Cuktech No.10: a power strip, fast charger, and smart hub in one for $44

By: Anton Kratiuk | today, 11:32
Cuktech No.10 All-in-One charging hub with built-in display. Image: Cuktech Cuktech No.10 All-in-One charging hub with built-in display. Image: Cuktech. Source: Photo: Cuktech

Cuktech has announced the No.10 All-in-One Screen Set, a desktop hub that merges a traditional power strip with a multi-protocol fast charger and a Xiaomi Mijia-connected smart home node — all for $44 at pre-order on JD.com. That price undercuts the Anker Nano Power Strip 10-in-1, which lists at $69.99 for a comparable port count. The catch: no confirmed availability on Amazon US or Amazon UK yet.

The hardware

The No.10 packs eight ports in total: standard AC outlets rated up to 2,500W combined — enough to run a gaming PC and a kettle simultaneously — plus USB ports delivering up to 120W total output. Cuktech holds a licensed partnership with Xiaomi for the Surge Charge (HyperCharge) protocol, so Xiaomi phone owners can pull the full 120W. Everyone else gets Power Delivery and other mainstream standards via the ADC 2.0 protocol negotiation system, which automatically selects the best charging profile for each connected device. Worth noting: third-party 120W chargers regularly fall short of their rated output in lab conditions, and Xiaomi's full 120W also requires a 6A-rated cable.

The most visible feature is a 2.8-inch display showing live power draw, port status, and the time. Wi-Fi and Bluetooth connect it to the Mijia app, so you can monitor consumption — or cut power to a socket — remotely. OTA firmware updates mean Cuktech can push charging-algorithm improvements after purchase, which is more useful than it sounds for a device that negotiates power profiles with dozens of device types.

The real-world picture

Cuktech is best known for power banks — the CukTech 10 and 10 Ultra sell for roughly £25–£30 in the UK and $45–$60 in the US, per Notebookcheck. The No.10 All-in-One is a different category entirely, and no English-language retailer currently stocks it. Pre-orders are live on JD.com at $44, but shipping timelines and final pricing for Western markets are unconfirmed.

If you're already in the Xiaomi ecosystem, the smart-home integration is a genuine addition to a desk setup. If you're not, the Mijia app routes data through Chinese servers — a consideration for anyone mindful of data privacy. Competitors like Anker and Baseus are easier to buy locally and come with straightforward regional warranties. For now, the No.10 is one to watch rather than one to order unless you're comfortable with grey import.