Key Takeaways
- DailyObjects has launched NODE, the world's first modular wireless charging ecosystem, available from May 27, 2026, starting at Rs 10,000.
- NODE features interchangeable modules (Phone Stand, Disk, Apple Watch Charger, Lamp) that snap in and out, allowing users to customize their charging setup and use modules independently.
- The ecosystem supports Qi2.2 25W standard, the fastest globally, offering precise alignment and fast charging for both Apple and Android devices.
Forget the tangle of cables snaking across your desk like a bowl of spaghetti gone rogue. DailyObjects has officially launched NODE, the world’s first modular wireless charging ecosystem that promises to rethink how modern multi-device users power everything from their phones to their Apple Watches, all from a single, organised hub. Available from May 27, 2026, starting at Rs 10,000, NODE is not just a charger. It is an entirely new way of thinking about your desk.
In This Article
What Makes NODE Different From Every Other Wireless Charger Out There
The wireless charging market is no stranger to docks and pads, but it has almost always been static. You plug in your multi-device dock, and that is where it stays forever, gathering dust and quiet resentment in equal measure. NODE flips that convention entirely with what DailyObjects calls a dock-and-go architecture. The ecosystem is built around interchangeable modules that snap in and out via pogo-pin connectors and USB Type-C support, giving users the freedom to build their ideal charging setup and change it whenever life demands.
Users can choose between a 2-in-1 or 3-in-1 dock configuration. The ecosystem includes four key modules: a Wireless Charging Phone Stand, a Wireless Charging Disk, an Apple Watch Charging Stand, and a Portable Lamp. Each module functions both on the dock and independently, meaning you can pull the phone stand off the desk and carry it with you without losing a beat. For anyone juggling a phone, smartwatch, earbuds, and a laptop across a day of back-to-back meetings, that kind of flexibility is genuinely useful.
Qi2.2 and the One Wire System
NODE is powered by the Qi2.2 25W standard, currently the fastest wireless charging certification available globally. Developed by the Wireless Power Consortium, Qi2.2 uses the Magnetic Power Profile 2.0 to ensure precise device alignment and deliver up to 25W of wireless power. Capable devices from both Apple and Android ecosystems benefit from this, making NODE one of the few wireless charging solutions built natively for both platforms from day one. Early 2026 testing has shown that Qi2.2 can take compatible flagships from zero to around 50 per cent charge in roughly 30 minutes, narrowing the gap between wired and wireless charging significantly.
What truly simplifies the daily routine is the One Wire System. A single cable powers the entire dock. No sprawling adapter collection. No cable management headaches that slowly chip away at your will to live. Just one wire and the job is done. The 2-in-1 and 3-in-1 docks both support up to 65W input using PD 3.1 and Qualcomm technology, with Smart Power Allocation distributing optimum power across all connected modules simultaneously.
Breaking Down the NODE Ecosystem Module by Module

The Wireless Charging Phone Stand is arguably the standout piece. It packs a 7,800 mAh battery, which means it continues charging your phone even after you pick it up and walk away from the dock. DailyObjects states this delivers roughly 1.5 full charges for an iPhone 17. The stand supports Qi, Qi2, and Qi2.2 standards, covering iPhone 12 series onwards and compatible Qi2.2 Android phones.
The Wireless Charging Disk delivers Qi2.2 25W output and supports both smartphones and wireless earbuds. It includes magnetic alignment for compatible devices and is a solid pick for a quick top-up between tasks. The Apple Watch Charging Stand supports every Apple Watch model from Series 1 through Series 11, including the SE and Ultra variants, delivering 5W charging across the board.
Then there is the Portable Lamp. It might look like an add-on, but it is one of the more considered inclusions in the lineup. With a 2,600 mAh internal battery, three dimming modes for personalised ambient lighting, and up to eight hours of backup for bedside, dining, or travel use, it turns NODE into something that genuinely extends beyond the desk. The lamp charges at 2.9W input and connects to the dock via pogo pins, the same as every other module.
Designed to Be Seen, Not Hidden
DailyObjects has always leaned into design aesthetics, and NODE reflects that clearly. The ecosystem features soft sculptural forms, balanced proportions, and a restrained colour palette intended to sit naturally within a modern workspace rather than being buried behind gear. Pankaj Garg, Co-Founder and CEO of DailyObjects, described NODE as a reimagining of power as an integrated part of modern living rather than a utility hidden in the background.
That approach speaks to a broader consumer shift happening globally. The wireless charging market is projected to reach USD 16.0 billion by 2029, growing at a CAGR of 20.3%. Desk setups have become personal statements as much as workspaces. Products that blend performance with visual coherence are increasingly what buyers reach for, and NODE positions itself squarely at that intersection.
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Availability and Pricing
NODE is available from May 27, 2026, across DailyObjects’ online platforms and select retail outlets across India. Pricing starts at Rs 10,000, with the final cost depending on the chosen module configuration. The package includes a 100W cable. For a 65W adapter, the brand recommends pairing one separately for optimum performance.
A Concept That Deserves to Succeed
The idea behind NODE is refreshingly ambitious: modular charging with real portability, Qi2.2 speed, a single-wire setup, a built-in lamp, and a design language that could pass for a premium lifestyle product. On paper, this is a strong proposition for anyone who has ever looked at their desk and wondered why their charging setup looks like the aftermath of a data centre explosion. Whether the real-world experience lives up to the promise is the only question that remains, and that answer will come once users actually start pulling these modules off the dock in anger.


