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EU Apple Technology

EU Agrees To Make Common Charger Mandatory for Apple iPhones and Other Devices (cnbc.com) 230

The European Commission, the executive arm of the European Union, is going to force smartphone manufacturers like Apple and other electronics makers to equip their devices with a standard USB-C charging port. From a report: EU lawmakers on Tuesday agreed to a single mobile charging port for mobile phones, tablets and cameras. It means equipment makers will have to comply with the new terms by 2024. "We have a deal on the #CommonCharger!" EU commissioner Thierry Breton said via Twitter. The legislation is designed to cut waste and make life easier for consumers who would theoretically be able to use one charger for multiple devices. It could have a huge impact on Apple, as the company still uses its own Lightning connector to charge iPhones. The company has recently equipped iPads and MacBooks with USB-C ports. Apple did not immediately respond to a CNBC request for comment. However, a spokesperson for the company said last September that the firm stands for "innovation and deeply cares about the customer experience."
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EU Agrees To Make Common Charger Mandatory for Apple iPhones and Other Devices

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  • The current option for charging is wireless charging, why require a charging port?

    It's just a little bit pointless, most chargers have USB A or USB C or both it's the cables that differ.

    • Wireless charging wastes power in exchange for convenience. https://www.iphoneincanada.ca/... [iphoneincanada.ca]

      I've had many devices over the years that have flat contacts for charging. No connectors to break, no huge power loss. That's what should be a standard. Throw in a magnet for alignment and reliable connections in cars and you have something worth making a standard. Now that devices communicate with the chargers there could even be updates with the physical connection being backward compatible.
      • by dasunt ( 249686 )

        Throw in a magnet for alignment and reliable connections in cars and you have something worth making a standard.

        That system seems to be pretty common for rechargeable sex toys that are supposed to be waterproof. Two contacts, and a magnet for alignment.

        I find it somewhat amusing that the easiest way to find a cutting edge example of charging with low power loss is to buy a good vibrator.

        Perhaps one day this cutting-edge technology will be found in phones.

    • by sjames ( 1099 )

      Because it's at least inconvenient to have to schlep the device to charge your device around with you. Also, wireless power is inefficient.

  • by ForkInMe ( 6978200 ) on Tuesday June 07, 2022 @11:55AM (#62600252)
    My wife is a customer and her experience is a bit mixed - fine when charging her iPad but bad when I throw her Lightning cable behind the couch so I can charge my phone ;-)
  • Apple will respond to this with courage. They will remove the lightning port and declare that all lightning accessories are obsolete and that you should buy new Apple-branded USB-C accessories. Those will just be the same old lightning accessories with USB-C connectors and lower quality than generic ones. But they will be genuine apple. And iPhone will refuse to use non-Apple accessories. Now that's courage. What Apple means by courage is that they are willing to torque their customers with no limit i
    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      Still slightly better than the current situation where you need different peripherals for your iPhone and iPad, because one had lightning and the other has USB C.

  • The USB-C spec includes something called alternate mode [wikipedia.org]. That's where the four wires carrying high-speed data [allaboutcircuits.com] (mirrored so 8 wires total) plus 4 lower speed data wires in a USB-C cable can be repurposed to carry signals other than USB. Common alternate modes include HDMI, Displayport, and Thunderbolt (PCIe signals).

    Lightning only uses 4 wires for data [wikipedia.org] (not mirrored). It would be completely trivial for Apple to create a Lightning alternate mode, and have all iOS devices switch to USB-C connectors. They co
  • by La Gris ( 531858 ) <lea,gris&noiraude,net> on Tuesday June 07, 2022 @12:33PM (#62600364) Homepage

    No EU did not "Agrees To Make Common Charger Mandatory"

    EU agrees to make all mobile chargers use the same connector.

    And please stop adding capitals to each words. This is grammatically and typographically wrong.

    • by Ol Olsoc ( 1175323 ) on Tuesday June 07, 2022 @01:04PM (#62600500)

      No EU did not "Agrees To Make Common Charger Mandatory"

      EU agrees to make all mobile chargers use the same connector.

      And please stop adding capitals to each words. This is grammatically and typographically wrong.

      A distinction without a difference, The only difference is that if an undesireable pollutes via using something different, they are verboten.

      The very interesting thing is now the superiors of the EU have set precedence in their dictate of connections.

      So does this mean that from now on, there is no other mobile charger but USB-C in perpetuity?

      Or does it men in their well reasoned knowledge of all things electronic, that the EU will decide what all of the next versions are permitted to exist as?

      Seriously, when the micro-meddling that the EU feels compelled to enforce, it becomes completely understandable how your history has played out over the millenia.

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        It gets reviewed regularly.

      • by thegarbz ( 1787294 ) on Tuesday June 07, 2022 @05:33PM (#62601364)

        The very interesting thing is now the superiors of the EU have set precedence in their dictate of connections.

        Literally every country in the world dictates some form of standard required for electrical devices. Note how devices in the EU are shipped complying with Part 15 of the FCC rules despite the FCC not existing over there? Or why that little CE charging brick I have has UL written on it as well (along with a smorgasboard of other icons showing compliance with various standards around the world).

        So does this mean that from now on, there is no other mobile charger but USB-C in perpetuity?

        It only means that if you don't bother understanding what the rule is or how it works. a) the presence of USB-C does not preclude other charging options, and b) the directive has a periodic re-assessment clause in case a better more suitable charging standard comes out.

        Seriously, when the micro-meddling that the EU feels compelled to enforce, it becomes completely understandable how your history has played out over the millenia.

        Funny you should mention that. The EU (far less than a millennia old, or even half a century for that matter) was created in part precisely to prevent how history has played out the millennia preceding it, and it has been humanities single most successful peace project at that.

        You would do well to lean a bit of history before you attempt to comment on it.

    • And please stop adding capitals to each words. This is grammatically and typographically wrong.

      missmatch using the Firehose to make her own stories again. Why bother submitting shit if an editho is just gonna do that? And where are my fucking mod points, you slack cunts? I metamod everyday for fucks sake.

    • And please stop adding capitals to each words. This is grammatically and typographically wrong.

      What? Who told you that? It is absolutely normal and common to capitalize words in headlines. It is literally called "headline case" in addition to "title case".

    • >And please stop adding capitals to each words. This is grammatically and typographically wrong.

      It's been standard for titles and headlines since long before you were born - I'd suggest tilting at a more tractable windmill.

  • by SmaryJerry ( 2759091 ) on Tuesday June 07, 2022 @12:58PM (#62600468)
    The port on a phone is not just a charger. It is a data port, display port, it is a phone stand in the case of apple, and it is a modular device connector for all sorts of devices. Even how it a plug gets connected gives the user a different feeling of security, Apple's port snaps in for example. I'm sure there are even more uses but just those I mentioned above have more considerations than just the type of connector. The stated purpose of environmental friendliness being the primary factor seems shortsighted given that this requires a retooling of the second most popular devices in the world (and all connecting devices) which has a very vast, possibly greater ecosystem than the USB-C phones. We are in the infancy of phones still, sure cell phones have been around for what 20-30 years now? That is practically nothing and phones in another 30 years will be very different, unless standards like this take hold. I can easily imagine a future where phones are so fast and power efficient that they replace our computers, you just bring your phone with you and plug into a monitor anywhere and start working, gaming, browsing, or watching as if you were at home. Even computers now have maybe 1 or two USB-C connectors, but keep display ports, HDMI, USB-A, SD Card Readers, Serial Ports, and more. If this connector was good enough to become the standard on a phone, then it should have replaced the connectors on PCs completely already. Thin and lights have done this but at the cost of a million dongles to get to the type of port they actually need. It sems short-sighted to think USB-C is the peak and deserving of eliminating the second most popular connector.
    • by Hodr ( 219920 )

      Boy that sure is a wonderful argument, against some other law than the one being discussed here. No one said Apple (or anyone) could only have USB-C, just that this must be included for charging. They are free to have as many other proprietary ports as they desire.

      • Or just one more capable port? One better for water proofing or better feeling, that works as a stand? There are many reasons you wouldn’t want this specific port required and then have multiple other ports. And the key thing is this is supposed to be for environmental friendliness but what if another type of port required less labor or less materials than USB-C? It seems like they have not considered the full impact and have likely been lobbied by USB-C creating companies.
        • Apple is a member of the USB-IF. If there are aspects of Lightning, or whatever magic port they haven't invented yet, that they think are absolutely unbearable to live without, they had ample opportunity to propose those features over the past however many years they've been a member. Bit late now, they already screwed themselves over, but I guess they can always contribute to future specs, too.

          I shouldn't have to go over the reasons why standardization on a single spec or group of specs for charging is
        • what's this virtual signalling bullshit about environment and materials for usb-c? you're going to claim some other connector is more environmentally friendly?

          If you actually care about the environment, what are you doing owning a smart phone with rechargeable battery? The connectors aint the problem.

          waterproof usb-c exist

          Stop talking out of your ass and making up things that aren't an argument.

    • USB-C is just the physical connection. But with USB4 we will at least get a lot closer to one single port since it requires USB-C connectors. USB4 has a transfer speed up to 20 Gbps or 40Gbps, can charge up to 100W, has support for 4K and 5K displays, and can support Thunderbolt 3 if the manufacturer pays Intel royalties. Thunderbolt 4 is just USB4 with 40 Gbps speed and Thunderbolt 3 devices, and running over USB-C.
  • by Mr. Barky ( 152560 ) on Tuesday June 07, 2022 @01:35PM (#62600612)

    I think that this is going to impact Apple more than most people think.

    Apple has at least historically shipped the most recent version of the iPhone plus 2-3 years of older phones (with little to no design changes). This means that complying by 2024 will mean that Apple will either 1. Reduce its offerings in the EU to only the recent ones. Or 2. Be forced to redesign older phones (i.e. the ones being released this year and probably last year's as well). My bet is on #1. They won't redesign the older phones. The 2023 model can be (re)designed with USB-C in mind, but the = 2022 won't.

    I see a lot of comments that Apple was intentionally incompatible with USB-C. When they introduced the Lightning connector, USB-C did not exist, so it wasn't an option (and who really liked micro-USB, or whatever - all the previous USB connectors really suck and Apple was right not to use them. USB-C is the first decent USB connector). They also had LOTS of criticism for changing from their 30-pin connector to Lightning (i.e. breaking compatibility with older peripherals). They will get the same for any new shift to USB-C.

    • will mean that Apple will either 1. Reduce its offerings in the EU to only the recent ones. Or 2. Be forced to redesign older phones

      It will mean neither. The rules only impact new devices released after the directive comes into effect. It would have been faster for you to google this than write your post.

      Literally the text from the first Google result of "EU common charger"
      After the summer recess, Parliament and Council will have to formally approve the agreement before it is published in the EU Official Journal. It will enter into force 20 days after publication and its provisions will start to apply after 24 months. The new rules woul

      • will mean that Apple will either 1. Reduce its offerings in the EU to only the recent ones. Or 2. Be forced to redesign older phones

        It will mean neither. The rules only impact new devices released after the directive comes into effect. It would have been faster for you to google this than write your post.

        Literally the text from the first Google result of "EU common charger" After the summer recess, Parliament and Council will have to formally approve the agreement before it is published in the EU Official Journal. It will enter into force 20 days after publication and its provisions will start to apply after 24 months. The new rules would not apply to products placed on the market before the date of application.

        In theory then, depending on the dates, no iPhones before 2025 will need use USB-C.

    • I see a lot of comments that Apple was intentionally incompatible with USB-C. When they introduced the Lightning connector, USB-C did not exist, so it wasn't an option (and who really liked micro-USB, or whatever - all the previous USB connectors really suck and Apple was right not to use them. USB-C is the first decent USB connector). They also had LOTS of criticism for changing from their 30-pin connector to Lightning (i.e. breaking compatibility with older peripherals). They will get the same for any new shift to USB-C.

      The EU have been working on a common charging port for a decade now. Apple knew that this was coming, and they had all the time in the world to do something in anticipation of this regulation that was unavoidable.

  • My customer experience would be enhanced if I didn't have to have so damned many different cables....
  • So, they can build whatever port they like into the device, "equip it with USB C" by plugging an adapter into it, and sell the EU model for $10 more to cover the cost of the adapter. For extra joy, they can make it so that the provided adapter doesn't transfer data and sell another adapter for those who want to use USB C for data.

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