this post was submitted on 16 Apr 2024
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Apple is making moves in this direction. I certainly hope not as the Bluetooth thing is a legitimate concern. It's probably a matter of months until the next Bluetooth vuln.
Apple will change it first, and Samsung and Google will make fun of them for it and promote how they still let you plug your phone in... Until next year's model when they do the same thing.
Apple will develop their own proprietary Bluetooth version first. iWave or some shit like that
They'll clone the Bluetooth standard, and change a couple of minor things only to make it incompatible with Bluetooth. Like they did with the wired headphone playback controls.
We'll see. The rumors have been around... But Europe just required that they add a USB-C charging port to all devices. They can't afford to ignore the mandates of the EU.
I don't think they'll get a pass for not having any port at all: the EU is the last remaining regulator.
The EU does not require a charging port, it only says that if you have a charging port it must be USB-C.
Source: Official EU Parliament News
Idk seems like the port is a requirement.
Nope.
Look at the actual directive , not some press release. Note that this is an older directive, but the common charger directive only describes the changes that need to be made to the earlier directive. The first link is to the latest updated version of that directive.
I quote (emphasis mine):
At the moment the directive does not prescribe a universal standard for wireless charging, but does reserve the right to do so in the future. (At the moment it doesn’t seen necessary as everyone seems to be adopting QI)
Thanks for linking the actual directive.
To be fair: it wasn't "some press release" - it was the official statement on the matter by Parliament.
Quoting from the directive:
Given that they're focused on reduction of waste and reduction of market fragmentation there's definitely a question mark over only QI based charging. I think they've left themselves significant latitude to smack down any attempts to fully go to wireless charging without a port.
Remains to be seen if they will.
I don't see how you can get that from the text. The way I read it, wired and wireless charging are separate. There is nothing in the directive that mandates one should be used over the other. They explicitly require USB-C for wired charging, but do not put any requirements on wireless, as there doesn't seem to be any significant fragmentation on the wireless side (i.e. no need to enforce a standard if everyone already agrees on a standard).
My quote explicitly ties wired and wireless charging together into the document. They left it open in saying "we're not establishing any rules yet but these go hand in hand and we'll immediately start looking at wireless charging in the context of e-waste".
It just says they are keeping an eye on developments in both wireless and wired charging standards. Not a word on requiring either on any device.