Now that we see the iPhone 15 with the new usb-c port, what’s your first impression?

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For me it’s not too big a deal, functionally identical. I have the pro, so could use high speed data, but I never have used the charging cable for data and am not likely to start now. I appreciate faster charging but realistically charge overnight, so no change

I understand and support the goal of one set of chargers and cables for everything, but in the immediate term, it does mean buying new cables and chargers, and it means all the existing ones going to waste.

– so far, I’ve had to buy two cables, a charger, and two new power strips with USB-C, and there will be more to come

– My teens still have Lightning iPhones and they’re hard on cables, so my old cables won’t go to waste.

– admittedly, I’m trying to jump past the next transition by moving to usb-c chargers somewhat rather than buy new usb-a to usb-c cables for old chargers

– I bought a usb-c watch cable but am not counting that because it was a replace t for a damaged usb-a Watch cable

– I’ll still need charging cables for my car, and my laptop bag, and I’m sure additional charging block or two

  • @derf82
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    01 year ago

    I use USB-A, and it never takes that much time. Perhaps your bricks do not offer 4-5 amps, as many USB-A chargers do. Apple’s USB-A bricks sucked. I think they may have been 1 amp (i.e. 5 watts)

    Apple still limits USB-C charging to 20 watts. They do not support USB Power Delivery.

    My point is more that you don’t need to rush out and change all your chargers. Replace only as needed. It isn’t like you can’t charge from USB-A.