The majority of non-Apple laptops you can go out and buy still use manufacturer-specific barrel jack adapters (or those weird rectangular ones that Lenovo uses).
This is amazing news. Apple will never voluntarily give up the licensing revenue from mandating Lightning chargers. This puts the onus on consumers, and makes it harder for people to switch ecosystems. A great example of productive regulation.
It's great news right now - but what happens when a newer better standard comes along and now these regulations keep us with the better than lightning but pretty problematic for a multitude of reasons USB-C? One can hope the EU will adapt appropriately, but I'm skeptical.
There's also the very distinct possibility that Apple will just do away with the port entirely, which IMO is also a loss for consumers.
bullshit, fragmentation is a loss for consumers, having standard cable helps everyone stay on the same page and advance at the same pace, avoiding useless waste, and lets everyone reuse their equipment whenever they have to buy a new phone
the future is wireless anyways, so let's move toward that path with the less friction possible
Anecdotally my last pixel died because the USB-C connector wore out. I have an old iPad that once experienced similar use, and it can still hang upsidedown by the lightning connector.
But agreed, hopefully this all goes away with wireless.
> Following a mandate from the European Commission, the European Standardisation Bodies CEN-CENELEC and ETSI have now made available the harmonised standards needed for the manufacture of data-enabled mobile phones compatible with a new common charger
I fully expect apple to make a phone with no ports in the near future, charging or otherwise. I wonder how this will effect a phone that can only charge wirelessly.
USB-C has a very fragile piece in the equipment (the tongue) while the wire-side is quite robust. Lightning is very robust equipment-side and the wire-side is less fragile than the fragile piece in USB-C equipment side. (In fact, the weakest part of lightning cables is the wire's connection to the connectors.)
I don't own any Apple equipment. Nevertheless, I envy that they almost always get connectors right.
Counterpoint: The lightning port has both the locking spring tabs as well as the spring contacts in the receptacle, both of which wear out over time.
I'd much rather replace a cable due to worn out springs than my phone's port.
Now why is Apple holding onto Lightning for iPhones when even the iPad has been transitioned to USB-C? I like the theory that Apple is trying to keep it until they can make an entirely wireless iPhone happen, but the failure of AirPower [1] was likely a factor in delaying this transition further than planned.
Hopefully, they won't pick a wireless power standard too soon. We're still in the phase where proprietary solutions are fixing real deficiencies, and not just making arbitrarily different shapes to sell more stuff.
>> Apple was not immediately available for comment. It has previously said the inappropriate use of dated international standards stifles innovation and that forcing users to change to new chargers could create a mountain of electronic waste.
USB-C is superior and allowing users to reuse usb cables (i.e from macbooks) could reduce a mountain of electronic waste.
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[ 3.6 ms ] story [ 65.3 ms ] threadThere's also the very distinct possibility that Apple will just do away with the port entirely, which IMO is also a loss for consumers.
the future is wireless anyways, so let's move toward that path with the less friction possible
But agreed, hopefully this all goes away with wireless.
https://www.thurrott.com/mobile/android/242818/google-pixel-...
my mechanical keyboard uses USB C and bluetooth, i switch modes constantly, and it is still solid today
Circa 2010. Apple had an exemption
https://www.engadget.com/2010-12-29-european-standardization...
https://blogs.oracle.com/utilities/post/how-much-does-it-cos...
https://www.knowyourmobile.com/user-guides/iphone-battery-si...
Even if their charging became half as efficient, it would still be a rounding error compared to the rest of our energy usage.
USB-C has a very fragile piece in the equipment (the tongue) while the wire-side is quite robust. Lightning is very robust equipment-side and the wire-side is less fragile than the fragile piece in USB-C equipment side. (In fact, the weakest part of lightning cables is the wire's connection to the connectors.)
I don't own any Apple equipment. Nevertheless, I envy that they almost always get connectors right.
[1]: https://www.macrumors.com/2019/03/29/apple-officially-cancel...
Connectors are non-trivial.
USB-C is superior and allowing users to reuse usb cables (i.e from macbooks) could reduce a mountain of electronic waste.