Digital nomads take a lot of flights. The average full-time nomad flies 15 to 30 times per year, which means dealing with delays, gate changes, connections, and the general chaos of air travel is a recurring part of the lifestyle ...

Getting reliable internet abroad is the single most important logistical challenge for remote workers, and the three main options each solve the problem differently. Portable WiFi hotspots, eSIMs, and local SIM cards all have specific advantages that depend on your ...

Budget airlines enforce a 7 to 8 kilogram carry-on limit. You need a laptop, a portable monitor, chargers, adapters, cables, and possibly audio equipment for calls. Everything else you own has to fit in whatever weight remains. This is the ...

Framework Laptop is the machine that r/digitalnomad cannot stop talking about but almost nobody has reviewed after actually traveling with one for an extended period. The pitch is compelling: a high-performance laptop where every component is user-replaceable, from the SSD ...

Starlink Mini weighs 1.1 kilograms, fits in a backpack, and promises internet anywhere there is a clear view of the sky. For digital nomads who have spent years juggling local SIMs, eSIMs, cafe WiFi, and coworking memberships, the idea of ...