I just throw one charger into my backpack and power my laptop, my phone, my partner's laptop and their nintendo switch
isn't that fuckin Neat
@jubei @AgathaSorceress There no guarantee that a given USB-C cable will work in a given context, because the standard... isn't exactly standard, and as of 2023, there's still no way to identify what a given cable is capable of.
This is a recent article on (some of) the issues with USB-C.
@AgathaSorceress usb c sure feels like the gosh darn holy grail connector to me. a single connector that works in everything, that supports everything, that can be inserted any way, that has a public spec.... infinity preferable to the proprietary hell we used to have.
and when the device and charger support PD it charges so fast! 🤩
i feel like most of the complaints I've seen about usb c are really about crappy low end stuff not implementing all the features... but that's the beauty of it - instead of needing a different connector for those devices that only want basic 5V power and nothing else *it just works*.
That super thin micro USB thing that should only go in one way, but it would go in flipped the wrong way, and break the paper-thin thing-of-contacts in the jack. Yeah, that shit was fun.
@AgathaSorceress No one could afford a phone anyway.
Mostly that.
@AgathaSorceress the amount of cable standards before micro/mini USB... dear god.
didn't the US government step in and say "STOP THIS SHIT"? or am I mistaken?
On the other hand, most people had a Nokia jack (some people still do, just in case).
@j4n3z @natty @AgathaSorceress
There were only two Nokia jacks: the old used to circa 2005, and the one used after. At the time Nokias had about 80% of the market, so far more common than people having 30-pin connectors or lightning cables.
@AgathaSorceress i remember when the DS, DS Lite, and DSi all used different cables and vendors started making 3-in-1 split chargers for them, haha.
Now my phone, laptop, Switch, Steam Deck, and a whole slew of wireless peripherals all charge off the same cable. It's so much better.
@stooovie @AgathaSorceress You can get most/all of that info from the wire (E-Marker chip) but require specific tooling for it, which is bullshit I think.
The cables are electronically marked and that data can be read-out from a given pin.
A small database would then be needed in the reader to reference expected VDMs if I understand it correctly.
Such marking is required by USB-PD https://usb.org/sites/default/files/D2T2-1%20-%20USB%20Power%20Delivery.pdf
@stooovie @AgathaSorceress Yeah, it annoys me a lot how they made that impossible.
If they can't be bothered to standardize some sort of color marking or code you can look-up, they should at least be bundling testers (https://www.chargerlab.com/e-marker-chip-detection-the-new-update-of-power-z-km003c/) with the cables (at no extra cost, too, certainly not an additional >100$ like that thing goes for on Amazon).
In March 2022, after the Apple spring event, they launched an unusual cable with E-marker chip - Thunderbolt 4 Pro cable, with a starting price of $129. Compared with the old one, the POWER-Z KM003C tester can accurately detect the E-marker chip info of a lightning cable. This new feature has
@stooovie @AgathaSorceress 99% of users are fine with the standard 60W/USB2.0 cables that come with even crappy cheap Chinese USB gadgets like fans
The one high-powered laptop charging cable or thunderbolt dock cable you have will live in your laptop bag or on your desk anyway
Pro users who need lots of thunderbolt cables will want to label all their stuff anyway
The problem is way overblown