Apple forced to ditch iPhone lightning charger::Apple confirms new iPhone 15 will have a common USB-C charging port after EU forces it into the change.

  • bob_wiley@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    I’m pretty convinced their plan was to release a USB-C iPhone this year either way.

    Their product roadmaps extend far out into the future; these products require a lot of lead time to develop and integrate. They had until the end of 2024 to comply, which means one more release. They started their journey to USB-C several years ago, so it’s not like it wasn’t part of the plan, and they had no reason to hurry up and force it out this year, risking integration issues.

    The EU is going to take the credit, but I think the chance for a coincidence here is strong.

    • BetaDoggo_@lemmy.world
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      10 months ago

      They first started using USB c on the macbooks in 2015. There’s no way that it took 8 years to get it ready for the iPhone. In that time they’ve also released several other devices and accessories which have used lightning.

      To me this doesn’t point to a planned gradual shift over to USB c but one that was forced by neccesity on the macbook then by regulation on the iPhone.

      • bob_wiley@lemmy.world
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        10 months ago

        Why would the 2015 MacBook’s USB-C ports been forced by necessity?

        Also remember the outrage when Apple moved form the 30-pin connector to Lightning. People were very upset and Apple promised they wouldn’t be switching ports all the time and it was made to serve them for a really long time… as every accessory with a lightning port just became e-waste. I guess Mother Nature didn’t see that.

        • Rootiest@lemm.ee
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          10 months ago

          as every accessory with a lightning port just became e-waste. I guess Mother Nature didn’t see that.

          I think it’s interesting that you see this as USB-C’s fault.

          If Apple had stuck to a standard connector they would have been on usb-c in a year or two anyway and none of that e-waste would exist.

          Or if they went back on their word and switched to usb-c from lightning after a couple years, there would also be way less Lightning e-waste. What do you think happens to all those Lightning accessories when someone switches from iPhone to a different device?

          Apple’s proprietary Lightning connector is responsible for the e-waste, not USB-C or regulators.

          These regulations will stop companies like Apple making proprietary connectors purely for profit that generate all the e-waste in the first place.

          • Petter1@lemm.ee
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            10 months ago

            Lol, a cable is barely e waste. The power Adapter is where the e waste is, and those usb A blocks can easily still be used, even if you only have usb-C cables lying around. For very little money, you can buy an Adapter from usb-A to C and you can still use them. I don’t get the eWaste argument on copper cables…

      • June@lemm.ee
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        10 months ago

        The narrative around Lightning was always that they’d keep it for 10 years and then move to something new, Schiller even called it “a modern connector for the next decade” when it was announced, and at the time it was better than anything else on the market.

        No one who’s been paying attention is surprised that Apple switched this year and not next. I’d love to go dig up my years old comments on Reddit about this but like many of us I deleted my whole history. I had hoped they’d advance the timeline and release the 14 with USBC because of the EU regs, but I’m convinced this was the plan because they waited for the lighting to fulfill its 10 year target (just like with the 30 pin connector) and not until the EU regs actually forced them in 2024.

        When the iPad switched to USBC in 2018 it was a foregone conclusion that iPhone would too, and the assumption was always for it to happen in 2023.

    • Fushuan [he/him]@lemm.ee
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      10 months ago

      Oh man you have not followed all of this progress have you? the EU has been pushing for this for a long time now, if this was their planall along Apple could have stated that they planned to do this in the future but that they were waiting for closure of their original connector, but they didn’t, all their communications until this decission was made have been that lightning was not going away. Suddenly, it was their plan all along. It’s… so much like apple to do this and so in line for their fans to eat it up.

      • bob_wiley@lemmy.world
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        10 months ago

        They aren’t exactly known for sharing their plans publicly. They do stuff like that all the time to avoid leaking plans of their internal roadmap.

        • Fushuan [he/him]@lemm.ee
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          10 months ago

          itr’s not about sharing their plans publicly, it’s about their intent being 180 of what they say now. When this was being worked on in the EU, Apple was pretty clearly against it. If their plan was to do it anyway them opposing the forced change would make no sense.

    • GooseFinger@lemmy.world
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      10 months ago

      Eh, I don’t know Apple’s intentions but this specific design change isn’t that complicated. The lightning port still uses the USB protocol so the firmware will be the same or very similar. The supporting electronics also wouldn’t change much, but at most they’d omit/add a few small passives and slightly reroute that part of the circuit to make things fit together. They’d also have to lock down a large production run of USB ports, but any manufacturer would accommodate a customer as large as Apple. They’d need to test fit it with the new phone chassis but that’s relatively simple as well. Regulatory certification would also be smooth sailing for a change this simple, since most of what’s changing is simply the form factor.

      I figure it would take two years before customers would see this design change from the moment engineering was assigned it.

      I’m an electrical engineer who works in production if that matters.

      • bob_wiley@lemmy.world
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        10 months ago

        You say it would take about 2 years and the EU gave companies 24 months, which is all in line…. But it’s only been about 12 months since the directive was approved. Do you think Apple could pivot to get it done in a year if they weren’t already planning it, especially when there was no legal reason to rush it?

        • CmdrShepard@lemmy.one
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          10 months ago

          I doubt Apple just learned of the pending EU rule 12 months ago as it was passed.

          The alternative is to take a gamble that it won’t be approved and then be stuck with phones that weren’t in compliance (ignoring the 24 month grace period) and having the development clock start immediately for future models. I’m sure they saw which way the winds were blowing, knew they had no populist counter argument opposing the change, and decided it was in their best interest to join literally every other manufacturer on the planet in using a standard port.

        • GooseFinger@lemmy.world
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          10 months ago

          It’s really hard to say without being personally involved. Two years is a very comfortable amount of time to implement that specific change. The biggest hurdle is passing regulatory testing early enough to begin manufacturing in time to build a large enough stockpile before release. If they really pushed it and threw enough people at it, manufacturing could begin as little as 6 months after starting. But that’s a very risky timeline because about a million things will still go wrong all throughout the process, and “simple” design changes like this are never, ever simple.

          I’m impressed if they began production one year after deciding to make the change. The EU directive might’ve been approved roughly a year ago, but Apple might’ve seen writing on the wall and started earlier too. Regardless of context, this is definitely not a >2-3 year process though.

          • bob_wiley@lemmy.world
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            10 months ago

            I wasn’t saying they’d take 3 years, but that they would at least use the 2 years to avoid the risk of a rush job. The iPhone is their most important product and I don’t see them putting it at risk to rush something out when there was no requirement to rush.

            Maybe they started early, or worked on both in parallel, if they saw the writing on the wall and wanted a hedge. But typically, or maybe I should say historically, Apple hasn’t been one to do something just because someone tells them to, and if forced they would maintain their own vision as long as possible until they had to make the change. I remember years ago reading that they paid a daily fine in their stores for not displaying ‘no smoking’ signs, because they didn’t like how they looked. I want to say this was in England, but it was a long time ago and I couldn’t quickly find an article on it.

        • Rootiest@lemm.ee
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          10 months ago

          Could they?

          Yeah probably. USB-C connectors are ubiquitous, I’m certain they could acquire the necessary components in short notice if they had to. From my understanding they essentially did just swap the connector and kept the same USB2.0 controller.

          Did they?

          I doubt it, they had plenty of notice this was coming and were likely already preparing for it.

          I wouldn’t be surprised if the second USB-C iPhone release gets a modern controller with USB 3.2 or even 4, and Apple talks it up like they have single-handedly made USB-C fast all by theirselves (and imply that other mobile devices haven’t had the same for far longer)

    • moitoi@feddit.de
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      10 months ago

      Are people astroturfing here? Seriously? It may be one of the worst place for that, and it looks like a very bad troll.

      • bob_wiley@lemmy.world
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        10 months ago

        I would’ve been too. The EU flexes too hard on some of this stuff. It was obviously on Apple’s roadmap.

        I guess if a new/better connector comes along we have to wait for the EU to give everyone permission to move the technology forward? How does this even work going forward?

        I like the idea of 1 port for everything, but a regional government effectively mandating what the whole world must use is fucked.

        • lustrum@sh.itjust.works
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          10 months ago

          Theyre not stupid if you read it before writing about it on Lemmy you’d see they’re required to review regularly with stakeholders to agree and amend requirements ‘in line with scientific and technological progress, consumer convenience and environmental developments’

        • Chewy@discuss.tchncs.de
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          10 months ago

          I don’t know any reason why switching to USB-C would’ve been on Apple’s roadmap. Controlling the lighting ecosystem is far too valuable for them. Apple’s refusal to switch to the common USB-C is one of the reasons this law exists in it’s current form.

        • Rootiest@lemm.ee
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          10 months ago

          I guess if a new/better connector comes along we have to wait for the EU to give everyone permission to move the technology forward?

          The EU is mandating open standards, not specific open standards.

          If a new and better connector comes around they are welcome/encouraged to use it. As long as it’s an open standard and not proprietary e-waste generating junk

        • lud@lemm.ee
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          10 months ago

          Apple would have implemented USB-C ages ago if they had any intention of ever doing it willingly.

          Everything they make uses USB-C except the iphone which uses lightning and funnily enough they get a substantial cut out of every accessory and cable sale.

          The EU has a FAQ somewhere addressing this, can’t find it though.

          And calling the EU a regional government is underplaying their power and international influence a LOT.

    • Dum@reddthat.com
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      10 months ago

      This law is more than a decade in the making, the only reason it was on Apples roadmap is because of this law.

      The EU doesn’t have to mandate a new connector when something new comes up, it just has to be an open standard, ANY open standard. This is miles better for everyone. And the EU doesn’t force the whole world to adapt their standard, it’s just not economical to produce different versions for different markets, but they are very much allowed to sell whatever to their non EU customers.

      If you really want the lightning adapter back, you can ask one of the many people who soldered a usb-c connector in an iphone 12/13/14. If one person can do it, I’m pretty sure Apple can, too.

    • Honytawk@lemmy.zip
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      10 months ago

      If they were going to switch anyway, they wouldn’t have struggled until the EU had to make regulations around it.

      Regulations means the market can’t regulate itself. The market in this case being Apple.

    • lorez@lemm.ee
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      10 months ago

      They had until the beginning of 2024, that is by 2024 USB C had to be the standard, leaving Apple no choice with Iphones introduced in 2023’s fall.