On 2023-08-06 14:02, -hh wrote:
On Sunday, August 6, 2023 at 12:15:14 PM UTC-4, Alan Browne wrote:
...
With USB-C, I won't be able to charge my iPads or current iPhones or my
Apple TV remote with the new cables.
Transitions are always a touchy thing, because one doesn't necessarily transition everything over at once. So while we initially think of the issue being "just" an iPhone and maybe an iPad, there's also the ATV remote,
an Apple mouse, etc ... and these are products which can very easily last well over five years.
It's sort of at a "good" point in our widget lifecycle. Other than our
iPads which won't be replaced for a long time, my SO will be getting a
new iPhone this fall which will almost certainly be USB-C, and I'll be
getting a new Mac (hopefully) this fall which is at least Thunderbolt 4
(same connector as USB-C).
If I get a Mac Studio it will also have two original style USB connector
(USB Type-A - with USB 3.1 spec performance).
My SO got a new Macbook Air a couple years ago, and it is TB-4 too.
I've had to replace a cable on her backup drive to avoid using an adaptor.
But this will leave a lot of Lightning cables around the house. I'll
probably buy some more adaptors. More e-waste. Because: EU regs.
As cables wear out (the one in my car, for example, had a cracked cable
casing - I'll Suguru it (again) but that will just move the stress point
up the cable) it will likely have to be replaced with a Lightning cable
now, and with a USB-C cable in a couple years (when I change phones).
Suguru .. I'd not heard that term before.
Is this the stuff?
<https://sugru.com/buy/sugru-mouldable-glue>
If so, looks like a pretty interesting little product; an alternative to using electrical tape or thermal shrink tube.
Yes indeed. I've repaired/patched various things with it - esp. where flexibility is needed in the result.
Downside is once opened, that packet has to be used entirely. So I "accumulate" a few things needing the job and do them all at once.
Upside: I've used packets 2+ years beyond their expiry data with no
problem at all.
Note that I let it cure 48 hours. Their 12-24 hour claim is optimistic.
Shrink tube is best - but can't get it over the connectors in most cases.
This is a separate cable from the one I use in the house and separate
from the one I use at work.
It is similar to how (original) USB started out expensive such that one hoarded one's cables, but as they got affordable, it was cheap & easy to 'overprovision' for sake of convenience. Pretty soon, one has a cable
that stays with each desktop, a few charging stations around the home,
plus a cable in each car, and then even one that's dedicated to one's
travel carry-on bag, so as to not have to disassemble any of the above
before every trip. Cost-wise, this was pretty easy to accumulate for free when each new device came with its own wall charger & cable, which
was where Lightning hit its stride vs the competition (USB Mini, Micro, various proprietary connectors, etc).
Last year I included a few dozen cables of various sorts for the trip to
the eco-centre where I take old electronics (paint, chemicals,
batteries...) and I'm still swimming in them.
--
“If you torture the data long enough, it will confess to anything."
-Ronald Coase
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