We’ve known that the iPhone is switching to USB-C for a while now, but there was always a possibility that Apple would stick with Lightning for one more year. Based on the latest leaked images, however, Apple is all-in on USB-C for the iPhone 15 and iPhone 15 Pro models, with USB-C parts for the iPhone 15, iPhone 15 Plus, and iPhone 15 Pro Max all shown in a leaked image by X user fix Apple.

With the switch to USB-C, nearly all of Apple’s devices will have adopted the new standard, with only AirPods, Mac accessories, and the iPhone SE remaining aside from older iPhones and the 9th-gen iPad.

    • Dandroid
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      4011 months ago

      I think the jury is still out on this one imo. If Apple does what the rumors are saying and limit it to 500mA @ 5V and 480Mbps transfer speed unless you have a MFI chip in the cable, then I don’t think these regulations worked.

      Also, if a hypothetical USB type D comes out some time in the future and blows USB type C out of the water in every category, but phones can’t use it because the EU said, then these regulations didn’t work. It’s my understanding that the EU protected against this possiblity, so I’m hopeful that this won’t happen. But I haven’t actually read the bill myself. I have only heard this from comments on the internet, so I don’t know for sure.

      • @Oneser@lemm.ee
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        8111 months ago

        This is not correct for devices being sold to the EU at least. Part of the amendment to the Radio Equipment Regulation outlines the exact standards for power delivery that must be used, and that interfaces which are capable of being charged @ > 15W must “ensure that any additional charging protocol allows for the full functionality of the USB Power Delivery…”.

        For data transfer, I don’t see the point and future improvements to USB will come from industry in future.

        The only way around this is with a wireless charging protocol, but manufacturers are moving away from that it appears.

        • Dandroid
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          5111 months ago

          If the EU covered all their bases here and Apple doesn’t find a way to screw their customers, I will be extremely happy. I just feel like they always find some way to be shitty. 😂

      • @Prizephitah@feddit.nu
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        7111 months ago

        The EU requirement isn’t actually USB-C. It’s whatever USB-IF says is the standard connector. So if USB-C gen2x2 (or wherever they will call it) comes out, that will be what everyone has to implement.

        The problem would arise when USB-IF stops being the de-facto innovation driver for peripheral interconnection.

      • @erwan@lemmy.ml
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        611 months ago

        Even if companies keep trying to be anti-consumer despite regulations, it doesn’t mean we need to stop trying.

        Don’t forget that, at least in Europe, governments are elected by Europeans so they’re our representatives. Companies however only represent their shareholders, and their bigger ones in particular.

      • @flashgnash@lemm.ee
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        110 months ago

        Even if they limit the speed of other cables I think for the most part it’s still worked

        Looking forward to the day a charger cable is a charger cable and no more of this “could I borrow your charger? Sorry only got an iPhone charger/micro USB” problem

        Slow charging is infinitely better than no charging in an emergency

        • Dandroid
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          110 months ago

          The power numbers I mentioned above would just cause modern phones to die slightly slower. But that’s the minimum required for USB 2.0, and that was the rumored amount that Apple was going to allow without an MFI chip. But other users seem pretty confident that it won’t matter because Apple won’t be able to find a loophole there.

          • @flashgnash@lemm.ee
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            110 months ago

            Still potentially the difference between being stranded without a phone and managing to trickle charge it over a long period of time while it’s off

            • Dandroid
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              210 months ago

              True. But I still think this would be a huge oversight, as it would completely go against the spirit of this regulation. It should be easy to keep this hole closed and a huge slam dunk if they can do it. If the EU whiffs on this, I definitely won’t consider it a win. All it will do is make Apple users upset that they can’t really use all the cables that they already own for non-apple devices. This will cause some families to purge every cable in their house and replace them with MFI cables, resulting in a ton of money for Apple, a ton of money spent by consumers, and a ton of e-waste. Is all that worth it when they could have just kept the loophole closed? An argument could be made, but I wouldn’t change my mind on it, especially when it would have been so easy for the EU to do it right in the first place.

              But again this argument is kind of moot, because other users are confident that the alleged loophole doesn’t even exist.

              • @flashgnash@lemm.ee
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                110 months ago

                We’ll see I suppose

                Also my argument is not that it won’t suck if they find a loophole but it’s still better than what we’ve got right now

    • HTTP_404_NotFound
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      1111 months ago

      Consumer-based regulation works better.

      ie- when people stop spending billions on iphones that don’t use standardized hardware… Then, perhaps Apple will stop being anti-competitive assholes.

      Right now, they can get away with being anti-competitive assholes, because everyone keeps buying their products.

      Money speaks.

      Just watch- apple will indeed release a phone that has a USB-Type C port. Then, disable data transfer to any non-apple certified USB cord, due to “security concerns” or “fire hazards”

      • @NattyNatty2x4@beehaw.org
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        11 months ago

        It literally does not, as evidenced by the state of chargers in the 2000s and early 2010s, before the EU threatened to regulate if phone companies didn’t get their shit together. Back then you’d have a different charger design for virtually every phone, including new models of the same phone. USB only became ubiquitous because the EU told companies to stop fucking around and legislate themselves, or the EU would make formal legislation. Most companies got the memo, but Apple decided to be cunts for long enough that the EU decided they needed to finally step in.

        Consumer-based regulation being the end-all is based off the classical- and neoliberal ideas that humans are rational actors and companies have a greater incentive to compete than to collude. Both of which are lies.

        • HTTP_404_NotFound
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          2111 months ago

          humans are rational actors and companies have a greater incentive to compete than to collude

          Touché. Point taken, you aren’t wrong there.

        • @AbsolutelyNotABot@feddit.it
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          11 months ago

          the classical- and neoliberal ideas that humans are rational actors

          Be very careful with this, because this is also the very foundation of democracy. If we start saying humans can’t decide for themselves over insignificant phone charger, how could we trust them selecting the people who has much more power than that?

          • @Bartsbigbugbag@lemmy.ml
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            1611 months ago

            That’s actually the opposite of the foundation of democracy. Democracy spreads the power out through as many people as possible in order to lessen the potential for abuse by any individual actor. Electing representatives who have near unlimited power and no recourse for constituents isn’t democracy, its oligarchy.

            • @AbsolutelyNotABot@feddit.it
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              411 months ago

              Democracy spreads the power out through as many people as possible in order to lessen the potential for abuse by any individual actor

              Well, that’s not our democracies work. We don’t let people vote every law by referendum, that would be spreading power as much as possible.

              In ancient Athens it was common, as was common for judiciary decision to be made by 3-4 hundreds people drawn at random. But that’s something almost universally considered stupid now, we have a judge, who we consider an “expert” in law.

              By your definition, we don’t live in a democracy, on the contrary, democracy is extinct on this planet

              • @Bartsbigbugbag@lemmy.ml
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                11 months ago

                There are indeed democracies on the planet that work in a way that both allows the use of representation and maintains the power in the hands of the constituency by allowing easy recall processes and mandates that officials follow the will of their constituency. We just don’t have them in liberal democracy, which was created, in part, to specifically guard against the possibility of majority rule, as mentioned in multiple of the Federalist papers, including but not limited to Federalist 9 and 10.

          • manucode
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            1311 months ago

            how could we trust them selecting the people who has much more power than that

            Who else is there to trust but us humans?

            humans can’t decide for themselves over insignificant phone charger

            Individual humans don’t have the ability to choose their phone based on their preferred charger. Each purchase is made between one buyer with fairly limited funds and few large corporations with extensive funds.

            • @AbsolutelyNotABot@feddit.it
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              111 months ago

              between one buyer with fairly limited funds and few large corporations with extensive funds

              Which is the same as saying that every vote is transferred between one voter, with very limited knowledge and political awareness and a few politicians with extensive power because politics is what they do their entire life.

              Democracy is, in many practical sense, a market for votes. One which is way less regulated than the one for goods and services

          • @NattyNatty2x4@beehaw.org
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            211 months ago

            There’s nothing to be careful about, it’s absolutely true. Democracy isn’t flawless and is capable of leading to demagogues and reality-denying lunatics coming to power precisely because humans aren’t rational actors. But just because democracy isn’t perfect doesn’t mean it’s worse than the other systems we’ve come up with.

      • It’s not so simple. If my parents stopped buying iPhones, they would need to replace their watches, their TV streaming device, their car chargers, and all their apps. You can’t expect normal people to collectively switch from an ecosystem designed around lock-in.

        • @jcarax@beehaw.org
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          911 months ago

          How is it not so simple, when all that still falls under them being anti-competitive assholes?

          Consumer based regulation only works when consumers care enough to have a sense of dignity about it.

        • HTTP_404_NotFound
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          711 months ago

          replace their watches,

          Never really got the craze around smart watches.

          their TV streaming device

          if your streaming device requires you to have a certain type of phone to use, you should replace it regardless. Roku/AndroidTV/etc… They don’t care WHAT type of device you try to stream media from. Have an IPhone? Sure. Android? No problem. Blackberry? That might not work.

          their car chargers

          Wait until you realize any 5$ charging cord from the corner store can charge your phone, and connect it to your car!

          all their apps

          Most of those work just fine on android. Just swapped my Dad’s phone from apple to android a few months ago, and was able to find all of his apps without any issues.

    • @HairHeel@programming.dev
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      The real test on this one is going to be in how well those regulations support the eventual transition from USB-C to something else.

      There’s inevitably going to be a use case for new connectors that have some yet-unidentified advantage over USB-C for certain devices, and there’s going to be hurdles convincing regulators to grant exceptions for those devices or to adopt one of them as the new standard for everybody.

      There’s plenty of examples of government regulations gone wrong trying to transition from an old technology to a new one. (i.e. the REAL ID format in the US, or the switch from analog to digital broadcast TV).

      • @NattyNatty2x4@beehaw.org
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        11 months ago

        The regulation is worded to require whatever the USB-IF currently requires, which is what companies that adopted USB already follow. The concern here died before the ink on the law even dried.

    • @cultsuperstar@lemmy.mlB
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      811 months ago

      Earlier rumors speculated that Apple would cripple it via software, either restricting charging speed, data transfer, or both.

  • @noddy@beehaw.org
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    7111 months ago

    EU is the real MVP. Hoping that a few more years now and we’ll have iphone with USB C, app sideloading, user replacable battery. I’ve never owned an iphone before but if that happens, I might consider one.

    • @Overzeetop@beehaw.org
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      If you don’t need access to iMessage or are not part of the iCloud ecosystem (i.e. do most/all of your work on a Mac), it’s still not worth it. I switched ~3-4 years ago for iMessage and the Lidar sensor. The lidar is shit for technical work, or really anything other than the simplest in-phone diversions. If iMessage were available on Android I’d almost certainly swap back. It’s not that the phone is bad, per se, just that there are weird limitations that pop up from time to time that wouldn’t exist with an Android device.

      Edit: I was going to jump on the 15 for the USBC, but I’ll probably wait for the hype to die down unless I get a sweetheart upgrade deal from my provider. My airpod case is still lightning, so there’s no economy for me in getting my phone switched over.

        • @Overzeetop@beehaw.org
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          311 months ago

          Good to know. That’s an interesting app all around.

          I moved because of the insular iMessage (including facetime) system my family uses, and have tried several hacks over the years prior to access it on my phone/desktop. During the time we were auditioning apps, there simply wasn’t a more reliable mobile system that worked on iOS with the features we wanted (and, trust me, I tried several).

      • @noddy@beehaw.org
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        411 months ago

        I don’t really care about imessage or icloud. But apple have a much better track record for providing updates for old iphones. Android is quite enshittified these days. Filled with sponsored unremovable apps, abandonware stock rom, and if you try to use something else like lineage os, it is no longer possible to use banking apps etc. Really all iphone need for me to consider it is sideloading apps which is presumably on its way.

        • @Overzeetop@beehaw.org
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          11 months ago

          [edit - my first response was combative; I didn’t intend it to be]

          Sadly, iOS is filled with sponsored, unremovable apps - the only difference is that they are Apple branded. I lock down my notifications pretty hard, and I generally don’t subscribe to streaming media. I get regular, invasive pop-ups to join Apple Music and Apple TV+. You can’t turn those off, you can’t uninstall them. Yes, they keep devices updated for longer, but once you fall out of that period almost none of the apps will work anymore and you can’t get versions that will work with your OS revision until you’re left with a brick (it’s happened on multiple iPads for me). It may be the lesser evil, but it’s still annoying at times.

          • @noddy@beehaw.org
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            111 months ago

            Damn that’s a bummer. So the strategy of all the tech corporations now is to annoy us into paying yet another subscription.

    • @Sodis@feddit.de
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      211 months ago

      This and we are gonna have replaceable batteries in the future as well. Thanks EU!

    • @CobraChicken@lemmy.ca
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      5511 months ago

      This is not sad. Progress is progress.

      Good on EU to force their hand, we should be cheering for regulatory agencies making life better for consumers.

      • Echo Dot
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        611 months ago

        It’s depressing that they were forced into it rather than realising for themselves that it’s bad for their own consumers to continue to have to use their crappy proprietary port. Of course they don’t care they make money out of lightning and that’s all that matters.

    • @erwan@lemmy.ml
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      1711 months ago

      Wait until you hear the same Apple fans who kept repeating the iPhone is better because of the lightning port suddenly praise Apple’s genius to switch to USB-C.

      • @d3Xt3r@lemmy.nz
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        I can’t wait to see tweets from people claiming that Apple invented the USB-C port.

        • @SnowdenHeroOfOurTime@unilem.org
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          Ya know what’s ironic actually? They were one of the companies that helped create that standard. They just couldn’t be bothered to use it as long as they could make a buck filling up landfills with their proprietary bullshit.

      • DJDarren
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        411 months ago

        As an iPhone user since the 3GS, I couldn’t really give a shit which port my phone has, because I almost never actually use it. Data transfer is usually via iCloud or Airdrop, and charging is almost always on my MagSafe stand.

        That said, it’ll be nice for my next phone to be able to use the same USB-C adapters that I have for my MacBook for those odd occasions they’re needed.

      • Echo Dot
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        211 months ago

        The lightning port is literally the USB-C standard but with a bunch of features removed, a lower max voltage rate, and it’s less safe. It’s not going to blow up on you, but it is less safe then usb-c.

      • @Swarfega@lemm.ee
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        211 months ago

        I don’t. But their hardware is top notch. Fuck Apple. I like my Google Pixel. But fuck Google too.

    • @Thorny_Thicket@sopuli.xyz
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      611 months ago

      Not saying it’s the right thing to do but sticking to lightning was more profitable to them due to licencing fees. Switching to usbc means they’re losing money

    • @boonhet@lemm.ee
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      211 months ago

      Their 10 years of no charger port change promise hadn’t yet expired 5 years ago. So it sure would’ve been news if they’d broken it. In fact it ran out a year ago, so I guess they went 11 years.

  • @lichtmetzger@feddit.de
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    6311 months ago

    One of the good things coming out of the EU.

    I still wonder if Apple will do a split between EU iPhones and the rest of the world, though. Lightning accessories make money.

    • CleoTheWizard
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      3411 months ago

      It makes them a very small amount of money. But they’ve also been rumored to be making iPhones use a “Made for Apple” type of cable for faster charging speeds. I think that would be really dumb but here we are.

      • @moitoi@feddit.de
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        1611 months ago

        making iPhones use a “Made for Apple” type of cable for faster charging speeds

        They can’t do that. The iPhone must comply with PD.

        • @ArtificialLink@lemmy.ml
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          1011 months ago

          Yes they can. Its just all about labeling. They can label a cable that fits to the standard and say “made for apple”

          • @moitoi@feddit.de
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            2511 months ago

            No, the regulation isn’t just usb-c, it’s usb-c and power delivery. Apple can’t magically escape both of them with a “made for apple” cable. It must accept all third party cable and charger.

            • Rootiest
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              11 months ago

              Of course they can:

              USB -PD support at limited speeds.

              A proprietary Apple chip enables higher speeds, either using USB-PD still or another proprietary charging protocol.

              They can just have both

              • @Oneser@lemm.ee
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                2611 months ago

                As I commented above, the regulation clearly states “any additional charging protocol allows for the full functionality of PD… irrespective of the charging device used.”

                So they can’t have both unless they split EU & RoW devices.

                • CleoTheWizard
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                  1211 months ago

                  I hadn’t heard this. Good on the EU not letting them squirrel out of this (hopefully)

                • @HairHeel@programming.dev
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                  211 months ago

                  The question is more about “how much” of PD they support right? Like PD has standards for charging at higher or lower currents.

                  My understanding of the current-gen MacBook Pro is that they support some kind of “fast charging”, but only if you use their MagSafe port. You can still charge on the USB-C ports, but not as fast as you could with MagSafe. I’m not sure if that’s a violation of the regulations, or if PD simply doesn’t have support for the amount of power they’re pushing through the MagSafe.

                  But I think the point is that they’ll continue to look for ways to offer a better experience with their proprietary stuff, even if they’re forced to support a standard in addition.

              • @moitoi@feddit.de
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                1311 months ago

                No:

                In so far as they are capable of being recharged via wired charging at voltages higher than 5 volts, currents higher than 3 amperes or powers higher than 15 watts, the categories or classes of radio equipment referred to in point 1 letters a) to m) shall:

                (a) incorporate the USB Power Delivery, as described in the standard EN IEC 62680-1- 2:2021 ‘Universal serial bus interfaces for data and power - Part 1-2: Common components - USB Power Delivery specification’;

                (b) ensure that any additional charging protocol allows the full functionality of the USB Power Delivery referred to in point (a), irrespective of the charging device used.

                https://data.consilium.europa.eu/doc/document/ST-10713-2022-INIT/x/pdf

          • AnonTwo
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            411 months ago

            Wouldn’t that be false advertising? It needs some internal feature that makes it faster, and there’s no way it’ll naturally be faster than a regular USB-C.

            • @ArtificialLink@lemmy.ml
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              111 months ago

              How is it false advertising? Apple makes a cord to spec and standard and slaps a “made for apple” tag line on it. Its just marketing. Nothing special about the cable. Its just a way to ensure apple fanboys buy it.

              • AnonTwo
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                211 months ago

                making iPhones use a “Made for Apple” type of cable for faster charging speeds

                The bolded part is the problematic bit.

      • Rootiest
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        1411 months ago

        At least then there will be no more confusion over who’s fault it is when your iPhone doesn’t charge as fast as you’d like.

        It’s always been Apple’s fault, but now there will be no more saying it’s because Lightning is somehow better.

        • CleoTheWizard
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          1311 months ago

          I’ll give them some fairness. When lightning originally launched, it was a great interface for lightweight power delivery and was more sturdy than the deplorable micro USB. I can’t explain just how bad microUSB is. So it made sense. I think USB-C just put in the legwork to be a much better adapter.

          Also the giant plot hole missing here is that Apple sits on the USB forum I believe and so has some say in what the billions of devices they produce use to charge. They just can’t make money off of a standard now.

          • @BobKerman3999@feddit.it
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            Don’t be silly. I have an iPad mini with lightning and had a ton of phones with miniUSB and had exactly zero problems with any of them. (I still have that iPad because I couldn’t sell it without losing a ton of money and I never found a use case other than watching movies for a tablet so I didn’t buy another)

            • 🦘min0nim🦘
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              1111 months ago

              Well my anecdote is that every single micro USB device I have has either a stuffed port or stuffs the cable. Those things are so incredibly flimsy.

              • @snowbell@beehaw.org
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                I hate microUSB so much. I always feel like I have to treat microUSB ports like fine china or they will break on me. That nervous anticipation every time you plug something in that this will be the time it finally breaks. Too bad mini USB ports had that problem with getting loose over time.

            • snowe
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              411 months ago

              As someone that has soldered micro USB, mini USB, and USB c, micro and mini are absolutely horrendous. They fail constantly, so much so that they were literally deprecated one after the other due to their failure rates.

              Lightning was perfect for the devices it was used in. Apple never split it out into laptops because that wasn’t its purpose, it’s incredibly thin and incredibly durable. USB C is pretty durable but not thin. I actually love the lightning port for how durable it is. The biggest problems with it are:

              1. It’s proprietary. Proprietary stuff sucks
              2. Apple’s brand cables are expensive junk that fall apart because design overrides functionality

              USB c is great, for laptops and headphones and general peripheral connectors. It’s got a fuck ton of problems though, because you can literally have identical cables that do not have the same features. I had to buy a device to test USB C cables to determine what features they support. Also, did you know USB C is directional? Well it can be at least. I didn’t know that until the cable I soldered up only worked in a single direction.

      • @erwan@lemmy.ml
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        311 months ago

        Don’t worry, Apple fans will happily buy an official charger for 3x the price even if third party work perfectly well.

  • 🦊 OneRedFox 🦊
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    6111 months ago

    Hot damn! Thank you, EU. Maybe we’ll finally be able to climb out of connector hell.

    • ultratiem
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      911 months ago

      The beauty is that it will start extending to devices like notebooks. So goodbye those stupid barrel plugs most still use that all vary in size for whatever goddam reason.

      Mice too. Why no one makes usbc dongles is just insane to me. Even if it was an extra $10 give us the option.

    • @erwan@lemmy.ml
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      611 months ago

      I’m already out of the connector hell for several years by buying only devices with USB-C.

      The iPhone doesn’t have USB-C, I don’t even consider buying one.

      • @nathris@lemmy.ca
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        211 months ago

        My new connector hell is trying to find a micro usb cable to charge that one device I still have that uses it.

  • glennglog22
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    Hm. For some reason, I felt like Apple was going to be petty enough to only make phones with USB-C ports exclusively for EU territories and leave the rest of the world with proprietary ports. Good for them for not doing that I guess.

    • DarkThoughts
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      4011 months ago

      It’s simply cheaper for them not to have two different devices.

      • @hahapeepeepoopooooo@lemmy.ml
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        811 months ago

        They kinda already do different physical models for different regions. NA has no SIM card slot, China requires 2, rest of the world gets 1.

        With that being said, charging ports might be a different beast.

        • Echo Dot
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          411 months ago

          That’s easy though because they just swap out a daughter board but with apples design the charge port is soldered directly onto the main board so they have to change that and it’s probably easy to not do that.

          Very few phones actually have daughter boards for the charging port. Pretty much the only ones that are phones aimed at repairability.

    • @Djinn@lemm.ee
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      411 months ago

      If that were the cheaper thing to do I have no doubt they would’ve done it. Personally, I figured they were more likely go portless/wireless charging before being forced to USB-C but I guess that’s not entirely feasible yet.

  • @MangoKangaroo@beehaw.org
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    4111 months ago

    Watch them roll with the most barebones feature set possible just so they can point and say, “see, lightning was obviously better!”

    • @cordlesslamp@lemmy.today
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      2811 months ago

      There’s no point for Apple to self sabotage like that. Why make your new shiny $1500 phone look bad just to praise a discontinued products? Switching back to Lightning is impossible. Better to just move on with it and because it’s Apple, they will more likely to pull some bullshit like “Reinventing USB-C” or “The Best USB-C in the world”.

      Apple would rather just ditch all physical ports and move to 100% wireless than praising Lightning over USB-C.

      • @MangoKangaroo@beehaw.org
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        1011 months ago

        Remember that this is Apple, the company which has already been crippling its phones with lightning for the past decade(?). Although you’re probably right about them just going with whatever and then marketing the crap out of it.

        As for ditching all physical ports, I was honestly thinking that’d probably be the road they’d go just to spite the EU. Oh well, I guess there’s always next gen?

        • snowe
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          811 months ago

          Crippling? Lightning is way easier to use than usb c and USB C literally didn’t even exist a decade ago, no clue what you’re on about. Yeah USB C is really nice, but lightning doesn’t get junk in the ports and in general is a much sturdier connector and for the time was a much better option than all the other ports. I didn’t even use apple at the time and it was clearly superior to things like usb superspeed and all the other proprietary junk that other manufacturers had.

          • @MangoKangaroo@beehaw.org
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            11 months ago

            lightning doesn’t get junk in the ports

            How the heck are you getting gunk in your USB C ports? 🤨

            for the time

            Indeed, it was probably fine ten years ago. But, as Mac Address (among many others) rightly pointed out, transferring gigabytes of HD video over a shoddy USB 2.0 line is a less-than-ideal experience.

            way easier to use than usb c

            How?

            • Auk
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              11 months ago

              How the heck are you getting gunk in your USB C ports? 🤨

              How are you not getting lint and dust in your USB C ports? Not really a problem with computers due to the cleaner usage environment but I have to clean out the port on my phone every few months or the cable will start losing connection at the slightest bump.

              I wouldn’t expect Lightning is immune from this either but it likely is less of an issue there due to having less narrow gaps for lint to get caught in the port.

              • @MangoKangaroo@beehaw.org
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                11 months ago

                I don’t know, but given the apparent volume of people having this issue I’m starting to think I might just have a special talent. Maybe my case is getting in the way?

                Edit: okay I actually went and shined a light in my Pixel 7 Pro’s port. It has the tiniest bit of dust build-up but nothing that’s prevented my charger from working properly. Unfortunately, my speaker grills have not been so lucky.

              • @Someusernamehuh@reddthat.com
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                411 months ago

                I’ve had my phone for near 4 years now and have never once had to clean out the charging port or the headphone jack for that matter. What are you doing to have that issue?

                • Auk
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                  11 months ago

                  Just carrying it in my pocket all day, nothing unusual. I might get a bit more lint forming or dust falling into my pocket than some people since I have a fairly active job but that applies to many others too. It’s not just a USB-C thing either as I found micro USB to similarly build up stuff inside the port. Headphone jacks I never had a problem with when I had a phone or mp3 player with one, I guess they’re less prone to this issue.

                  Edit: Never had issues with lint build up in the old Nokia charger port either, micro USB was the first port I really noticed it happening with.

            • snowe
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              211 months ago

              How the heck are you getting gunk in your USB C ports? 🤨

              I’m not, but other commenters in this thread are. And with the internal pin in the female connector you have a much higher risk of damage, also the connector is larger. Also have you never had lint get into a phone connector in your pocket? That was a huge issue for years with my Android phones. I had it fuck up my Dell streak port all the time.

              I have an iPhone and have never had anything get stuck in the port, unlike all the Android stuff I’ve owned. But like I said, other commenters in here are complaining about things getting stuck in their USB C ports.

              Indeed, it was probably fine ten years ago. But, as Mac Address (among many others) rightly pointed out, transferring gigabytes of HD video over a shoddy USB 2.0 line is a less-than-ideal experience.

              Huh? Why in the world would you be doing that? And shoddy? Haha dude, usb 2 ran the world fine fora decade and continues to work fine today. Lightning supports up to USB 3 anyway, but USB C came out and they didn’t bother expanding their cable selection.

              How?

              No need to worry about whether the cable you’re using supports PD, bidirectionality, hdmi, etc. All lightning cables are the same. Power and data. I literally have a device to plug usb c cables into to verify what they support. Even Android news sites agree it’s a mess.

              I’ve soldered up USB C cables. They’re not “it just works” like lightning is. I don’t even use lightning anymore since I wireless charge everything but apple not putting usb c on their phones is completely inconsequential and really not the massive deal everyone thinks it is.

              • @MangoKangaroo@beehaw.org
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                11 months ago

                Also have you never had lint get into a phone connector in your pocket?

                No.

                Huh? Why in the world would you be doing that? And shoddy? Haha dude, usb 2 ran the world fine fora decade and continues to work fine today. Lightning supports up to USB 3 anyway, but USB C came out and they didn’t bother expanding their cable selection.

                Because some people actually use their iPhone to record videos, since the iPhone has a pretty damn good video camera. I’ll just link this excerpt from Mac Address that I hinted at before.

                No need to worry about whether the cable you’re using supports PD, bidirectionality, hdmi, etc. All lightning cables are the same. Power and data.

                USB C is a mess, sure. But if your solution to that is to try and justify sticking with an old, proprietary standard that supports only a fraction of the features of the competitor, then I guess it’s your money to burn.

                • snowe
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                  010 months ago

                  USB C is a mess, sure. But if your solution to that is to try and justify sticking with an old, proprietary standard that supports only a fraction of the features of the competitor, then I guess it’s your money to burn.

                  I most definitely am not doing that. Lightning was good for the time, and the benefits of USB C now are overwhelming (compared to a few years ago). What I am talking about is the blatant whitewashing of the past. USB C didn’t exist, and the lightning cable was amazing for what it replaced. Absolutely astounding honestly. And the connector still is. But time moves on. But lots of people love to hate on Apple and just completely ignore history.

          • DJDarren
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            711 months ago

            Also, I feel like not enough people appreciate just how much shit Apple got for moving everything from the 30 pin to Lightning. There was a barrage of comments across the message boards from people bitching about how they’d have to replace their iPod docks and all the cables they’d amassed. There was no way Apple would have gone through that again lightly to switch to a new standard that wasn’t mature.

            • snowe
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              211 months ago

              I completely agree. It was terrible how bad all the connectors were (including that fucking 30 pin, my god I hated that fucking thing) before lightning. This includes micro and mini USB.

              • DJDarren
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                211 months ago

                I quite like the 30 pin, though that may be because I coveted iPods at the time but couldn’t afford one. I had a couple of Sony hard disc Walkman, which seemed to have a different connector every damn time, meaning you couldn’t buy one dock like you could with an iPod. On top of that, it was a solid connection that clicked nicely every time. But yeah, ya boy was wiiiiiide. I have a dozen of them knocking about now, as my little collection of iPods grows…

                Also, it’s hilarious that Samsung straight up copied the 30 pin for their original Tab, but flipped the pin position so the cables weren’t interchangeable.

          • @erwan@lemmy.ml
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            311 months ago

            They released lightning about 3 years before the first USB-C phones, so they could have worked with the standard, delay the connector switch a bit, and use USB-C. They could even have released the first USB-C phone if they’re so keen on being “innovative”.

            That would have save their users from 10 years of incompatible connectors.

            But Apple never cared about standards, on the contrary they choose lock-in over standards whenever they can.

            • snowe
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              111 months ago

              I really cannot tell if you’re joking or not…

              They released lightning about 3 years before the first USB-C phones

              3 and a half years before the first usb c phones showed up in china. It was 4 years until it showed up anywhere else.

              so they could have worked with the standard,

              They literally did work together to create the standard.

              delay the connector switch a bit,

              You seriously have to be joking. Stop working on getting rid of their shit 30 pin connector that everyone had been complaining about for literally a decade? Why in the world would they stop development for something that was never guaranteed to actually make it out of a standards body? Standards don’t just pop up at a set time. They had no clue USB Type-C would succeed or if it did, how long it would take. Not only that, but it’s not like they just started developing lightning in 2012. They had to have been developing it for several years, along with the phones to go with it. This is honestly the most ridiculous suggestion I think I’ve seen in this thread.

              They could even have released the first USB-C phone if they’re so keen on being “innovative”.

              … they were innovative. They released the first symmetrical connector for a phone, ~4 years before anyone else. Theirs was (and still is) thinner and more robust than other phone connectors. You’re literally just trying to rewrite history.

              That would have save their users from 10 years of incompatible connectors.

              dude… like… are you seriously joking? why in the world do you think this?

              But Apple never cared about standards, on the contrary they choose lock-in over standards whenever they can.

              … this is where you clearly reveal that you are ignorant on this topic. Apple (and every tech giant) collaborates on standards all the time. Please. seriously. Go look at any standard and you will find apple, google, facebook, etc. on the standards body.

              You might go ‘oh iMessage’. Well apple did try to create a standard for iMessage. Carriers didn’t want it

              Just because you believe all the apple hate doesn’t mean it’s true. Just like believing that Google sells your data doesn’t mean it’s true. Sometimes you have to research stuff yourself.

    • @supercriticalcheese@feddit.it
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      511 months ago

      iPad Pro (2020 model onwards if I recall correctly) already uses USB type C already so it shouldn’t be any different.

      I could charge my android phone with it for example and in couple occasions I have done so.

      • @bric@lemm.ee
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        211 months ago

        Honestly, the fact that apple used usb-c on it’s “pro” iPads but not the regular iPad is all the proof we need that even apple thinks usb-c is better

        • DJDarren
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          211 months ago

          It’s likely more to do with the iPad Pro architecture being essentially the same as a MacBooks. Makes it easier to produce multiple devices based on the same components. But they kept Lightning on the cheaper devices because the people using them are less likely to care how they (very infrequently) plug stuff in.

    • zeroxxx
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      411 months ago

      Not gonna happen.

      They are a perfectionist company.

  • Plume (She/Her)
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    3011 months ago

    I wonder how they’re going to announce it at their keynote. Because Apple was strong armed into doing this they didn’t want to. At all. They kicked and screamed the whole way but they did comply.

    So. Will they present it as an evolution like they almost invented the thing? Will they be passive aggressive about it? Or will they just say nothing about it.

    I’m also expecting Apple to basically use the worst USB-C standard possible, which, just like Lightning, will basically be USB 2 in terms of speeds and so on. At least on the non-pro models. :/

    • @gapbetweenus@feddit.de
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      2111 months ago

      Apple actually pioneered and pushed USB-C use with their Macbooks which had only USB-C ports. Pretty sure they kept lightning out of pure greed.

      • @upstream@beehaw.org
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        811 months ago

        Yup, and as far as I can tell they still require custom chips for “made for iPhone” approval.

        The lighting port has one good thing though, it’s robust and easy to clean. I’ve cleaned my fair share of dirty charging ports on phones and USB-C is a bitch to clean sometimes. Really depends on what you have at hand.

        Also funny to hear when people replace their phones because the USB port was dirty (cable doesn’t stick and the “phone just doesn’t charge anymore”. A toothpick and a blast of compressed air later and the phone is as good as new.

        • Chewy
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          111 months ago

          Yes USB is annoying to clean. We were on a trip and had nothing at hand except a piece of a plastic zip tie lying on the ground which worked wonders. It took a while though.

      • Plume (She/Her)
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        511 months ago

        That Macbook was too ahead of its time… 12 inches was such a good size. It was so thin, too. Wish they’d make a MacBook SE or some sort and bring it back with an M1 or M2 chip in it.

        • Barry Zuckerkorn
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          211 months ago

          You’re 100% right.

          The 12" MacBook had a great form factor right at the time that Intel CPUs really started to struggle with performance at lower power consumption, so the design turned into a huge weakness for thermal management. If they had similar performance per watt as the base M1 later showed off, that device would’ve been perfect for an ultraportable laptop, the spiritual successor to the discontinued 11" MacBook Air.

      • @Aurailious@beehaw.org
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        411 months ago

        I thought I read there was an agreement with accessory manufacturers about keeping the same port for 10 years. Because they didn’t want to run into previous issue of the iPod pin port being discontinued quickly.

    • @worfamerryman@beehaw.org
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      911 months ago

      They will probably introduce some dock to monitor mode that is super limited in functionality and talk about how they just couldn’t get it working right with lightning or something.

      • Plume (She/Her)
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        311 months ago

        Honestly, some kind of dock that would turn iOS into iPadOS on a display sounds kinda neat.

          • Plume (She/Her)
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            111 months ago

            It’s Apple we’re talking about, I’m being realistic. Plus, that would require two OSes on the device. iPadOS is not really another OS, just iOS for larger devices.

            • @worfamerryman@beehaw.org
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              111 months ago

              Samsung is doing it with Dex. I don’t think MacOS and iOS are that different anymore. I’m not saying there isn’t work to do, but it’s far from being outside of Apples ability.

      • 𝒍𝒆𝒎𝒂𝒏𝒏
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        411 months ago

        I think they’re going to hint at it for a few seconds and very quickly move on. I wonder how it’s going to affect MFI products though

        • Irina
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          611 months ago

          They wanted to software-limit non-MFI usb cables, not sure if the EU will stop them in time.

          • @mici01@feddit.de
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            711 months ago

            They already stopped them … the EU law that mandetes the USB-C conenctor also mandates support of USB-PD if the device supports fast charging.

          • @probably@beehaw.org
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            511 months ago

            Iirc the EU said it was expected to have feature parity between apple and non apple cables.

            Also, if they did that, it would be a characteristic that makes iphones look worse than android. Just imagine being an iphone owner needing a charger and your friend hands you their fast charging android one only for it to be slow as piss for you right after they spent 10 minutes getting 40% charge.

  • @maeries@feddit.de
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    2911 months ago

    I’m really curious how apple will present that on stage. If they say anything positive about the change everyone will ask why they didn’t do it sooner. But they also can’t just not say anything about it

    • @silentdon@beehaw.org
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      3011 months ago

      They’ll do like they always do and pretend it’s the greatest, most innovative feature ever. They’ll probably give it a hip new name like ‘light speed port’ and make it only compatible with Apple-branded products.

      • @itsmikeyd@lemmy.ml
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        11 months ago

        The EU specifically disallowed that in their terms.

        • Harmonised fast charging technology will help prevent that different producers unjustifiably limit the charging speed and will help to ensure that charging speed is the same when using any compatible charger for a device.

        Source

    • @moitoi@feddit.de
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      2311 months ago

      Two possibilities:

      • It’s a revolution. They give it a specific name and blablabla.
      • They don’t say anything.
    • Dandroid
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      2211 months ago

      I think there’s a good chance that they act like it was their idea and that they are doing a the world a huge favor by switching.

      • @snowbell@beehaw.org
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        I don’t know what people don’t understand about this. Lighting is way better than microUSB, the only other option at the time. I cant imagine how many accessories will be rendered useless or at least inconvenient to use after this change. Probably gonna be an ewaste disaster.

        It doesn’t really matter anyway, how many people really care about the port they have to plug their phone into at the end of the day as long as it works? I’ll admit I used to care A LOT but I just don’t anymore, bigger fish to fry and all.

        • Can-Utility
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          211 months ago

          I cant imagine how many accessories will be rendered useless or at least inconvenient to use after this change. Probably gonna be an ewaste disaster.

          On the upside, everyone in this thread bitching about Apple hanging on to Lightning for all these years will have something new to hate them for, thus maintaining balance in the universe.

    • @Jearom@beehaw.org
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      1311 months ago

      My guess is they spend less than 60 seconds on it, in the same way they talked about it when it came to the iPad Pro in 2018: https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=bfHEnw6Rm-4&t=3309

      In summary: “We changed a thing. It’s a big deal but also not. Here are three benefits this change brings for users. Also this other benefit. On to the next thing.”

    • GunnarRunnar
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      911 months ago

      My understanding is that USB-C as a standard is pretty all over the place. Some can fast charge etc. So my guess is that Apple will come up with some superduper performance USB-C or they’ll at least present it as such. And why not sooner? Because they were in the lab perfecting it.

      • @evatronic@lemm.ee
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        1511 months ago

        USBC is a hot god damned mess.

        The C describes only the shape of the connector.

        The numbered specification (“2.0”, “3.0”) describes the speed.

        But USBC can also do non-USB protocols like HDMI and Thunderbolt and DisplayPort.

        • @thejml@lemm.ee
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          511 months ago

          This is why I haven’t really been clamoring for this change. USB-C SUPPORTS cool things, but doesn’t guarantee that it’ll be available to use. Most of the time that’s a silent fallback, but I’ve seen a lot of odd things with USB-C cables and chargers in the past, all followed the standard, the standard just allows for only supporting partial feature sets.

          At least with Lightning I know what I’m getting. I’ve got usb-c cables that don’t support 1.1 data lines for keyboards or mice, yet pass 40gbit. I’ve got chargers that support, in fine print, high output at 5v, 9v and 20v, but plug a 12v device in and it negotiates it down to 5v. Etc. and these are all brand name things. I even have a cable that supports more if you flip It over than it does on the other side.

          I really hope D is better, but I also kinda hope they don’t call it D…

        • @erwan@lemmy.ml
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          211 months ago

          Things got better as manufacturers now implement the standard correctly.

          Nowadays you can plug any device to any charger and the worse that can happen is your device not charging fast enough (sometimes actually discharging).

          So if you get a powerful enough charger, you’ll be able to charge all your devices.

          And yes, you can also do video out and for that you need to check the compatibility of your devices but it’s still not that bad, compared to the days where you could fry a device by using the wrong charger.

      • @Kazumara@feddit.de
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        11 months ago

        USB Type-C is not all over the place, it’s a pretty normal connector standard, that was updated a few times.

        What may be confusing to is that there are also two other relevant standards:

        • USB Power Delivery 2.0 and its updates
        • USB 3.0 and its updates

        Both of these standards require the USB Type-C connector for some of their features. Sometimes in a specific revision, for example at least USB Type-C Rev 2.1 is required for the Extendend Power Range introduced in USB Power Delivery 3.1 for charging at more than 100W.

        Furthermore USB 3.1 has absorbed USB 3.0 and USB 3.2 has absorbed USB 3.1. Each time they renamed the old connection speeds. For example a USB 3.2 Gen 1×1 connection used to be called a USB 3.1 Gen 1 connection and before USB 3.1 came out it was called a USB 3.0 connection.

        Finally USB Type-C has so called alternate modes, where the lanes for SuperSpeed USB can instead be assigned to carry other protocols, like DisplayPort.

        Since very few features are actually required to be supported, and marketing managers are apparently allergic to precision, it’s hard to find out what feature is supported on which interface for any given device.

        • @Swedneck@discuss.tchncs.de
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          311 months ago

          I think what confuses people is precisely the fact that we finally have one universal connector, because previously each connector basically only had one set of standards.

          USB-C is a victim of its own success

        • snowe
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          111 months ago

          It is all over the place. The connector allows for all of those things and doesn’t guarantee any of them. Along with that cables don’t even have a guarantee of being bidirectional, a problem with the usb c spec, not with the USB standards.

          Also you kind of proved the point. USB C is confusing because it pretends to be universal (see literally the hundreds of comments in this thread) even though it most definitely isn’t.

          • @Kazumara@feddit.de
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            111 months ago

            USB C is confusing because it pretends to be universal

            In reality USB Type-C is only a connector, not all the features people associate with it. Of course it’s going to be confusing if you insist on mushing the concepts up in your head even after an explanation. Just accept that there are at least four different things, Type-C, USB 3.2, Alternate Modes and USB PD, and start thinking in those categories.

            • snowe
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              111 months ago

              Dude. The connector allows for different sets of pins. This is not mushing up different concepts. I’ve actually soldered usb c connectors. I’ve even designed PCBs that needed to support PD. Have you read the USB spec? I have. It’s clear you don’t actually understand how complicated the connector itself is.

      • JoeCoT
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        11 months ago

        For sure, they’ll make some spec that isn’t very compatible with lots of cables, chargers, devices, etc. But, it will charge. A normal usb c cable might not Super Ultra Mega Charge your iPhone like an apple cable and adapter would, but it will charge, and vice-versa. That’s basically what we have with usb-c standards currently, though.

      • Neato
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        211 months ago

        It depends what the device supports. It’s on Apple to implement the standard to the fullest extent the device can utilize. If they don’t implement fast charging, that’s on them. There was a lot of complaints when the Nintendo Switch came out because they didn’t implement all the features.

    • @June@lemm.ee
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      111 months ago

      I’m confident Apple will use whatever the currently top performing variant of usb-c is.

  • @HeavyRaptor@lemmy.zip
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    2611 months ago

    Next up: allow side loading!

    I might actually consider getting an iPhone.

    (it’s crazy you still cannot get a version of Firefox with both adblock and bookmarks sync on ios)

      • @Swedneck@discuss.tchncs.de
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        1311 months ago

        extra annoying because in software we have semantic versioning which is objectively better for all purposes other than marketing.

        • @SkyeStarfall@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          811 months ago

          Semantic versioning isn’t useful for all kinds of software. Plenty intentionally choose to not use it. Look at the Linux kernel, for example.

    • @CobraChicken@lemmy.ca
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      2211 months ago

      You simply cant win. People make fun of Xbox fand Windows for having non sequential names, and iPhone gets berated for having a naming scheme that’s sensical, easy to follow and date

      • @cordlesslamp@lemmy.today
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        Yup, out of all the things I hate about Apple, their iPhone’s naming scheme is something I wish other brands would follow (including Apple with thier other devices).

        Apple iPad on the other hand, is a completely mess.

        To OP, what’s wrong with sequential names? I look at an iphone and i know exactly when they were released and their relative performance to other iphone models. Why is it a bad thing?

        • DJDarren
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          311 months ago

          Remember the New iPad, or the 3rd gen iPad as literally everyone called it?

          Apple did try to simplify in the same way they did with Macs, but then they fragmented the iPad line so much that it was difficult to keep up, so now you have “12.9” 2022 iPad Pro" as opposed to “5th gen iPad Air”.

          Still, it’s better than the abominations that Sony come out with. Looking at you, WH-1000XM4 headphones, or Bravia KD55X75WL (2023).

      • @Swedneck@discuss.tchncs.de
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        1211 months ago

        that makes a lot more sense, it looks better and you get the well-proven benefit of bigger numbers.

        Eventually you get to S3000 and that’s when you know you’ve made it

        • @TheButtonJustSpins
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          2011 months ago

          I’m not buying another Samsung until it’s over 9000.

        • @hazeebabee@slrpnk.net
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          1511 months ago

          I think samsung is going with the year as the name now. They skipped to s20, but then have going with s21 s22 s23 etc.

          • @Bartsbigbugbag@lemmy.ml
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            1611 months ago

            Having worked internally to Samsung at that time, I can confidently say, no, it isn’t. They did it so that their number wouldn’t be behind apples anymore.

  • Echo Dot
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    2111 months ago

    Yes because wireless charging is still very inefficient. Most of the energy seems to go into cooking your phone for you rather than actually recharging the battery.

    It’s fine for a quick top-up but if you want your phone to go from flat to 30% in 15 minutes you’re going to need wired charging for the foreseeable future.

    Going over to full wineless charging would have been very anti-consumer. Not that I’m going to get an Apple device, but I’m glad that they didn’t try and screw people over on that one.

    • @TeamAssimilation
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      11 months ago

      We changed to USB-C ports because the EU forced us we have courage!