iPhone 8 and iPhone X Will Support Fast Charging, But Only If You Buy a New USB-C Charger (9to5mac.com) 144
One little detail Apple didn't mention at its event in Cupertino, California yesterday was the fact that the new iPhones will support fast charging. According to the official tech specs page, the new iPhones can recharge up to 50 percent of their battery life in a 30-minute charge. The catch? You have to use a USB-C charger and Lightning cable (sold separately). 9to5Mac reports: iPhone 8 battery life is roughly equivalent to the iPhone 7 and iPhone 7 Plus. On a full charge, expect up to 12 hours of internet usage on iPhone 8 and iPhone X, with up to 13 hours on iPhone 8 Plus. With a 50% quick charge in 30 minutes, you are effectively gaining hours of additional battery life during the day, even if you only plug in for a short period. However, to take advantage of fast-charging, you cannot use the Lightning to USB-A cable that is bundled in the box. Fast charging requires a USB-C to Lightning cable and the USB-C wall charger. More specifically, one of three USB-C wall chargers. Apple sells 29W, 61W and 87W variants of its USB-C power adapters. Prices range from $49 to $79. Apple doesn't break out specific numbers on how each model affects charging times, it's not clear if the cheapest 29W model can achieve the advertised 50% recharge in 30 minutes.
Re: Super fast charging? (Score:2, Insightful)
annoyed that they didn't put a USB-C connector ON THE DAMN PHONE
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annoyed that they didn't put a USB-C connector ON THE DAMN PHONE
This. I'm already not upgrading from my iPhone 7 plus to a new iPhone due to the headphone jack (back to Android for me). But to not put C on the phone as well is perplexing and counter to my interests. USB-C charging is simply better and messing with special cables for the phone, when I have computers, chargers, music devices (e.g. the Roli Blocks) and other things all with USB-C connectors is not something I will put up with in my near future.
Port-less iPhones Coming (Score:2)
Re: Super fast charging? (Score:2)
That's like saying you have too many 8-track tapes lying around, so you're upset that car manufacturers no longer include an 8-track player.
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Re: Super fast charging? (Score:1)
I have to use my phone for a secure messaging app that is HIPAA compliant. When in the hospital I am using it all day. I routinely burn through the battery on my phone
Re: Super fast charging? (Score:5, Funny)
I routinely burn through the battery on my phone
Oh, a Samsung hey?
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I routinely burn through the battery on my phone
Oh, a Samsung hey?
No no, he said that he burns through the battery on his phone, not that his phone burns the battery through him.
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Samsung's battery tests routinely beat the equivalent i thing by 2 HOURS, but don't let that get in your way of rabid fanboyism.
Just curious, did that rigorous testing mandate come out before or after they released the Samsung Torch?
Samsung's been fast charging for years now.
Obviously Scotty wasn't in the engine room last year when Captain Samsung called for more power.
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Are you so blinded by your knee-jerk biases that you don't get the joke? lemme 'splain it to you. Remember those Samsung phones that burst into flames? And then they fixed them? And they burst into flames again? Thus when you said you burn through your battery (see it coming now?) he wryly put forward that it was a Samsung phone.
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>Side note: is battery efficiency why i users run around with external battery packs to play Pokemon go or similar?
The Pokemon app uses more power. Same with the Ingress app. 3D, GPS, sloppy coding and the screens always on while playing means you can run out in a morning on a fully charged, new device. Our grandkid uses my wife's phone for some 3D game and can empty the battery in an hour, while it'll go for 1.5 days in normal use.
the right thing to do? (Score:5, Insightful)
Of course, the right thing for Apple to do would have been to completely replace the proprietary lightning connectors with the standard USB-C connectors on all of their new device models going forward, but alas, shareholders gotta eat.
Re:the right thing to do? (Score:5, Funny)
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Then you'd just whine about Apple forcing their consumers to buy new cables again, same as when they switched from the dock connector to lighting. But alas, hateboi wankers gotta wank.
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At least iPhones are finally supporting wireless charging, so at worst they can place their devices on a mat regardless of connector.
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Of course, the right thing for Apple to do would have been to completely replace the proprietary lightning connectors with the standard USB-C connectors on all of their new device models going forward, but alas, shareholders gotta eat.
Queen tried to warn them ages ago. "Thunderbolt and lightning, very, very fright'ning..."
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Of course, the right thing for Apple to do would have been to completely replace the proprietary lightning connectors with the standard USB-C connectors on all of their new device models going forward, but alas, shareholders gotta eat.
Call me when the USB-C connector supports Audio Line-out. Until then, please keep counterproductive opinions to yourself.
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They've changed the iPhone connection port once in the entire history of the product and loads of morons still bitch about Apple unnecessarily changing ports and how they only do it to make money on cables.
If you include the entire line of "iDevices" and go all the way back to the original iPod the ports changed twice, from FireWire to 30-pin, and then 30-pin to Lightning. That's over 15+ years. Changing the charger port on such devices every 5 or 10 years doesn't seem excessive to me, especially when the capabilities of the devices have changed considerably in that time and inexpensive adapters are available (for some definition of "inexpensive").
If they changed away from Lightning now, they'd get it all over again. They are damned if they do and damned if they don't.
No doubt. The Lightning connector predates the USB-C connec
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No doubt. The Lightning connector predates the USB-C connector, and the USB-C port isn't really catching on outside of smart phones. As evidence I give the many posts here on Slashdot on Apple putting USB-C ports on their laptops. Which is it? Is USB-C good or is it bad?
The USB-C port is catching on, it's strarting to replace power on most new small laptops (Chromebooks and Ultrabooks).
The complaint with the MacBook Pro was that it's the ONLY port, plus a 3.5mm audio jack. When USB was released motherboards still had Parallel and Serial ports for a while, when HDMI was released VGA didn't die instantly on Laptops. Apple skipped a step. $50 Dongles are an inadequate stop gap. They also released a phone that ships with headphones that you can't plug into the new laptop they
Re: the right thing to do? (Score:4, Funny)
Q: Conjunction junction, what's your function? A: Connecting nouns and verbs and phrases.
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If they'd released a USB-C iPhone 7 and then the USB-C MacBook Pro there would have been far fewer complaints.
I doubt it. Perhaps what you say is true but I have my doubts. First is the order of events. An iPhone with USB-C charging and no laptop with USB-C ports creates near certainty of complaints since people will have to buy a new cable for wired connection to their laptop. There are ways to connect wirelessly but that's not as simple, fast, or reliable.
Getting the laptop with USB-C first means being able to use a USB-C to A adapter, which many would get anyway for other devices, to connect the iPhone. Alt
WATTS (Score:3)
There is another reason why Apple isn't including a charger with the iPhone 8 and X : Watts. And number of different parts.
Usually, the charging limits of a lithium battery are 1C :
e.g.: you can charge a 3'000 mAh battery (like that in iPhone 7 plus) at 3A max.
(that's why usually you can at most charge 50% of capacity in 30min)
Standard tablet charger only go up to 2A, and I think apples "thin as an euro-plug" phone charger are 1A only.
(One of the limiting factor is the way too thin copper wires in the USB c
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or they are normal human beings that have 7 chargers already and figure most people already have that covered.
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>One of the limiting factor is the way too thin copper wires in the USB cable. Too much resistance for such moderately high current.
The USB-C charging protocol allows the sink and source to negotiate a higher voltage. Increase the voltage by 4X (from 5 to 20V as allowed by the spec) , reduce the current by 4X, you are delivering the same power but the voltage across the wire is reduced by 4X and P=V*V/R so the losses in the wire are reduced by 16X, without changing the wire. This is one of the things th
Thank you for your reading skills (Score:2)
The USB-C charging protocol allows the sink and source to negotiate a higher voltage.
Thank you for trying to correct me with what I've litteraly written, after the next line :
Also note that this is not "USB-C charging protocol". USB-C is merely a connector, used most often for USB 3.1+ but can even be used for USB 2.0 [wikipedia.org].
The protocol is USB Power Delivery (USB-PD) [wikipedia.org] (which supersedes pre
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of course it will not handle fast charging so you point is a bit silly in this thread.
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Literally everyone else in the smartphone market Is at 10+ years per cable interface change.
That is just plain provably false. The mini-USB connectors came out in 2000, the micro-USB connector came out in 2007 (which made the mini connectors obsolete), and USB-C came out in 2014. Unless new smartphones are coming out with the obsolete mini-B port for charging, which could not be certified by the USB-IF group, they've changed the ports on their smart phones at least once in the last "10+ years". In 2007 we also saw China demand cell phone makers decide on a common port, precisely because "everyo
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The proprietary adapter is and always has been purely to maintain a stranglehold over 3rd party peripherals and to force phone owners to buy and ow
Nothing new (Score:5, Insightful)
My Nexus 6P also can only fast charge on a USB-C charger.
The real news is that the iPhones don't include the cable and fast charger in the box.
Daisy Chain two adapters to microUSB cable (Score:2)
1) USB-A to Micro-USB (c.f. an OTG adapter would work),
2) A Micro-USB to USB-C adapter,
You should get 3.0 Amps @ 5V -- which is about as fast as you can get. Even Qualcomm's QuickCharge doesn't do much more than 15watts, as QC does higher voltages at a lesser amperage for parts of the charging cycle.
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The real news is that the iPhones don't include the cable and fast charger in the box.
This is the main complaint. Most phones fast charge only under specific scenarios. But Apple has historically been known for the "it just works" and "everything is compatible with everything else" approach.
Not only does the iPhone not come with the ability to fast charge with the items in its box, it also doesn't come with the ability to plug it in to the Macbook. Despite Apple insisting that USB-C is here now and backwards compatibility is not needed it somehow ranks as an optional extra on their most popu
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My Nexus 6P also can only fast charge on a USB-C charger.
The real news is that the iPhones don't include the cable and fast charger in the box.
My Nexus 5x fast charges from the wall using the cable and charger provided in the box. It also fast charges from a USB 3.0 port, but not as fast as from the wall.
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My Nexus 6P also can only fast charge on a USB-C charger.
The real news is that the iPhones don't include the cable and fast charger in the box.
Exactly.
The title of this posting could be paraphrased as, "Something gives you new hardware functionality...BUT ONLY IF YOU BUY THE NEW HARDWARE! *GASP*"
Really, I'm not sure why people don't automatically grasp that faster charging than standard USB = higher flow of charging = higher flow than a non-USB-C connector can supply. It's not Apple's fault that a new hardware spec (USB-C) with a new bit of functionality (an option for higher power supply) doesn't automatically cause that functionality to flow ba
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My Nexus 6P also can only fast charge on a USB-C charger.
The real news is that the iPhones don't include the cable and fast charger in the box.
Dear Smartphone World,
You're doing it wrong.
Sincerely,
- Apple Profit Margin Analysis Group
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And they don't mind yanking another $50 out of their customer base to get one.
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My Motorola Droid Turbo supports fast charging on a regular USB cable, with it's own special brick.
I've a blackberry passport. It charges from 10% to 60% in about 45 minutes. It doesn't need a special brick (I've been using the usb charger than came with my twisp).
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7+ Already supports Fast Charging (Score:3)
Comparison point: 1A or 2A ? (Score:2)
Faster than what ?
Than standard USB wall-wart's max 5V 2A ?
(Meaning that indeed the smartphone manages to ask for 12V 2A using USB Power Delivery protocole - or any other QuickCharge variant)
Or faster than the standard 5V 1A that was packaged with it ?
(Meaning that the smartphone was simply using the standard max 5V 2A that the packaged wall wart couldn't achieve and that the 29W power supply could deliver by default if the device didn't engage in any USB-PD negociations).
Innovation (Score:2)
So basically for modern stuff they're moving towards USB-C, which various Androids (such as Samsung S8) are already using. The only difference is that you also need a proprietary Apple cable to make it work, because someone has to pay for that fancy new 5-billion dollar building.
Re: Innovation (Score:1)
No, the darkening (lightning) connector is still very much in the loop.
Its better than some dumb industry standard.
Re:Innovation (Score:5, Informative)
Ah, you seem to forget that the cell phone makers had to be dragged, kicking and screaming, into using a standard charging port. If China and the EU had not made the cell phone makers get in a room and come up with a standard battery charging port then you'd be complaining (still) about how every phone maker has a different charger.
Apple uses a USB port to charge like every other cell phone. Sure, you have to buy a cable to plug it in, also like any other cell phone. You don't have to buy cables from Apple either, I found "Apple certified" cables for $8 on Amazon. I'm sure you can find them cheaper too, just like you can get a cheap USB-C cable and take your chances on it not working or breaking your phone. Before the USB port was mandated as a standard a lot of 5 billion dollar construction projects were funded from selling vendor specific chargers.
The transition to USB-C hasn't exactly been smooth either. Lots of cell phone makers couldn't be bothered with complying with the standard. The phone might have a port that *LOOKS* like a USB-C port but plugging in a charger other than what came with it could damage the phone, or limit it to slow charging rates as it reverted to voltage and current that complies with USB 2.0. I seem to recall an article on this website called Slashdot, perhaps you've heard of it, where there was a discussion on Google "suggesting" that Android phone makers comply with the USB standard or lose the Google endorsement.
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My S7 came with a cord and plug that does fast charging. So unless I misinterpreted your post, the quoted portion was wrong.
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If "Apple certified" cables on Amazon are anything like "USB-IF certified" cables on Amazon then I wouldn't get my hopes up about them. Even if they work today, Apple might brick them with a software update tomorrow.
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Apple uses a USB port to charge like every other cell phone. Sure, you have to buy a cable to plug it in, also like any other cell phone.
Uh, no. My S8+ came with a charger and cable that enables fast charging, I didn't have to buy anything. My old S5 also came with a cable, as did my daughter's iPhone SE.
OMGWTFBBQ!?!?! (Score:5, Insightful)
Holy cow, I'm glad this information is front page news. This is groundbreaking journalism. No clickbait tagline here, no siree. All that's missing is the analysis on how devastating this information will be to the new iPhone's sales.
This should be part of a new series. What cables will next-gen devices come with? Do HP desktops come with regular round power cables, or those weird, flat, 3-wire jobs? And, most importantly, HOW LONG WILL THEY BE? If they include a 3-foot but I need a 4-foot I'll have to go out and buy one!
Seriously, is nothing else going on in tech right now?
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Seriously, is nothing else going on in tech right now?
You think that the company well known for compatibility and "it just works" product lines, releasing a product where one of the advertised features doesn't work, is not compatible with their other products, and unlike every other phone manufacturer doesn't include a fast charger in the box isn't worthy of news?
Heck this is a two-for-one. I'm quite impressed that with the latest and greatest model they are STILL not automatically bundling it with USB-C despite Apple's insistence that USB-A is dead when it re
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USB PD 2.0 (Score:5, Informative)
Any charging brick that supports the USB PD 2.0 usb power delivery [usb.org] standard will charge a MacBook, new MacBook Pro, or iPhone 8. You don't need to buy a brick from Apple for this.
The only detail to consider is the maximum wattage the brick can put out. That's why Apple sells a larger brick for the MacBook Pro.
Any brick - from any vendor - that can fast-charge a MacBook will fast-charge the iPhone 8 as well. The one I use is the Anker PowerPort+, but there are a number of others.
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did iphones not do fast charging before this? been doing it for over a year with with my moto x pure
Re:USB PD 2.0 (Score:5, Informative)
All previous iPhones have been able to pull ~10 watts out of a USB port by looking for a proprietary signal from Apple-brand chargers. (A "voltage cascade" on pins 2 and 3, a.k.a the USB data pins.)
With that signal, the iPhone draws 2 amps (at 5v) out of the connected USB port. Without that signal, the iPhone assumes it's a USB port from some other vendor, and uses the standard USB power negotiation signals to ask for the maximum power available from the port (usually 1 amp).
This "voltage cascade" signal is trivial to recreate in any USB wiring setup by adding two resistors. Put those in, and you signal to any Apple device that your port can supply 2 amps without problems. Many, many manufacturers have sold USB devices with "fast charging" ports containing these resistors over the last ~10 years, from USB hubs to USB ports on laptops to USB chargers that go in cars to USB charging stations at airports, et cetera. They've become so common that there's now confusion over exactly who came up with the voltage cascade signal idea.
Now that the USB spec has given us a good standard for supplying lots of power at lots of voltages, the earlier fast-charging signal can (very slowly) be phased out.
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thank you for the great information.
also it seems the "turbo charge" I have jas two charge levels, 1.6 or 1.2 Amps
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Any charging brick that supports the USB PD 2.0 usb power delivery [usb.org] standard will charge a MacBook, new MacBook Pro, or iPhone 8. You don't need to buy a brick from Apple for this.
Yeah, except if you're an Apple only person, then you can't connect your phone to your laptop because while Apple says USB-A is dead, Apple also seems to think USB-A is very much alive.
Let's do the dongle dance, or the I just spend $1000 on a phone and now I need to go back to the store to spend another $30 on a cable dance.
Re: USB PD 2.0 (Score:2)
Apple is less concerned with connecting your phone and laptop together, than it is with giving you a cable that will connect to the vast, vast majority of charging ports available in the rest of the world.
These days (for better or worse) you are not expected to ever need to tether your phone to your laptop. You get music from Apple Music, apps from the store on the phone, and photos and backups go through iCloud.
I disagree with this new paradigm and it looks like you do too. I have many gigabytes of music
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Yeah we're in agreement. I think their new slogan should be "Everything just works*"
* Dongles must be carried at all times.
But really from a $1000 device I would expect their fast charger to be provided along with the appropriate cable out of the box.
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Yeah, but will those other bricks be as stylish as the Apple power brick? What will the other folks are Starbucks think if I pull out some 3rd party power brick?
Don't think I'm gonna chance it.
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I want Apple
Then use an Apple supplied USB 2.0 PD Chargers that came with the larger iPods. Either one that you have thee laying around, or one off of eBay.
I have one in my hand right now rated for 10Watts. White (of balls), slightly scratched. It even comes with the detachable wall plug à-la laptop poweer adapter... (I am not selling it BTW)
But this is not-news. I bet that when the phones finally come out in late oct or early nov, the fast charging power adpater will be included in the box in most (if not all) th
HTC, really? (Score:3, Funny)
Re: HTC, really? (Score:1)
This is why a lot of Samsung phones were catching fire. Similarly if I plug my iPhone into my iPad charger it charges way faster. That said it gets a lot hotter so while it's good in some cases, with the limited heat dispersion most phones have, charging lithium batteries quickly isn't always a good idea, regardless of the manufacturer. This has less to do with the phone manufacturers and more to battery limitations.
Re: HTC, really? (Score:1)
No, a lot of Samsung devices were catching fire because of a flawed battery being built into them.
29W should do it (Score:3)
The iPhone 8 battery is rumored to perhaps be a s big as 2,700 mAh. Thus assuming no loss in charging, a 2.7 amp 5 volt power supply could charge it in one hour (that is the same amount of power the battery produces in an hour). The 29W power supply produces 5.8 amps at 5 volt (29 / 5 = 5.8). So not counting any loss, the 29W power supply produces enough power to charge the battery to 100% capacity in 28 minutes. So if we assume up to 50% inefficiency during charging, a 29W power supply could still charge the phone to 50% capacity in 30 minutes. If the battery was much larger (like in the plus models), or the charging is less efficient than 50%, a bigger power supply would be needed to charge to 50% in 30 minutes.
Re: 29W should do it (Score:2)
29W is 14.5V * 2A, which keeps the current in range for the small cables.
Common mistake to just divide the wattage by five.
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The iPhone 8 battery is rumored to perhaps be a s big as 2,700 mAh. Thus assuming no loss in charging, a 2.7 amp 5 volt power supply could charge it in one hour (that is the same amount of power the battery produces in an hour). The 29W power supply produces 5.8 amps at 5 volt (29 / 5 = 5.8). So not counting any loss, the 29W power supply produces enough power to charge the battery to 100% capacity in 28 minutes. So if we assume up to 50% inefficiency during charging, a 29W power supply could still charge the phone to 50% capacity in 30 minutes. If the battery was much larger (like in the plus models), or the charging is less efficient than 50%, a bigger power supply would be needed to charge to 50% in 30 minutes.
Ah, a refreshing reminder that math is the universal language that is truly timeless. Thanks for the detail.
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Will it charge even faster if I hook it up to my arc welder?
Of course. You'll just need the $39 arc welder to Lighting adapter cable. Good luck finding one in stock though, I hear they are selling fast.
Nice (Score:1)
They're charging 1K for the (no home button) razor, and they're charging for the charger (the razor blades)
Oh and let's not get me started on beats headphones...
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Even in your analogy Apple is copying their competitors. Motorola already sold a phone called the RAZR
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What other options do they have? Let's walk through them.
- Include a USB-C charger and cable. People then complain that the phone won't plug into their USB-A only computers without an extra adapter. People would also complain about the phone being $20 more for having the more expensive charger.
- Don't put any charger in the box. People then complain about the phone being useless without an extra cost charger. People would not care, or even stop to consider it, that the price is $10 lower for not includ
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I don't think including a fast adapter is exactly overcharging on a $999 phone. If they included a $3 USB-C to USB-A adapter like this [dx.com] there would be very little reason to complain since you'd get faster charging with the "native" charger and hey it kinda works with any other USB port too. But chargers are a profit center, most people need more than one (home, cabin, car, travel) and they lose or forget them so hey, let's buy one more. And in some people's mind there's only brand chargers and cheap knock-of
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If they included a $3 USB-C to USB-A adapter like this [dx.com] there would be very little reason to complain since you'd get faster charging with the "native" charger and hey it kinda works with any other USB port too.
They'd complain about a non-standard adapter being included in the box. That adapter is a fire hazard since it allows people to plug two USB-A ports together if used with a standard male USB-C to male USB-A cable. Such an adapter might pass the USB standards testing if it had a USB to USB controller in it, but then it wouldn't be $3 any more, it'd be more like $30.
But chargers are a profit center, most people need more than one (home, cabin, car, travel) and they lose or forget them so hey, let's buy one more.
Yes, people do typically buy more than one. So then why complain about the one that comes in the box? Keep it as a cheap spare and buy the ch
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buy a nickel's worth of copper, formed into a $1 cable and priced at $50 in a white "Designed by Apple in Cupertino California" box.
(Contestant) - "What is how to amass $250 billion in cash reserves?"
(Alex Trebek) - "Correct!"
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People would also complain about the phone being $20 more for having the more expensive charger.
If you complain that a 10 dollar charger adds costs to your 1000 iPhone you have issues bigger than this.
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to see how stupid their customers really are...
Uh, they tried that, about three models ago. $250 billion in cash reserves was the end result of that test.
History will be scratching it's head for centuries over this era.
I thought this was a tech site (Score:1)
Slashdot has missed the two biggest stories in tech this week, both of which happen to be feelgood stories.
1) Senator Ted Cruz (R-Texas) liked an incest-porn video with his Twitter account.
2) Martin Shkreli had his $5 million bail revoked and was put in jail for shitposting. He sent out a message on Facebook offering $5000 if someone would snip a lock of Hillary Clinton's hair. The judge deemed Shkreli a "menace to society". He will sit in jail while awaiting the appeal of his conviction for securities
This is old news (Score:2)
We figured this out with the iPad Pro's earlier this year. It's not surprising the iPhones work the same.
Same (Score:2)
My Moto X supports fast charging, if connected to a charger that supports Qualcomm QC
The phone only came with a basic 5V 700mA charger, so I had to buy a QC compliant charger to use the feature.
really, for only $1000 (Score:2)
what did you expect?
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50% of 100mAh, not so much.
50% of 100 000mAh, more so.
Not all 50% are created equal.
Oooh Ahhh Such Courage! (Score:2)
My Nokia 950 supports USB-C fast charging via a built-in USB-C port, the fast charger came WITH the phone, and I can replace the battery, which is needed because fast charging diminishes the life of the battery.
Apple is still the suxx0r after all these years. Only dummies/sheep buy them.
Non-issue (Score:2)
Just use the cable and charger that ship with your phone
How about (Score:2)
Apple ditches proprietary cable and will use the standard USB-C cable?
Or is that not anti Apple enough?
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I'm an idiot. Apologies. When I was at Apple last year, they were talking about how it wouldn't use lightning and just use USB C, I didn't realize they decided against that. Which is really weird, but that Apple I guess.
Again, my apologies.
Misleading headline (Score:1)
If you already have a USB-C charger, you don't have to buy a new one. The headline is incorrect.
well duh (Score:2)
gee they require that the charger and cord actually output enough power to charge the battery at that rate?
If Apple had figured out how to charge a battery at a 3A rate with 2A of current I think they would have made i bit bigger deal about it.
Last year's iPad already NEEDS this setup (Score:1)
I had to buy that setup something like a year ago for my wife's iPad. With the charger that came in the box, it discharges faster than it can charge if you use it while plugged in, and seems to only trickle charge if you don't use it while charging. But, with a USB-C charging and a USB-C to lightening cable, it works rather well. It charges her iPhone 7 pretty fast too. Apple really needs to step up it's packed-in power supplies to match the current needs of the equipment they're selling. (Or maybe the poin
Manage iPhone 8, iPhone 8 Plus and iPhone X (Score:1)
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Because it wouldn't work... would still be a 2A device