• Flying Squid
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    583 hours ago

    USB C is the best thing to happen to peripherals since the mouse.

    I would agree with you if there were a simple way to tell what the USB-C cable I have in my hand can be used for without knowing beforehand. Otherwise, for example, I don’t know whether the USB-C cable will charge my device or not. There should have been a simple way to label them for usage that was baked into the standard. As it is, the concept is terrific, but the execution can be extremely frustrating.

    • @[email protected]
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      343 hours ago

      Hey that’s a fair point. Funny how often good ideas are kneecapped by crap executions.

      • @[email protected]
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        293 hours ago

        I’m pretty sure the phrase “kneecapped by crap executions” is in the USB working groups’s charter. It’s like one of their core guiding principles.

        • @db2
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          102 hours ago

          If anyone disagrees with this, the original USB spec was for a reversible connector and the only reason we didn’t get to have that the whole time was because they wanted to increase profit margins.

          • @[email protected]
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            102 hours ago

            USB has always been reversible. In fact you have to reverse it at least 3 times before it’ll FUCKING PLUG IN.

          • @disguy_ovahea
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            40 minutes ago

            That’s the reason Apple released the Lightning connector. Apple pushed for several features for USB ~2010, including a reversible connector, but the USB-IF refused. Apple wanted USB-C, but couldn’t wait for the USB-IF to come to an agreement so they could replace the dated 20-pin connector.

    • @[email protected]
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      123 hours ago

      Burn all the USBC cables with fire except PD. The top PD cable does everything the lower cable does.

      • @Janovich
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        42 hours ago

        IDK I’ve had PD cables that looked good for a while but turns out their data rate was basically USB2. It seems no matter what rule of thumb I try there are always weird caveats.

        No, I’m not bitter, why would you ask that?

      • @ripcord
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        32 hours ago

        There are many PD cables that are bad for doing data.

        • @disguy_ovahea
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          41 minutes ago

          Correct. The other comment is giving bad advice.

          Both power delivery and bandwidth are backwards compatible, but they are independent specifications on USB-C cables. You can even get PD capable USB-C cables that don’t transmit data at all.

          Also, that’s not true for Thunderbolt cables. Each of the 5 versions have specific data and power delivery minimum and maximum specifications.

      • @shatteredsword
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        32 hours ago

        You forgot thunderbolt and usb4 exists now

        • @[email protected]
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          11 hour ago

          You forgot thunderbolt and usb4 exists now

          You can buy a single cable that does 40GB and USB4 and charges at 240w.

    • @TORFdot0
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      32 hours ago

      Do not all USB C cables have the capability to do Power Delivery? I thought it was up to the port you plugged it in to support it?

      • Flying Squid
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        42 hours ago

        Nope. My daughter is notorious for mixing up cables when they come out of the brick. Some charge her tablet, some are for data transfer, some charge other devices but not her tablet. It’s super confusing. I had to start labeling them for her.

        • @TORFdot0
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          31 hour ago

          Come to think of it, all the USB C cables I have are from phone and device chargers so I just took it for granted. Good to know. Thanks for sharing some knowledge with me

          • @InputZero
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            41 hour ago

            USB-c cables can vary drastically. Power delivery alone ranges from less than 1 amp at 5 volts to over 5 amps at 20 volts. That’s 5 watts of power on the low end to 100 watts of power on the high end and sometimes more. When a cable meant to run at 5 watts has over 100 watts of power run through, the wires get really hot and could catch fire. The charger typically needs to talk to a very small chip in the high power cables for the cables to say, yes I can handle the power. Really cheap chargers might just push that power out regardless. So while the USB-c form factor is the one plug to rule them all, the actual execution is a fucking mess.

      • Flying Squid
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        11 hour ago

        Damn, check out the price of the thing someone else linked to at AliExpress for a fraction of that price. But having to spend money on that should not be necessary.

        • Saik0
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          1 hour ago

          That aliexpress device doesn’t tell you what wattage or data speed the cable will max out doing. Just what wattage it’s currently doing (to which you’d need to make sure that the device you’re testing with on the other side is capable and not having it’s own issues). Also can’t tell you if the cable is have intermittent problems. If all you care about is wattage, then fine. But I find myself caring more about the supported data speeds and quality of the cable.

          But yes, I agree that cables should just be marked what they’re rated for… However it’s possible well built cables exceed that spec and could do better than they’re claiming which just puts us in the same boat of not really knowing.

          Edit: oh! and that aliexpress tester is only 4 lines(usb2.0 basically)… usb 3.0 in type c is 24 pins… You’re not testing jack shit on that aliexpress. The device I linked will actually map the pins in the cable and will find you breaks as well.

      • Flying Squid
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        21 hour ago

        Oh very cool! And you can’t beat that price. Thanks.

        • @disguy_ovahea
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          21 hour ago

          No problem! Oh, and use a charger/power supply for the input. It’ll work on a computer port, but I wouldn’t recommend it.

          • Flying Squid
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            21 hour ago

            Yeah, I wouldn’t trust it on a computer port. I’d just plug it into a power brick.

    • Krzd
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      32 hours ago

      Yeah, I totally get that there is a need for cheap power only cables, but why are there what feels like 30 different data “standards”. Just gimme power-only, data, and fast-data. And yeah, in 2 years there’ll be a faster data protocol, so what, that’s then fast-data24, fast-data26, etc. and manufacturers have to use a specific pictogram to label them according to the highest standard they fulfill.