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Tweed <usenet.tweed@gmail.com> wrote:I wonder if Covid and the semi conductor shortage had anything to do withBill Powell <bill@anarchists.org> wrote:Apple should be able to make any connector it wants to make.
Even one which is designed specifically to prevent interaction.
If people would just stick only to Apple products, they'd be fine
as there's no need for interoperability if you buy only Apple product.
As Tim Cook openly said, "Buy your mom an iPhone" if you want your device
to work with another company's products. It's all Apple around here.
So it shouldn't matter if nobody else uses Apple's connector.
It's a free and openly competitive world market, isn't it?
Thing is, Apple didn’t even have inter operability between its own
products.
Agree. And I've said this before on here.
Apple didn't transition to USB-C from USB-A well or consistently. When Macs
lost USB-A ports phones should have gone the same way shortly after.
What happened instead is that Apple bundled phones with USB-A - lightning
charges for years without an ability to charge your phone with your Mac. In
all that time they sold billions of phones with USB-A chargers.
Then, when they transitioned to USB-C, only at one end of the cable, they
also removed the charger (apart from ones model). So forced everyone to buy
chargers.
MacBooks have had USB-C for years (you can’t push enough power
through a Lightning connector) So you couldn’t use your Mac charger to
charge your Lightning connector iPhone or iPad or ear phones. Now you can.
I’d understand reluctance to move to usb-c if there were any significant
technical downsides, but I can’t see any. It supports a wider range of
charge voltages than Lightning, has a more robust connector, (though some
disagree about this) and supports a much wider range of protocols including
high speed video. Lightning was a much better technical and mechanical
solution than micro USB, but it is now technically and commercially
obsolete.
Agree. Lightning should have died 3-4 years ago.
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