There is a particular kind of frustration that comes with packing for a work trip. The laptop goes in, then the portable keyboard because the touchscreen never feels right for long sessions, then maybe a compact monitor for the hotel desk, then the cables, then the adapters that somehow breed overnight. By the time the bag is zipped, it weighs more than it should and still does not feel like a proper setup.
VitaLink has built something designed specifically for that problem. The device brings together a full-size keyboard and a 13-inch touchscreen display inside a single CNC aluminum shell that folds flat to 20mm. Plug it into any USB-C device and you have a working environment that opens up immediately, no stand, no arm, no bag pocket surrendered to cables.
The screen runs at 3840 by 1600 pixels across a 2.4:1 ultra-wide format, which gives it more horizontal space than a standard 16:9 panel. That means two apps open side by side without either feeling compressed. The panel supports 10-point touch, refreshes at 60Hz, and covers 100 percent of the sRGB color range at 298 pixels per inch.
A Keyboard That Actually Travels Well
The keyboard underneath uses scissor-switch mechanisms with 0.8mm of key travel and spacing wider than most portable boards offer. That detail matters after an hour of real typing, when a cramped layout starts producing errors and the whole point of bringing a keyboard collapses. Three RGB backlight modes are included, and the keys are designed to stay quiet in shared spaces.
The 180-degree hinge is what ties everything together practically. Open, the footprint sits at roughly 34 by 15 centimeters, manageable on an airplane tray table or a cafÊ counter that barely fits a coffee cup. Closed, it slides into a standard laptop sleeve without the awkward bulk that most travel peripherals bring with them.
Two USB-C ports handle video, data, and power delivery simultaneously through a single cable. The plug-and-play setup works across Windows, macOS, Linux, iOS, and Android without any driver installation, and the compatibility extends to tablets, mini PCs, and handheld gaming consoles. That range matters for people whose devices do not all belong to the same ecosystem.
The aluminum body is CNC-machined with a frosted anodized finish, which gives it a rigidity that plastic travel accessories tend to lack. In transit it carries more like a slim hardcover book than a screen peripheral, and the keyboard deck does not flex under typing pressure the way cheaper portable boards often do.
VitaLink is currently available through a crowdfunding campaign priced at $279, down from a listed retail price of $658. The campaign had raised over $37,000 at the time of publication with nearly 500 units claimed out of a 600-unit run.
Portable work setups have improved steadily in speed and power over the past few years. What has not changed much is the bag itself, still a loose collection of things that were each designed independently and happen to end up together. Whether a combined keyboard and display in one deliberate object actually changes that calculus depends entirely on how a person works. But for anyone who has ever arrived somewhere and immediately started assembling a workspace from parts, the question VitaLink is asking is a reasonable one.
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