SKU: 23192014546

899 30W QC 3.0 6 USB Ports Fast Charger with LCD Digital Display, EU Plug, 899

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Description

899 30W QC 3.0 6 USB Ports Fast Charger with LCD Digital Display, EU Plug, 8991. With 6 USB ports. 2. With LCD digital display. 3. Suitable for home, office, travel and other indoor use. Specification: 1. Input: AC 100 240V, 50 60Hz, 0. 22A. 2. Total power: 30W. 3. Output: 5V 6A (maximum). 4. Single USB interface output: 5V 2. 4A (maximum). Packing list: USB charger x 1 EU plug charging cable x 1 Specification: General Compatible with Apple: iPhone 17 Pro, iPhone Air, iPhone 17 Pro Max, iPhone 17, iPhone 16e, iPhone 16 Plus,

1. With 6 USB ports.
2. With LCD digital display.
3. Suitable for home, office, travel and other indoor use.

Specification:
1. Input: AC 100-240V, 50-60Hz, 0.22A.
2. Total power: 30W.
3. Output: 5V 6A (maximum).
4. Single USB interface output: 5V 2.4A (maximum).

Packing list:
USB charger x 1
EU plug charging cable x 1


Specification:
General
Compatible with
Apple: iPhone 17 Pro, iPhone Air, iPhone 17 Pro Max, iPhone 17, iPhone 16e, iPhone 16 Plus, iPhone 16 Pro Max, iPhone 16, iPhone 16 Pro, iPhone 15, iPhone 15 Pro Max, iPhone 15 Pro, iPhone 15 Plus, iPhone 14 Plus
Apple: Watch SE 40mm, Watch SE 44mm, Watch Series 5 44mm
Samsung: Galaxy S25 Ultra 5G, Galaxy S23 FE 5G, Galaxy W23 Flip 5G, Galaxy W23, Galaxy Z Fold5, Galaxy Z Flip5, Galaxy M14, Galaxy F04, Galaxy A04 Core, Galaxy A24 5G, Galaxy A14 4G, Galaxy M04, Galaxy A34 5G, Galaxy A23s
Huawei: Pura 90 Pro 5G, Pura 90 Pro Max 5G, Pura 90 5G, Mate 80 Pro Max Wind 5G, Mate 80 Pro Max, Mate 80 Pro, Mate 80, Pura 80 5G, Pura 80 Ultra 5G, Mate XT Ultimate Design, Pura 70 Pro+, Pura 70 Ultra, Pura 70, Pura 70 Pro
Honor: Magic8 Pro Air 5G, Win 5G, Magic8, Magic8 Pro, X70 5G, 300 Pro, Magic7 Pro, Magic7, Magic Vs3, Magic6 RSR Porsche Design, Magic6 Ultimate, Magic6 Pro, Magic6, Magic5 Pro
Xiaomi: 17 Max 5G, 17T Pro 5G, 17 Ultra, Redmi K90 Pro Max, 17 Pro Max, 17, 17 Pro, 15T Pro 5G, Mix Flip 2, 15S Pro, 15 Ultra, Redmi K80 Pro, 15, 15 Pro
OPPO: Find X9 Ultra 5G, Find X9, Find X9 Pro, Reno14 Pro (China), Find X8s, Find X8 Ultra, Reno13 Pro (China), Find X8, Find X8 Pro, Find X6 Pro
OnePlus: 15T, 15, 13, 12
Vivo: iQOO 15 Ultra 5G, S50 Pro mini 5G, iQOO 15, X300, X300 Pro, X Fold5, X200s, X200 Ultra, X200 Pro mini, X200 Pro, X100s Pro, X100 Ultra, X Fold3, X Fold3 Pro
Google: Pixel 2, Pixel 2 XL, Nexus 5, Nexus 4 (E960)
Nokia: 9, 1, 6.1 / 6 (2018) / 6 (2nd Gen), 7 Plus, Lumia 1020, Lumia 925, Lumia 928, Lumia 720, Lumia 920, Lumia 820
Input Voltage AC 100-240V.
Output Voltage 5V
Output Current 6A (Single Max 3.5A)
Cable Length 1.5m (Charger Cable)
Product Size 8.6x8.8x3.7cm
Weight 288g
Package Include
Package Contents Charger x 1
Package Weight
One Package Weight 0.34kgs / 0.75lb
One Package Size 15.9cm * 11.7cm * 5.6cm / 6.26inch * 4.61inch * 2.2inch
Qty per Carton 40
Carton Weight 13.20kgs / 29.10lb
Carton Size 34cm * 50cm * 32cm / 13.39inch * 19.69inch * 12.6inch
Loading Container 20GP: 490 cartons * 40 pcs = 19600 pcs
40HQ: 1137 cartons * 40 pcs = 45480 pcs

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SKU: 23192014546

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4.6 ★★★★★
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Product Reviews
J
Verified Purchase
Jade
Chelsea, US
★★★★★ 5
Useful in class and for personal use
Format: Paperback
We are learning python in my class and this book is so helpful to practice outside of class. I had started using it before class started because I didn’t know we would be learning python I just bought it because python is a popular programming language and I should learn it and it’s very simple to follow. The digital assets help u download the necessary tools used in the book. I do find the code to be a little confusing because I’m used to SQL and R. Python is a little different but the book makes it easy to learn and has you implementing what you learned into a project so it’s very useful. Get this book!
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Reviewed in the United States on February 9, 2025
S
Verified Purchase
Sterling R.
Cuba, US
★★★★★ 4
Must read
Format: Paperback
Wonderful book and great walkthrough, I have been using it off and on but when I do. I know I can notice a difference for my hobbies.
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Reviewed in the United States on October 29, 2025
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Verified Purchase
Connor
Birmingham, US
★★★★★ 5
Great Purchase
Format: Paperback
Content is excellent. Very pleased with the purchase.
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Reviewed in the United States on March 1, 2026
R
Verified Purchase
Received as seen on the app. Thanks
Phoenix, US
★★★★★ 5
Product received
Format: Paperback, Format: Paperback
Product received in good condition. I like the book
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Reviewed in the United States on February 19, 2026
D
Dulcimoo
Houston, US
★★★★★ 3
I think this book will give many beginners a good quick start into Python programming
A review of "Python: QuickStart Guide by Robert Oliver" Published by ClydeBank Media Copyright (c) 2023 ISBN-13: 978-1-63610-038-8 First Edition: Last Updated: April 24, 2023 In summary - I feel this book has missed some opportunities, is trying to be “cute" and is somewhat lacking in detail in some of the beginning explanations. However … this book starts at the bottom and builds you up. When you are done … while not quite a Python Expert you will be well on the way. It really is a good overview of Python and covers a lot of ground; while it does leave out some things I would have liked to see, [cough cough turtle graphics — turtles make a great introduction to objects … even if they may have taken a detour to the application you end up with at the end] you can’t put every everything including the kitchen sink in a book like this. Most of the things I would have liked to see differently are just nit-picky: they have these little icons (Note, quckclip, detour, etc.) … things like that should be DEFINED before they show up — the introduction is the perfect place to do that; that that isn’t done bugs me. That he brings up “X” as in Algebra isn’t really needed, programming variables are known quantities for the most part, and are more like the names for things, or the name of a box that contains something … the “variables” in Python has little to do with the variables in Algebra which are unknowns you are trying to solve for. As example of missing “essential” detail: In the discussion of data types such as integers, and floating point numbers, and strings but don’t discuss magnitude and precision for the numerical datatypes. Not everyone needs to know that in integers basically have as much precision as you have allowed it memory to run. This isn’t “normal” in most other languages and is a nifty feature of Python. I have used it to compute really large numbers such as the 1 millionth Fibonacci number, or the 33rd perfect number (it has over half a million digits, and is very simple in Python[see the short code at the end of this review for another example]). It doesn’t discuss comparison operators for objects you create (I feel that is an important topic, but may be more advanced that this introductory book is designed for - and actually isn't NEEDED but would have been a nice thing to mention). On the other hand the discussion of Python data structures really was very clear. While it does discuss and use objects, the discussion really isn’t in-depth. But that is OK as this is a quick start guide, not an in-depth reference book. You could (and will later if you go on) find enough to fill a book half this size talking about the details of Python Object Oriented programming ([P]OOP). This one may not be a nit if they are older: The format is somewhat difficult to read when it comes to the code examples. Code examples are highlighted in gray, this lowers the contrast and unless well lighted makes it harder to read, so make sure you read it in a well lit room or use a book light. Bolding the highlighted text would probably solve this issue. The binding is great (it is spiral bound) and even being somewhat thick, every page lies flat — this makes it easy to use for when you are copying the code examples to your computer. The code can be downloaded, but I would recommend that you type everything in. Errors made by having your typed code not be what you intended to type in are a common source of errors and learning how to find and correct those sorts of errors now will save you a lot of problems. The book isn’t just introductory material, but gets into some fairly advanced topics such as databases, test driven development, and using GIT. The book does do a good job about more “advanced” topics. It talks about some features of Python while just a few years old may not have been know to some older Python Developers (like dataclass, or Lamda expressions). It provides you an introduction to developing websites, and interacting with the web, multiprocessing, optimization, and error handling to name a few. I really think topics that may stump some people the author has explained clearly and concisely the make the topics easy to grasp. One thing that surprised me is that it didn’t talk about the philosophy of Python in the introduction… No braces {} or semicolons, but you do need the occasional colon Whitespace, indentation, and blank lines MATTER in Python. That needs to be hammered in (really). One simple way of doing things (not a lot of different ways to do the same thing). And the name Python comes from the Monty Flying Circus kind and not the Reptile kind (even though a lot of Python “stuff” has the snake kind on it). It doesn’t talk about Python 2. Python 2 and 3 are different Code bases, They eventually stopped “improving” Python 2 and Python 3 is the one true version of Python, it should at least have a mention. The phylosophy is important because in Python white space in really important, and that is part of the philosophy of Python that should be covered. This is probably one of the things that messes people up most in the beginning (and that case matters — cow and COW are not the same, as they are in a lot of cases in Windows machines). Here is an example of case mattering: (not from the book). >>> cow=3 >>> cow==COW Traceback (most recent call last): File "", line 1, in NameError: name 'COW' is not defined. Did you mean: 'cow'? Here are some things to try once you get your Python installed that show a bit of Python Humor…(also not from the book)… >>> import this The Zen of Python, by Tim Peters Beautiful is better than ugly. Explicit is better than implicit. Simple is better than complex. Complex is better than complicated. Flat is better than nested. Sparse is better than dense. Readability counts. Special cases aren't special enough to break the rules. Although practicality beats purity. Errors should never pass silently. Unless explicitly silenced. In the face of ambiguity, refuse the temptation to guess. There should be one-- and preferably only one --obvious way to do it. Although that way may not be obvious at first unless you're Dutch. Now is better than never. Although never is often better than *right* now. If the implementation is hard to explain, it's a bad idea. If the implementation is easy to explain, it may be a good idea. Namespaces are one honking great idea -- let's do more of those! >>> Or try import antigravity Python is a fun programming language to learn and it probably the best language for a beginner. Python is a fairly easy to learn programming language, and Mr. Oliver’s brief look back at BASIC is fitting. I do think that Python, in may ways, really is the new BASIC. In conclusion: This book does provide you a step by step learning path, if followed will get you a lot more knowledgeable about Python, while fairly wide it isn’t always as deep as I would like. The Python QuickStart Guide(r) is like one of those tour packages, it covers all the things you need to see but sometimes you wish you could linger a bit more on a topic. The Coffee Shop game that you work in throughout most of the book is interesting and leads to some good topics and gets you in to some really good practices so you start out right. The author has provided a video the help you get going which will help you over the rough beginning spots. If you take the time, and follow the book step by step, I think you will be pleased with your progress, and will be able to do some fun stuff quickly. Just remember to do a little bit every day, because learning to program is like learning any language — practice makes perfect. PS: You might want to try this to see just how easy it is in Python to work with large integers: f=1 for x in range (1, 101): f=f * x print (f" {x:>3d}! = {f:>210,d}") print If you had the book, you would know what to do with that! Also - It may not show up but the following lines need to be indented two spaces in the above example f=f * x print (f" {x:>3d}! = {f:>210,d}") print
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Reviewed in the United States on May 26, 2023

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