum logo visibility over coherent storytelling. The renovation team understood that immersion breaks when placement feels arbitrary.

Every stay includes MIMARU-exclusive merchandise you can’t get anywhere else. Limited edition fabric bags, collectible items that only guests receive. This is retention marketing dressed up as a perk, and it’s extremely effective. People collect these things. They post about them. They keep them as physical reminders of the experience, which triggers “remember when we stayed at the Pokémon hotel” conversations years later. Creating scarcity around a hotel stay is smart business. Making guests feel like they’re part of something exclusive rather than just renting a room builds the kind of emotional attachment that drives repeat bookings.

The properties sit near major tourist hubs and transportation centers, which balances fantasy with practicality. You can spend your day exploring Shibuya or Kyoto’s temples, then return to your Pokémon sanctuary at night. International families especially appreciate the apartment setup because it lets them cook meals and avoid the exhausting hotel-restaurant cycle. Guest feedback consistently uses phrases like “living in the Pokémon world,” which is the gold standard for themed hospitality. You want people feeling transported, not just tolerating cute wallpaper for a night.

The post Japan’s Pokémon Hotel Rooms Put 100+ Characters on Your Ceiling (And Gyarados in Your Bathroom) first appeared on Yanko Design.

Adobe Photoshop upgrades its Firefly-powered generative-AI editing tools

Adobe Photoshop introduced some new features that are rolling out for creators today. As you'd expect from any service operator in this day and age, there's some AI involved. Adobe has improved the tools for Generative Fill, Generative Expand and Remove that are powered by its Firefly generative AI platform. Using these tools for image editing should now produce results in 2K resolution with fewer artifacts and increased detail all while delivering better matches for the provided prompts. The Reference Image option for Generative Fill has also been upgraded to deliver "geometry-aware results that better match the scene." 

 One of the other new updates is a beta version of Dynamic Text, which should allow simpler transformation of a text layer into a curved shape. Photoshop has also added new adjustment layers: Clarity, Dehaze and Grain. These allow non-destructive image editing on layers.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/apps/adobe-photoshop-upgrades-its-firefly-powered-generative-ai-editing-tools-213737915.html?src=rss

A mechanical LEGO Typewriter that types using Gravity, not ink

When the official LEGO Typewriter was released in 2021, it was one of the coolest sets around. The brick typewriter had a major kink, though: it could not type any genuine text. Koenkun Bricks was bugged by this shortcoming and wanted to build a working model that could type in character fits for the LEGO world.

This incredibly detailed LEGO Typewriter is a result of that ambition, as the typewriter sticks LEGO character tiles onto the LEGO brick, making the LEGO typewriter set complete in its own right. The detailed DIY is achieved with LEGO parts, a rubber band, and, of course, the maker’s intuitive engineering brain.

Designer: Koenkun Bricks

Rather than trying to replicate the full complexity of a real typewriter’s mechanics, which would require dozens of articulated typebars and space far beyond a reasonable LEGO build, the creator reinvented the typing process to fit within standard LEGO constraints. Koenkun Bricks’ solution foregoes ink and paper entirely, instead using LEGO letter tiles as the “characters” that are pushed onto a reusable base plate that stands in for the page. This clever redesign allows the model to remain roughly the size of a classic typewriter while still delivering a tactile, playful typing experience.

Each key on this functional LEGO typewriter serves two purposes. When pressed, a corresponding hopper opens to release a specific letter tile by gravity. On release, stored tension in rubber bands powers a pusher that drives the tile through a ramp and around a guiding arch before it contacts the white LEGO base plate, ensuring the tile lands facing correctly. This sequence cleverly simulates letter placement without needing complex print mechanics and shows a deep understanding of LEGO’s modular systems.

The arrangement of keys posed its own challenge. With 26 letters to accommodate, space was at a premium. Early versions attempted to eject characters forward like classic typebars, but this caused interference between adjacent mechanisms. The final design staggers the key rows slightly, allowing each to operate independently while maintaining the familiar typewriter silhouette. Rubber bands are central to the build, functioning as springs and return mechanisms throughout the machine and making iterative design adjustments more straightforward.

The movement of the plate that receives the tiles also mimics traditional typing action. After each key press, the board advances sideways automatically through a ratcheting mechanism actuated by the key itself. When a line is complete, vertical advancement is done manually with a small reel, echoing the feel of rolling the paper on an old trusty typewriter. This mix of automatic and manual motion adds to the sense of interaction and gives users a satisfying control loop as they “type.”

While Koenkun’s LEGO typewriter might not deliver ink on paper, it embodies the spirit of mechanical ingenuity and playful engineering that draws many to LEGO building in the first place. The reusable white plate means typed messages can be erased and retyped, inviting experimentation and wordplay.

The post A mechanical LEGO Typewriter that types using Gravity, not ink first appeared on Yanko Design.

Astronomers discover over 800 cosmic anomalies using a new AI tool

Here's a use of AI that appears to do more good than harm. A pair of astronomers at the European Space Agency (ESA) developed a neural network that searches through space images for anomalies. The results were far beyond what human experts could have done. In two and a half days, it sifted through nearly 100 million image cutouts, discovering 1,400 anomalous objects.

The creators of the AI model, David O'Ryan and Pablo Gómez, call it AnomalyMatch. The pair trained it on (and applied it to) the Hubble Legacy Archive, which houses tens of thousands of datasets from Hubble's 35-year history. "While trained scientists excel at spotting cosmic anomalies, there's simply too much Hubble data for experts to sort through at the necessary level of fine detail by hand," the ESA wrote in its press release.

After less than three days of scanning, AnomalyMatch returned a list of likely anomalies. It still requires human eyes at the end: Gómez and O'Ryan reviewed the candidates to confirm which were truly abnormal. Among the 1,400 anomalous objects the pair confirmed, more than 800 were previously undocumented.

Most of the results showed galaxies merging or interacting, which can lead to odd shapes or long tails of stars and gas. Others were gravitational lenses. (That's where the gravity of a foreground galaxy bends spacetime so that the light from a background galaxy is warped into a circle or arc.) Other discoveries included planet-forming disks viewed edge-on, galaxies with huge clumps of stars and jellyfish galaxies. Adding a bit of mystery, there were even "several dozen objects that defied classification altogether."

"This is a fantastic use of AI to maximize the scientific output of the Hubble archive," Gómez is quoted as saying in the ESA's announcement. "Finding so many anomalous objects in Hubble data, where you might expect many to have already been found, is a great result. It also shows how useful this tool will be for other large datasets."

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/ai/astronomers-discover-over-800-cosmic-anomalies-using-a-new-ai-tool-205135155.html?src=rss

The Must‑Have Portable Power Station Setup Every Household Should Own For Storms And Blackouts

This is not a normal cold snap. The polar vortex that usually stays locked over the Arctic has split and sagged south, dragging temperatures in parts of the Midwest and East Coast to levels that feel closer to the Far North than to cities where millions live. Across affected regions, the results have been immediate and severe. Hypothermia deaths in Louisiana. Rolling blackouts. Ice storms that shatter tree limbs and bury power infrastructure under frozen weight. Nearly 250,000 people in Tennessee alone woke up this week without electricity, and utilities are warning that repairs could take days.

If you are watching the forecast from a warm, lit room, it is worth asking what happens if your block goes dark. Your thermostat stops, your phone begins to drain, your internet dies, and you lose access to weather updates and family check‑ins just when you need them most. For people in small apartments or older homes without backup systems, this is not a thought experiment, it is the reality playing out at this moment. A compact, indoor‑safe power station is one of the few tools that can soften that blow, quietly keeping phones, medical devices, and a few essential lights running while the grid catches up.

Click Here to Buy Now

Why the Mid‑Size Power Station Makes Sense for Most Households

Portable power stations fall along a spectrum, and most of them do not fit the use case of a typical household facing a winter outage. The small units, typically in the 200 to 300 watt‑hour range, are barely larger than heavy‑duty power banks. They can charge phones and tablets, maybe run a laptop for a few hours, but they lack the capacity and output to keep anything more demanding alive. A router pulls too much. A CPAP machine drains them in a single night. A small electric blanket finishes them off in two or three hours. They are fine for a day hike or an overnight car trip, but in a multi‑day blackout during freezing weather, they run dry too quickly to matter.

On the other end, the large systems in the 2,000 to 4,000 watt‑hour class are designed for off‑grid living, RV installations, or whole‑home backup with automatic transfer switches. They can run refrigerators, sump pumps, and multiple high‑draw appliances at once, but they weigh 50 to 100 pounds, cost as much as a used car, and take up serious floor space. For someone in a studio apartment or a rented house, they are impractical both financially and logistically.

The mid‑size tier, roughly 700 to 1,000 watt‑hours with 800 watts of continuous output, occupies the useful middle ground. These units are light enough to move with one hand, affordable enough to justify as a one‑time purchase rather than a major investment, and powerful enough to keep the essentials running for several days if used carefully. They are not designed to replace the grid. They are designed to bridge the gap between when the grid fails and when it comes back online, which is exactly the scenario playing out across the East Coast right now.

What the River 2 Pro Brings Over Its Predecessor

We reviewed the standard EcoFlow River 2 a couple of years back and liked it for what it was: a genuinely portable, well‑designed 256 watt‑hour unit that charged fast and looked good doing it. The dual‑tone design was sharp, the handle redesign made it easier to store, and the price was right for weekend adventurers. But 256 watt‑hours is just not enough capacity to be useful in a real emergency. You could maybe get through one cold night if you were very, very careful.

The Pro triples that to 768 watt‑hours and bumps the continuous AC output from 300 watts to 800 watts, all while adding only about 11 pounds to the overall weight. That capacity jump is not incremental, it is transformational. Now you are talking about running a CPAP for multiple nights, keeping a router alive for over a week of intermittent use, and still having juice left for phone charging and LED lights. The original River 2 was a nice‑to‑have for camping trips. The Pro is something you can actually rely on when the infrastructure around you stops working.

EcoFlow also stuck with LiFePO₄ chemistry, which is the right call here. These cells handle temperature swings better than standard lithium‑ion, they are safer, and they are rated for over 3,000 cycles before they start losing capacity. If you are buying this as a piece of emergency gear that might sit unused for months or years at a time, that longevity matters. This is not a gadget you replace every couple of years. It is something you buy once and forget about until the lights go out.

70 Minutes from Empty to Fully Charged

EcoFlow has been pushing fast charging as a selling point across their lineup for a while now, and in the River 2 Pro it is not just a spec sheet flex, it is genuinely useful. The unit goes from dead to full in about 70 minutes off a standard wall outlet. In normal times, that is convenient. During a rolling blackout, it is the difference between a functional backup and a paperweight.

Think about how most grid failures actually play out in populated areas. Power does not just drop and stay off for three days straight. It flickers. It comes back for an hour, goes out again, comes back for two hours overnight. If your power station takes five or six hours to charge, you are constantly playing catch‑up and never actually filling the tank. With the River 2 Pro, every time the grid comes back on, you have a realistic shot at getting back to 100 percent before it drops again. That changes the whole strategy of how you manage an outage.

The unit also takes up to 220 watts of solar input, so a pair of decent folding panels can top it off in four or five hours under good sun. Winter solar is sketchy, clouds and short days mean you are not going to get reliable full charges, but even partial sun can stretch your runtime by enough to matter. It is not a primary charging method in January, but it is a useful fallback if the outage drags on longer than expected.

What It Costs and How That Compares

Online pricing on the River 2 Pro right now is hovering around the $315 mark, depending on where you shop. The MSRP is technically $549, but there’s almost always a discount running somewhere.

Compare that to a Jackery Explorer 1000 V2, which offers about 1,070 watt‑hours and usually runs $500 to $600. Or the Bluetti AC180, which is in the same ballpark for capacity and price. The River 2 Pro is giving you about 70 percent of the capacity at roughly half the cost, which for most apartment and small‑home use cases is the right tradeoff. You are not powering a refrigerator for a week either way, so the extra 300 watt‑hours does not fundamentally change what you can do. What changes is whether you can justify the expense as a one‑time purchase or if it feels like a luxury you will never pull the trigger on.

The really small units, the 200 to 300 watt‑hour boxes, run $150 to $250. So you are paying maybe $100 to $150 more to triple your capacity and double your output. That is an obvious upgrade if you are serious about emergency preparedness. The giant 2,000+ watt‑hour systems start north of $1,200 and climb fast from there, which is a completely different budget conversation.

What It Can Actually Power During an Outage

The numbers on a spec sheet do not always translate clearly to real‑world use, so it helps to think in concrete scenarios. A fully charged River 2 Pro, used carefully, can sustain:

Communication and information: A smartphone pulls maybe 10 to 15 watt‑hours per full charge. You could recharge your phone 50 times off a full River 2 Pro. A typical Wi‑Fi router and modem together draw 15 to 25 watts while they are on. Run them three hours a day to pull weather updates, check news, coordinate with family, and you are using about 60 watt‑hours daily. That gives you a week and change of intermittent connectivity from a single charge.

Medical devices: A CPAP machine is slightly trickier because the power draw varies wildly depending on your model and settings. If you are running a basic unit without the heated humidifier, you might pull 30 to 40 watts. With the humidifier cranked, that can jump to 60 watts or more. Let us say you are at 40 watts for eight hours a night. That is 320 watt‑hours per night, so you get two full nights of sleep therapy before you need to recharge. Not great if the power is out for a week, but enough runway to get through the worst of a storm without ending up in an ER.

Targeted warmth: Low‑wattage electric blankets and heated throws usually run 50 to 100 watts. A 75‑watt throw for three hours in the evening is 225 watt‑hours. Combine that with CPAP and phone charging and you are looking at maybe 600 watt‑hours total per day, which gives you a full day of decent comfort before you need to think about recharging.

Lighting: LED lighting is almost free by comparison. A 10‑watt bulb for five hours a night is 50 watt‑hours. You could light up a small apartment every night for a week and barely dent the battery.

The key here is prioritization. You shouldn’t be running everything at once. Keep the critical stuff alive, lights, communication, medical devices, and use targeted warmth instead of trying to heat the whole space. That is what makes a mid‑size unit like this viable, and truly accessible to the vast population who can divert sub-$500 on a moment’s notice. The power station might be tiny, but it forces you to be smart about power – which is exactly what you need to do in a real outage anyway.

Need More Power? Just Buy A Second One And Connect Them

One feature that does not get talked about enough is that you can actually chain two River 2 Pro units together for expanded capacity. EcoFlow builds this into their ecosystem, so if you find yourself consistently running up against the limits of a single 768 watt‑hour unit, you are not stuck buying a completely different, more expensive system. You just add a second River 2 Pro and suddenly you are working with over 1,500 watt‑hours of usable capacity. That is enough to stretch a multi‑day outage without obsessively rationing every watt, or to run slightly higher‑draw appliances that a single unit would struggle with.

The math here is quite interesting because it gives you a more flexible upgrade path than most power station ecosystems offer. Instead of dropping $1,200 to $1,500 on a single large unit right out of the gate, you can start with one River 2 Pro, see how it performs in real‑world use, and then add a second one later if you need the extra capacity. You end up spending around $630 total for a combined system that gives you more modularity than a single giant battery box. If one unit dies or needs servicing, you still have backup power. If you only need light capacity for a short trip, you take one and leave the other at home. That kind of flexibility is genuinely underrated.

It also means the River 2 Pro scales better for different household sizes and needs. A single person in a studio apartment might never need more than one unit. A family of four in a larger house might find that two units let them cover essentials in multiple rooms without running extension cords everywhere or constantly shuffling devices between outlets. The ability to grow the system incrementally, rather than making one big all‑or‑nothing purchase decision, makes it a lot easier to justify the initial investment and adapt as your needs change.

How to Use It Effectively in Cold Weather

Store and operate it indoors. LiFePO₄ cells can discharge in cold temperatures, but they should not be re-charged when the internal temperature is below freezing.

Most modern power stations, including the River 2 Pro, have battery management systems that will flat‑out refuse to charge if the cells are too cold. So keep the unit inside, away from exterior walls and drafty windows, and you will be fine.

Turn things off when you are not using them. That sounds obvious, but in the chaos of a blackout it is easy to leave the router on all day or forget a phone plugged in after it hits 100 percent. The River 2 Pro has a small parasitic draw just from being powered on, so if you are not actively using an outlet, shut it down and save every ounce of power you can.

And for the love of all that is holy, do not try to heat your apartment with this thing. Yes, the 800‑watt continuous output can technically run a small space heater. Yes, the X‑Boost mode can push that to 1600 watts for short bursts. But a 1,500‑watt space heater will drain the entire battery in about 30 minutes. That is not a strategy, that is just lighting your stored energy on fire. Layer up, use blankets, deploy a low‑watt heated throw for targeted warmth if you need it, but resistive heating is a losing game with battery power.

What It Cannot Do

The River 2 Pro is not a whole‑home backup system. It will not keep your refrigerator running for days, it will not power your furnace, and it definitely will not run a sump pump if your basement starts flooding. If those are your needs, you are shopping in the wrong category. You want a 2,000+ watt‑hour system, probably with a transfer switch and professional installation, and you are going to spend a lot more money.

The usable capacity is also not quite the advertised 768 watt‑hours. Independent testing puts the real‑world output closer to 620 watt‑hours, which is about 81 percent of the rated capacity. That is normal for the industry, battery management systems always hold back some reserve to protect longevity, but it is worth knowing so you do not plan your runtime calculations around the full number.

And while the unit is rated for 3,000+ cycles, that assumes you are not constantly hammering it from zero to 100 percent under extreme conditions. If you want to maximize lifespan, try to keep the charge between 20 and 80 percent when you can, and store it at around 50 percent if it is going to sit unused for months. Treat it like a piece of infrastructure, not a toy, and it will last you a decade.

Preparing Before the Next Storm

Hundreds of thousands of people are sitting in the dark tonight while the cold keeps piling on. More are watching the forecast and realizing their block could be next. The grid is not built for this. It was not designed to handle ice storms in places that rarely freeze, or sustained cold snaps in cities where winter is usually mild. And when it fails, the gap between “uncomfortable” and “dangerous” closes fast.

A power station like the River 2 Pro does not fix the underlying problem. It does not make the grid more resilient, and it does not replace the need for serious infrastructure investment. What it does is give you a buffer. A way to keep the essentials running while you wait for the repair crews to get the lines back up. A way to avoid the kinds of decisions that turn a bad night into a genuine emergency.

For $315, that is not a bad insurance policy to have sitting in your closet, charged and ready, before the next storm rolls in.

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The post The Must‑Have Portable Power Station Setup Every Household Should Own For Storms And Blackouts first appeared on Yanko Design.