• @kadu
      link
      1671 year ago

      deleted by creator

      • Rustmilian
        link
        1751 year ago

        Just stop buying iPhones, problem solved.

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          48
          edit-2
          1 year ago

          until all the others start to copycat them, as always, simply because they can get away with it

          would love to have removable batteries again

          • @dumbcrumb
            link
            English
            521 year ago

            Apparently the EU passed a bill that would require companies to have batteries that could be replaced with no specialized tools and that “the process of replacement shall be able to be carried out by a layman”. With a 2027 deadline

            • @[email protected]
              link
              fedilink
              61 year ago

              I’m aware, but i’m not in the EU nor can I expect govmts around the world to legialate away evey little anti-consumer idea those people have.

              • @dumbcrumb
                link
                English
                21 year ago

                Well its not likely that the big phone brands will make specific models for just the EU because of how much extra that would cost. Like whats happening now with the USB C laws.

        • BOMBS
          link
          English
          19
          edit-2
          1 year ago

          But then how will people know I am willing to blow money, implying that I have extra cash to waste, if they don’t see a blue bubble?

          • @mint_tamas
            link
            51 year ago

            This is only a thing in the US. In other parts of the world, iphone users have to adapt to whatever messenger platform has the most people in it (likely whatsapp or facebook messenger, maybe telegram)

            • @saltesc
              link
              11 year ago

              I’m 39 and not even so old I use native messaging and telephony styled services. Hell, not even my dad does.

              Did the kids in your school grow up in the 80s or is stuff like iMessage making a comeback because it’s retrocool?

              • @Serinus
                link
                21 year ago

                Kids think iPhones are cool for a good reason. If a fifth grade kid has an android, it’s probably a cheap one. There are no cheap iPhones.

                Sure, Pixels are better than iPhones straight up. But who the fuck is buying their kid the latest Pixel?

                So cool (read: spoiled) kids have iPhones. The others start on cheap androids. That stigma sticks around at least awhile.

        • @mind
          link
          -11 year ago

          deleted by creator

          • @[email protected]
            link
            fedilink
            English
            171 year ago

            If you get ostracized from a group for the wrong chat bubble color, that group wasn’t worth your time.

          • @FlexibleToast
            link
            91 year ago

            That’s fine. I don’t want to be friends with someone that would ostracize me for the green bubble.

          • @[email protected]
            link
            fedilink
            English
            41 year ago

            Btw whats the matter of blue bubble? iMessage? Who tf uses imessage especially on android? Or is it just an sms app?

            • @mind
              link
              4
              edit-2
              1 year ago

              deleted by creator

              • @[email protected]
                link
                fedilink
                English
                11 year ago

                It’s not the blue bubble, it’s that iMessage is like any other of the big message services and has it’s own things like those messaging services. I have a group chat with another iPhone user, and an Android user. Just sending texts is whatever, but when you start using the messaging features like tapbacks to like a message or replying to a specific message, it gets real fucky real fast.

                Although I am glad iMessage was created (largely as a fuck you to carrier fees) these days I wish that Apple would either make an Android app or the world (US mostly) could collectively move to a good messaging app/protocol (which includes e2e encryption and isn’t fucking Meta.)

              • @money_loo
                link
                1
                edit-2
                1 year ago

                Ironically you can use it on android using an app called…wait for it….BlueBubbles. -Source: me using it right now.

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          -51 year ago

          Not yet but one day. If I could get a phone and keep it for 20 years (with repairs/upgraded parts) then I’d switch.

          If apple removes the plug then i’ll start considering the other options when my current phone becomes unusable. Until then it’s too easy to buy an old iphone and hold onto it for 6 years.

          • @derbolle
            link
            81 year ago

            fairphone 5 is out :-) it is getting upgrades until the 2030s. and it is so easily repairable that it is realistic to use it for a long time

            • @[email protected]
              link
              fedilink
              21 year ago

              This is the one I’m thinking of. Love the concept. Potential challenge is that in Canada things, in particular, shipping is expensive. I’m pretty broke right now so my inclination is to save money over the long run and not be wasteful.

              I’m not a phone person though. Useful device but not something that takes up much of my day to day time.

          • @iampivot
            link
            21 year ago

            Google Pixel 8 will have same update length as Apples Iphone.

      • @LethalSmack
        link
        541 year ago

        It’s worth noting that the current lightning cable is also limited to usb 2.0 speeds. They’re not making the usb c version any slower than it already is.

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          22
          edit-2
          1 year ago

          Right, but I assume what it means is that any Apple charging cable will be generally useless as a USBC cable for anything other than charging an iPhone, which very much violates the spirit of the EU anti-waste law.

          For most people, it won’t matter. But a USBC cable which can’t support USB3 data rates probably also won’t support proper USB-PD, or USB-HDMI/DP, etc. The dream of having one universal physical standard for charging and high data rate comms will be violated in principle, even if it makes little difference in practice.

          • @fuckwit_mcbumcrumble
            link
            English
            91 year ago

            The iPhone already doesn’t support USB 3.0 speeds, or video out from the port so nothing would be lost.

            And the data rate of the cable has no impact on it’s power delivery capability. I have USB 2.0 speed cables capable of doing 240 watts. Plus the iPhone already does USB PD, just through the lightning port. https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/12152bd5-5977-4cf3-9dd5-c302ca78462b.jpeg

            USB C is already a mess, and plenty of Android devices don’t support USB 3.0 speeds either. Apple changing to USB C port changes nothing except for the literal receptacle.

              • @[email protected]
                link
                fedilink
                English
                21 year ago

                I honestly feel like it’s a mistake that USB-C means almost nothing outside of “it’s got this port shape.” The idea was that you have one port and one cable, and you plug whatever you want into it. In practice, virtually no where is this true. Is this a data port or power only? What speed for either? Does the port support Thunderbolt or no? Video or no? Does the cable support data or just power? What speed? Video? Which HDMI spec? Thunderbolt? Grab 3 random devices with USB-C and 3 random USB-C cables and see how often you get the intended outcome.

                Tbh I think the only goal that USB-C really accomplishes is that it’s less shitty than micro-usb (might as well make all of those ports/connectors out of paper mache) or USB-A (let’s make a port shape that there is no way for anyone living or dead to plug in correctly the first time.)

                • @[email protected]
                  link
                  fedilink
                  11 year ago

                  Nearly every USB-A male I’ve seen has a USB logo carved into the rubber boot.

                  This is on the “up” side of the cable, and would face “up” from the perspective of how the computer is intended to be used (or from the perspective of the motherboard, if we’re talking about a tower PC).

              • @[email protected]
                link
                fedilink
                English
                11 year ago

                Why assume the cable would have low speeds? Are those enough cheaper to justify that?

                I mean, it would be a trademark Apple kind of thing to do, for sure. They may take privacy seriously, but literally every other thing they do is pure scumbag.

                I don’t wanna assume they are 3.0 speed either, but do we know one way or the other?

                Also, is there really a use for 240W cords? I’ve never heard of a phone accepting triple digit speeds at all, and even a tablet wouldn’t go that high.

          • @[email protected]
            link
            fedilink
            English
            11 year ago

            Legislating that everything shall be a $50 20Gbps cable stuffed with impedance matched micro-coax and shielding on top of shielding on top of shielding just means that nobody can afford it.

            USB-C is not and will never this thing that you are imagining. It is one commonly shaped hole, with all the incompatible connections of yesteryear now lurking in a mess of unreadable symbols next to each port. This one can charge. That one can thunderbolt. These can send out power, if you want to use your laptop as a $2000 portable battery. This one sends out video, but wait it’s only HDMI, and only if that port over there isn’t using its superspeed lanes.

        • JackFrostNCola
          link
          English
          11 year ago

          At that speed their ‘lightning’ cable doesnt sound all to lightening-ey then, more of a mild static.

        • @MsPenguinette
          link
          -31 year ago

          People are transferring data to their phones via a cable?

              • @[email protected]
                link
                fedilink
                71 year ago

                Being able to record raw 4k60 video means huge file sizes. Transferring over what we hope will be usb3 speeds would be much faster than any other available medium to iPhone.

                • @[email protected]
                  link
                  fedilink
                  English
                  21 year ago

                  This is the amazingly, insanely stupid thing about the idea that at least for Apple’s Pro line, which they’ll painstakingly put together videos showing iPhones being used as actual movie cameras in big gimbal rigs and how they can capture 4k60 and put messages in the OS that shooting 20 minutes of video is going to take your entire phone storage even if you got the big one, and the options for transfer are wifi or USB 2.0. For a potential terabyte. Very Pro to sit and wait for an hour or several.

          • @Bytemeister
            link
            Ελληνικά
            11 year ago

            Sure. It’s a super fast and easy way to transfer videos, music and images. You can also back up your phone using the cable. I used to use my for USB tethering to get around hotspot charges. It’s also handy for loading projects for development.

            • @MsPenguinette
              link
              11 year ago

              Thanks. Tho does surprise me to hear that backups to the computer is still a thing people do on any sort of scale. Dev projects tho, that def makes sense

              • @Bytemeister
                link
                Ελληνικά
                11 year ago

                My partner actually just backed up their iPhone today using a cable. They don’t want to pay the extra storage fees for iCloud, and they like having control of their own data.

      • Dharma Curious
        link
        fedilink
        381 year ago

        Not just expensive, they’re also environmentally unsound! They use more power to charge, more plastic for casing. Hooray?

        • arefx
          link
          fedilink
          26
          edit-2
          1 year ago

          Android is superior and I’ll die on this hill. Want a phone built nicer than an iPhone? Here you go. Want a cheap phone because your on a budget or it’s not important to you? Here you go. Want an operating system you can configure to your liking, or even install your own version of it? Here you go. Want a headphone jack? Here you go.

          • qyron
            link
            fedilink
            131 year ago

            Make some room; I’m camping on the hill with you.

          • @stonedemoman
            link
            21 year ago

            Samsung has already surpassed apple in hardware. We’re at the point where equivalent Samsung’s multi-core performance is the same, the 25% faster iGPU carries the single-core performance way beyond what the iPhone can do, and they ship with 25%+ more RAM.

            I’m hoping more people start to realize that healthy market competition is a good thing for Apple, it has already changed many of their anti-consumer practices in the past.

          • @Serinus
            link
            11 year ago

            Guess which one of those gets foisted onto grade school kids.

          • @Anomalous_Llama
            link
            -11 year ago

            I was on Android for years. Galaxy’s and Pixels

            Without fail around 1.5 years the battery was almost useless and the usability would slow to a grind and it would get super warm. I had to upgrade often.

            Eventually decided to try iPhone. I’m on a 12 pro that I got at launch still. Never used a case or screen protector. Dropped more times than I can count. I’ve even been swimming with it several times by accident. (Twice over an hour before realizing)

            Battery life is greater than 80% of its launch life still. The phone still fucking works great, I have zero issues with it. I have saved money by using iPhone because I’m not replacing it all the time.

            I LOVE Android for its flexibility and freedom of choice etc. those things can’t be taken away from that platform. But a phone that’s built like a brick shit house that just fucking works? I found that in an iPhone.

            • @[email protected]
              link
              fedilink
              -11 year ago

              Exactly. It’s the same for virtually anything code-related; more flexibility equals more bugs. Yes, i phone goes a little overboard sometimes, but there phones aren’t just some status symbol. An android is a fine option, it just doesn’t meet some people’s needs. It’s like when people try to suggest windows or linux to me. I use each of them frequently, you know what I find the most buggy? Windows. You know what needs the most configuration? Linux. The Mac just works. “But Google can fix the issue” I know it can. I never said it couldn’t. I just like being able to turn on my device and have it work after I’ve fixed bugs all day

            • arefx
              link
              fedilink
              1
              edit-2
              1 year ago

              I can still buy an Android phone with an aux input I think I’ll still be able to buy a phone with a USB port. Android is about options. But nice hypothetical, it really brought a lot to the table.

              • @[email protected]
                link
                fedilink
                01 year ago

                Ok, they will have cables, but “Android is about options”, yet it’s hard to find a phone that does not have a rounded screen, a notch, or a screen embedded camera.
                Honestly I’m using a 7 year old phone and I’ve almost given up on finding a new one with sensible hardware. In the last years android really became much closer to iphones, and not to their advantage in my eyes.

          • @money_loo
            link
            -7
            edit-2
            1 year ago

            “Just want a phone that works and does everything you need without thinking about it with support past two years?..…we, uh, I’ll get back to you…,”

            • @[email protected]
              link
              fedilink
              41 year ago

              Samsung and pixels have been doing 3-4 years of updates for a while now, and pixels are moving to 5 years with the 8 series coming out in a couple months.

              • @money_loo
                link
                4
                edit-2
                1 year ago

                “For a while now” = Since Feb 2022.

                But yeah, that’s awesome they finally decided to support their devices!

                And Google? Well, thankfully they don’t have a track record of abandoning things, so I’d totally trust them.

                • Jackie's Fridge
                  link
                  51 year ago

                  IPhones are cool and all, but I’m a fan of usable file management.

                  • @money_loo
                    link
                    -11 year ago

                    I actually use both, so I kid a lot but ultimately a phone is a phone. I find it funny when people take it personally.

        • @Bytemeister
          link
          Ελληνικά
          31 year ago

          It’s a drop in the bucket really. You know who has decided not to use a wireless charger in order to save money on their electric bill… Nobody.

          • Dharma Curious
            link
            fedilink
            01 year ago

            It’s not really about the tiny amount for an individual, it’s a problem when multiplied by the millions upon millions of iPhone users, and because they steer the market, the millions and millions of Android users that will follow.

        • Hydroel
          link
          21 year ago

          Wireless charging would be a catastrophe at that scale. It is terribly inefficient; multiplied by the number of iPhones in circulation, and we would have gigantic amounts of energy wasted because Apple didn’t want to bend to a non-proprietary port. We already live in a world where the energy is an issue and the EU USB-C law is precisely aimed at reducing waste, it would be a horrendous decision on a disastrous scale, especially as other phone makers would quickly follow.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        English
        211 year ago

        EU has already warned them not to throttle charging and transfer speeds just because a cable isn’t MFI

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        201 year ago

        I don’t know about you, but I don’t honestly remember the last time I connected my phone to my computer to transfer data

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          151 year ago

          I connected my phone to tether internet since the power was out but the cell network was still going.

          • @[email protected]
            link
            fedilink
            01 year ago

            iPhones can tether via a wifi connection, so that’s not necessary. Does drain the battery a bit faster, though.

            • @[email protected]
              link
              fedilink
              English
              5
              edit-2
              1 year ago

              Most desktops don’t have WiFi cards + it does add more latency to WiFi hotspot. Say your internet died at home and you still want to play games or work in vdi

            • Hydroel
              link
              11 year ago

              All smartphones I’ve had since around 2013 could do that. Is Wifi Hotspot still locked behind an ISP paywall exclusively on iPhone?

        • BOMBS
          link
          English
          31 year ago

          I don’t do it often either, but it came in clutch this week when I re-installed Linux Mint and needed to download the drivers for my wifi card via tethering.

      • @OscarRobin
        link
        91 year ago

        Apple uses the standard USB-PD standard for all existing wired USB-C charging, uses the QI standard for wireless, and directly contributed their magsafe technology to the next generation of the QI wireless standard, so there’s no reason to think they will make iPhone wireless charging proprietary.

        • @SirQuackTheDuck
          link
          51 year ago

          Furthermore, they’ll be shooting themselves in the foot. The EU is already curtailing wireless charging lock-in, by mandating Qi charging support. A tailor-made solution might have a higher speed, but as technologies improve, the “harmonised interoperability” will be bumped up by the EU parliament.

          Lastly, this legislation doesn’t seem aimed at just the EU. My legalese isn’t all that great, but it seems they’re highly encouraging members of the EEA (non-EU) to adopt similar legislation too.

          Source: europa.eu

      • @Wooki
        link
        -11 year ago

        Wireless charging should be regulated. It’s a wasteful joke that burns more carbon by wasting electricity

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          English
          61 year ago

          The amount of electricity used to charge phones is statistical dust. If you want to save electricity there are 1000 better places to worry about.

          • @[email protected]
            link
            fedilink
            11 year ago

            Yep, definitely. A bigger problem is the additional heat generated, especially if the phone is also being used at the same time.

          • @Wooki
            link
            1
            edit-2
            1 year ago

            Multiplying every phone in use by the average capacity loss at 50% that’s the best case scenario for loss ( ignoring the newer phones using significantly more power and glass to insulate). You do not have a statistically dust number of wasted carbon every day.

            • @[email protected]
              link
              fedilink
              English
              11 year ago

              Let’s say everyone in the world has a smartphone and charges it 100% every day. Let’s say that it’s 4000 mah battery so they waste 2000 mah. This is very very generous. That’s 7.4 wh per person per day X 8b people X 365 days a year = 2.1x10^13 wh. In 2022 we used 1.7x10^17. Or 0.01% Like I said, statistical dust.

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          English
          31 year ago

          The energy consumption of replacing a worn out cable is pretty bad too.

          The energy consumption of replacing a whole phone when the port wears out is considerably worse.

          Oh and as a bonus, the wireless charger provides unbeatable isolation from lightning strikes or a defective power brick shorting to mains. I can’t say how many phones are saved that way, but it’s also something of an energy savings.

          • @Wooki
            link
            1
            edit-2
            1 year ago

            Delusion is strong in this one.

            “Worn out cable…. Ect ect fallacy about power loss.”

            Nice straw man argument, you are really reaching. Not only will it never happen to get close to the wireless waste but we are talking about Brand new future device.

            I abuse my charging port with headphones, 5 years not replaced. This still would not come close to the loss.

            it’s at least 50% power loss over wireless. At minimum.

            https://www.resilience.org/stories/2020-08-09/wireless-charging-a-colossal-waste-of-energy/

            • @[email protected]
              link
              fedilink
              English
              01 year ago

              I’m not talking about “resistance change in a cord blah blah”. I’m talking about the power and resources to manufacture and ship a new phone, after your old phone fails prematurely. The kilowatt-hours being poured into a phone’s battery over its service life are a miniscule part of its TCO. Doubling that makes it two pittances.

    • @Baphomet_The_Blasphemer
      link
      -111 year ago

      Changing their plug design with every new generation of products has created a lot of e-waste as the older plugs are no longer usable, as well as some countries have deemed this practice as a form of planned obsolescence which they have policies/laws against. So the EU basically told Apple that if their new products didn’t switch to a universal standard plug design (currently being the usb-c), then they would not be allowed to sell them in Europe. I’m guessing Apple is now trying to pass this off as their idea.

      • @BB69
        link
        441 year ago

        They don’t change it every generation. Apple has been using the lightning port since 2012.

        • Zagorath
          link
          fedilink
          251 year ago

          Yeah it’s a really weird reputation Apple’s gotten, but it’s completely unfair. In the time I’ve been using Android smartphones they’ve switched from micro-USB to USB-C.

          Over that same time period, Apple has always used Lightning.

          Go back a bit further and Apple’s older 30-pin connector comes into play, but that’s still just 2 cables in the entire history of smartphones so far. Compare that to the proprietary cables that could often vary by model on the various devices that existed prior to Apple and Android taking over the market and it’s a pretty good situation.

          iPads have been a little worse, going from 30-pin to lightning and starting to use USB-C in 2018. But still, even that’s been very stable since then.

          There’s plenty of legitimate things to criticise Apple for. Like their opposition to the right to repair. We don’t need to be making shit up.

          • 𝕸𝖔𝖘𝖘
            link
            fedilink
            English
            111 year ago

            Don’t forget miniB USB before the microB.

            It went: proprietary–>open standard MiniB–>open standard MicroB–>open standard C.

            On iPhone: proprietary 30pin–>proprietary Lightning

            • @fuckwit_mcbumcrumble
              link
              English
              51 year ago

              Mini USB was a dark dark time. Please don’t bring up those bad memories.

              • 𝕸𝖔𝖘𝖘
                link
                fedilink
                English
                11 year ago

                Hahahahahhahaha!!! I was actually thinking how bad those times were in tech hahaha

            • Zagorath
              link
              fedilink
              English
              31 year ago

              I didn’t forget it, I just have never seen a phone with mini USB. I’ve still actually got some devices that use it, but never a phone.

              Not doubting that they exist, but I was very explicitly comparing my own personal experience to the Apple one.

              • 𝕸𝖔𝖘𝖘
                link
                fedilink
                English
                21 year ago

                That’s fair. I do know that miniB phones were few and far between, since the microB was popularized shortly after the smartphone was starting to go ubiquitous. I know about HTC phones, since those were where my experience was with early smartphones (specifically the HTC Dream and HTC Hero, which both had miniB).

          • @MsPenguinette
            link
            81 year ago

            Also, it’s frustrating that everyone acts like lightning has no redeeming qualities. Lightning is a postless port, meaning that the failure mode is outside the device. If you accidentally trip over your cable, the cable will break but the port will be fine. That’s why your grandma can be using a 10 year old iPhone and treat it like shit

            I think a serious argument could be made that more e-waste could be made by having a device that has a higher chance of breaking.

            I’ll be happy to have a single cable for everything but that device will have a short life overall once it hits the point where the cost of any repair on the port outweighs the value of the device.

            I’ll also have a lot of lightning cables that will become obsolete but that’s how it goes. There will be a ton of old people giving a lot of retail works a lot of shit that Apple changed ports just to make money. It happened when they went from 30-pin to lightning over decade ago and will happen again

            • @[email protected]
              link
              fedilink
              English
              11 year ago

              If you accidentally trip over your cable, the cable will break but the port will be fine.

              Tbh this is thing I’m not excited about the USB-C future on. On paper, I would expect that Lightning be more problematic since the springy bits are on device rather than the connector. In practice, I’ve never seen a Lightning port fail since it’s come out. Micro-USB, which is much closer to USB-C in design (obviously with improvement) for me has basically come with an expiration date. I don’t have enough USB-C stuff yet to say if that’s going to continue, but it’s a concern for sure.

          • @weeeeum
            link
            English
            61 year ago

            That reputation is definitely unfair for their mobile devices but extremely fair for their laptops. 3 different magsafe connecters, switched to thunderbolt, switched to a new magsafe connector all over again, all in 10 or so years.

            • Zagorath
              link
              fedilink
              English
              11 year ago

              That’s a fair point. Though I’d point out that two of the three pre-Thunderbolt (which—and I assume you know this, but I’m adding it in for the casual reader who might not know—uses the USB-C connector) Magsafe cables actually used the same connector, so you could use them interchangeably. They just improved the way the cable itself worked to come out at an angle instead of 90º. And that the new post-Thunderbolt Magsafe laptops can also be charged using the Thunderbolt/USB-C ports, so it’s only adding a new option, not replacing one.

              So it’s definitely worse than their mobile devices, but not quite as bad as it might at first seem.

          • @[email protected]
            link
            fedilink
            61 year ago

            If every cell phone brand acted like Apple we would have like thirty different proprietary chargers.

            We shouldn’t give them a pass just because they’re the only ones brazen enough to be stupid.

            • @fuckwit_mcbumcrumble
              link
              English
              61 year ago

              USB C didn’t exist when Apple made the lightning connector.

              Are they idiots, or are they innovators and the rest are just trying to catch up?

              • @Afiefh
                link
                51 year ago

                USB C didn’t exist, but it was being developed, and apple was on the USB-IF forum which developed it. So literally part of apple was developing USB-C while another part decided “nah, we will make our own” and of course it takes less time to make your own than to make something everyone agrees on.

              • @[email protected]
                link
                fedilink
                -11 year ago

                Micro USB did.

                And then instead of making a connector like USB-C that everyone could use they made their own proprietary one.

                • @money_loo
                  link
                  51 year ago

                  Micro usb sucked.

                  It was weird how you’d go to plug it in in the darkness of night, and it wouldn’t fit, so you’d rotate it, but inexplicably it still wouldn’t fit, so you rotate it again….and now it fits?!?

                  No thank you, I don’t like cables that break the fabric of space and time and betray reality itself.

                • @[email protected]
                  link
                  fedilink
                  English
                  31 year ago

                  Micro-usb is just about the most garbage connector in the last 30 years. I’d damn near rather Apple have actually sent me a breadboard and some leads than have that connector.

            • Hydroel
              link
              11 year ago

              It used to be the case, just like it was for laptops until very recently.

            • @Bytemeister
              link
              Ελληνικά
              11 year ago

              I remember when it used to be that way. Every damn brand had a slightly different size barrel jack for charging.

          • @[email protected]
            link
            fedilink
            -41 year ago

            It’s not an unfair reputation at all. I still have trauma from needing to buy new 24/30pin connectors every couple iPod generations. They absolutely did that shit on purpose, and lightning might have been a more moderate version of their planned obsolescence peripheral policy, but there was no fucking reason in the world for them to stick with the inferior lightning standard, other than forced fragmentation of the peripheral market. Apple knows that the number one reason people don’t even consider switching away from iPhone is because of all their lightning peripherals

            • @[email protected]
              link
              fedilink
              81 year ago

              This is a weirdly untrue comment. The iPod used FireWire for a couple generations before switching to 30 pin and never changing again throughout the rest of the history of the classic iPod form factor.

              And a cable has nothing to do with why people buy or stick with an Apple or Google device. A switch to USB C would be better for everyone and Apple knows it (otherwise why switch the iPad to usb c? Why not put proprietary connectors on macs???)

              Also? If Apple switched to USB C when it was invented AFTER Lightning, you’d be complaining even harder about how Apple keeps switching their ports to get you to buy more cables. Better late than never

        • genoxidedev1
          link
          fedilink
          21 year ago

          Nothing and no-one other than Apple though, so I would welcome them being forced to use a universal standard instead of that ugly-ass fucking conglomerate of multiple types of bullshit proprietary standard they keep pushing so they can get even more money.

          I’d be way happier with Apple existing if they wouldn’t always push these overly obvious proprietary money grabbing bullshit.

          • @BB69
            link
            91 year ago

            I mean, yeah, but there’s no need for OP to lie about Apple swapping ports every generation.

            • @[email protected]
              link
              fedilink
              English
              41 year ago

              I use 10 Apple hardware devices currently, and have owned well over 100 since my first Mac 128K in 1984. I’m a sucker for Apple shit.

              I kind of have to agree with the spirit of previous poster’s point. Apple does do annoying shit with port formats.

              Between the four MacBooks in front of me, only two share the same main power format—and, of course, one of those can’t get enough juice from the other’s PSU.

              Have two different formats for my iPads, and my partner’s iPhone and mine don’t share a format. That’s not remarkable, but the timing of the various iOS port format changes was frustrating, as certain devices made the port jump at the same time that their brethren did not.

              I would finally note the rather large bouquet of different Apple wall-warts we have collected, also in two different formats, and a variety of wattages.

              Finally, a lot of Apple’s cables have tips that seem purpose-built to fall apart, meaning even more trash in landfills.

              • @BB69
                link
                21 year ago

                Apple swapped MacBooks to USB C in 2015

                2018 was first USB C iPad.

                Unless your partner is using an iPhone 4s, they have a lightning port. Not sure why you’re saying they’re different.

                Again. Not every generation.

                • @[email protected]
                  link
                  fedilink
                  English
                  0
                  edit-2
                  1 year ago

                  “Spirit” was the operative word.

                  Your data isn’t comprehensive: Intel MB Air used MagSafe until 2017, but not same MagSafe as currently offered.

                  And, I meant that, among iOS devices, iPads did not switch to USB-C at same time phones did.

                  From cgpt, through 2021:

                  iPhone and iPad models did not make the shift to USB-C at the same time. As of my last update in September 2021, iPads started transitioning to USB-C with the iPad Pro in 2018. Other iPad models like the iPad Air followed suit, adopting USB-C in 2020.

                  iPhones, on the other hand, have stuck with the proprietary Lightning connector for charging and data transfer. As of 2021, no iPhone models had transitioned to USB-C, although the topic has been a subject of speculation and rumors.

              • genoxidedev1
                link
                fedilink
                01 year ago

                The “purpose-built to fall apart” is real, I used to have a best friend who had to get new apple headphones every 2-3 weeks because they always somehow broke.

                My apple headphone clones on the other hand lasted at best 2 years and at worst I can’t say yet because this is the second pair I got from the manufacturer and they’re still going strong. And I usually handle my headphones like shit, though not intentionally, of course, but the usual wear and tear.

                • @fuckwit_mcbumcrumble
                  link
                  English
                  61 year ago

                  Your friend is incredible if he’s able to kill Apple’s headphones in under a month. Unironically he should apply to work for some of these companies for QA if he’s actually capable of doing that.

                • @[email protected]
                  link
                  fedilink
                  English
                  11 year ago

                  For all of my suckerdom, the one Apple thing I don’t buy is headphones. Between the pre-sale engineered obsolescence and the post-sale engineered obsolescence (looking at you, AirPods and your declining noise-canceling levels after software “updates” as a new model is about to launch), I managed to achieve escape velocity to other headphone brands. Love the Sony WF-1000XM series for noise-canceling earbuds.

      • OhStopYellingAtMe
        link
        131 year ago

        Changing their plug design with every new generation of products

        what are you talking about? They’ve used the same lightening connector for the past 10 generations.