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EU Apple

EU Proposes Mandatory USB-C on All Devices, Including iPhones (theverge.com) 244

The European Commission, the executive arm of the European Union, has announced plans to force smartphone and other electronics manufacturers to fit a common USB-C charging port on their devices. From a report: The proposal is likely to have the biggest impact on Apple, which continues to use its proprietary Lightning connector rather than the USB-C connector adopted by most of its competitors. The rules are intended to cut down on electronic waste by allowing people to re-use existing chargers and cables when they buy new electronics. In addition to phones, the rules will apply to other devices like tablets, headphones, portable speakers, videogame consoles, and cameras. Manufacturers will also be forced to make their fast-charging standards interoperable, and to provide information to customers about what charging standards their device supports. Under the proposal, customers will be able to buy new devices without an included charger. The proposals only cover devices using wired, not wireless, chargers, EU commissioner Thierry Breton said in a press conference, adding that "there is plenty of room for innovation on wireless." A spokesperson for the Commission subsequently confirmed to The Verge that a USB-C port is only mandatory for devices that charge using a cable. But, if a device charges exclusively via wireless, like Apple's rumored portless iPhone, there'd be no requirement for a USB-C charging port.
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EU Proposes Mandatory USB-C on All Devices, Including iPhones

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  • Cellebrite (Score:2, Interesting)

    by AcidFnTonic ( 791034 )

    Need to make sure that Cellebrite tool can easily be plugged in.... Those adapter kits must be getting expensive.

  • Can Apple not continue to sell the iPhone by just not selling lightning cables in the EU and advising their purchasers to only use wireless charging? Otherwise they would have to put a blob of plastic in the connector slot so that it is unusable. Either way I do not see Apple affected much by this.
    Also, does this cover laptops? A lot of PC laptops would be screwed.

    • Actually they do not even need to put a blob of plastic in the connector they could just prevent charging in software when the phone detects it is in the EU region.

      • And if the battery is dead, is it forced to power on the phone (explicitly without trying to charge yet) and get a GPS lock before charging? What if no GPS signal is found - do you have to go buy a wireless charger to bring it back?

    • The loophole is to eliminate the port entirely, which Apple just might do. If they put a port it will have to be USB-C.

      Does not appear to cover laptops according to the EU site: USB-C will become the standard port for all smartphones, tablets, cameras, headphones, portable speakers and handheld videogame consoles.

      That said I think it should cover laptops. With the new power spec supplying 240W no reason not to but I imagine since that is fairly new it may come at a later time.

      Also I imagine there is far l

      • They don't have to wait to mandate it on laptops. Just limit it to laptops using 100W or less. But it's not like phones - significant redesigns to charging circuitry need to be made to handle the USB-PD voltages. There would need to be a grace period to allow time for new designs.

    • Can Apple not continue to sell the iPhone by just not selling lightning cables in the EU and advising their purchasers to only use wireless charging?

      There is no "wireless charging". For what is called "wireless charging", you plug the charger in the wall with a power cable (multiple wires), and then you take a cable from the charger to the phone with a magnet at the end that you attach to the phone.

      It's not wireless. It's "connected with a magnet instead of being plugged in".

  • So Apple would most likely switch to all wireless chargers for their phones sold in the EU. I assume that a wireless charger uses significantly more resources than a simple wall wart, and it probably almost never interoperates between any vendors. End result: more E-waste than if they do nothing.

    • by mark-t ( 151149 )

      Will Apple also provide a mechanism for cars that don't support wireless carplay?

      Because when the choice is between switching platforms to Android when they decide to upgrade their phone and costing maybe a few hundred or spending 30K euros on a brand new car that supports wireless carplay, guess which one a lot of people are going to pick?

    • Apple uses the Qi standard for its wireless charging.

  • USB-C Standard (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Thelasko ( 1196535 ) on Thursday September 23, 2021 @10:30AM (#61824063) Journal
    Does this mean USB-C will actually follow a standard [androidauthority.com] now?
  • USB micro B (Score:3, Insightful)

    by djb ( 19374 ) on Thursday September 23, 2021 @10:31AM (#61824077) Homepage

    The EU tried to do this a decade ago and if they had managed it we would all be stuck using USB B still

    What happens when USB D comes out in another decade or so?

    • Re:USB micro B (Score:4, Interesting)

      by UnknowingFool ( 672806 ) on Thursday September 23, 2021 @10:47AM (#61824135)
      I do have a question about smaller devices that do not need the full capability of USB-C. Smaller devices today use micro B because it is simply cheaper like game controllers, remotes. What about smart watches which seem to use proprietary external contact connectors as they often have no room for a port internally.
      • If everything uses one single connector, it will get even cheaper than it is now. Most of the cost difference with C is licensing anyway, isn't it?

        • No, the cost of USB-C includes the hardware too. USB-C ports require USB 3.2 or newer chipsets which is more expensive that USB 2 hardware. Some devices simply do not need that kind of bandwidth or power. For example my TV antenna has a tiny amplifier powered by a micro B cable. It only needs the 2.5 W max power of USB2 spec to work; it does not use the port for any kind of data transfer. My universal remote uses micro B to update settings when I get new electronics; it does not need 5Gbps to do so when I m
          • USB-C ports require USB 3.2 or newer chipsets which is more expensive that USB 2 hardware.

            Not true. There are microcontrollers from ST and others that have native USB-C ports and only support USB 2 connections. The type-C port require a couple of cable configuration lines (CC) where one of the lines is used as power and the other used to negotiate the connection between devices. Once the negotiation is complete it is just standard USB 2.0 - or up to 4.0 if supported by the hardware.

            The Type-C overhead is not insignificant but is nothing compared to the underlying USB overhead. In short -

            • There are microcontrollers from ST and others that have native USB-C ports and only support USB 2 connections.

              Such as?

    • Maybe this can prevent that from happening.

      And that will be a good thing. The world doesn't need more stupid dongles for whatever idiotic connector USB D might be.

  • by TuballoyThunder ( 534063 ) on Thursday September 23, 2021 @10:36AM (#61824095)
    I have a pair of Bluetooth headphones that use a magnetically attached connector that has spring loaded nubs that makes contact with some pads. I have a similar connector on my Garmin watch. This configuration allows for a water resistant connector.

    The headphones definitely don't have space for a USB-C connector and my experience with the previous generation of the headphones that had a micro-USB connector covered by a rubbery door was that it did not tolerate sweat. The USB connector corroded and failed prematurely.

    The watch can be built to use a wireless charger. Cramming a wireless charger into the headphones will be tight and I'm not sure entirely practical.

    I'm not sure this directive would benefit the consumer with regards to the headphones.

    • by v1 ( 525388 )

      Apple used magsafe on their laptops for several years, before recently switching to USB-C. They worked pretty well, but there was a problem with higher current delivery. They made up for this by using multiple sets of pins. The problem is that its hard to get a large amount of contact area when you're just using magnetic force and some weak pin-springs, and that leads to higher resistance, which leads to heating and arcing.

      Also, the water resistance is only on the accessory side. I had a lightning cable

      • Apple has already switched back to magsafe ... actually long ago.

        • by v1 ( 525388 )

          >>MagSafe 2 can be found on the MacBook Pro (2012â"2015) and MacBook Air (2012â"2017) notebook computers.

          Magsafe has left and not returned to the macbook and macbook pro. The only current model with magsafe is the air, probably due to size considerations.

          You might be thinking about a magsafe-like connector intended for new iphones?

  • Well... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by MitchDev ( 2526834 ) on Thursday September 23, 2021 @10:45AM (#61824129)

    While I kind of agree with it because I hate Apple's over-priced custom connectors, this sounds like a major overreach of government power.

    • Huh? It's a perfect fit for government power.

      Speaking of power, governments already regulate electricity connectors for higher voltages everywhere in the world. That's why you don't have to buy an adapter dongle unless you go to a different country with your devices that plug into the wall.

    • Really? I can go on Ebay and get a lightning cable for pennies. Not genuine Apple but good enough for most cases.

  • by Maury Markowitz ( 452832 ) on Thursday September 23, 2021 @11:00AM (#61824185) Homepage

    It will be a great day for the environment when everyone throws out their lightning cables and USB-A wall warts.

    • It will be a great day for the environment when everyone throws out their lightning cables and USB-A wall warts.

      The wall warts aren't going anywhere, you'll just be using them with USB-A to USB-C cables.

      Apple lightning cables are disposable and fragile. My kids break the lifetime warranty Anker and AmazonBasics cables 1-3x a year. My wife breaks her apple charging cables every year, so they already had short lives.

      What this means is that every vacation, I can pack half the cables I need to pack. The biggest boost will be killing micro/mini-USB in the EU and hopefully all the Chinese manufacturers will finally

  • So how do I plug in my headphones? Will the EU replace my audio-to-lightning connector with an audio-to-USB-C connector, for free?

    If people haven't noticed, the lightning connector serves more than one purpose.

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