• JWBananas
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    -23 months ago

    They were keeping their promise of 10 years of Lightning ecosystem support. Dropping the old iPod connector was highly controversial.

      • @Clusterfck
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        3 months ago

        And they promised to do so for at least 10 years.

          • TheRealKuni
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            93 months ago

            we promise we’ll use the inferior, proprietary connector

            Honestly Lightning wasn’t inferior when it launched in 2012, two years before the design of USB-C was even published. And in some ways I actually prefer it physically (though obviously I would much rather all my devices use USB-C now as it is a much superior connector).

            Lightning was reversible where Micro-USB was not, and Lightning’s female port is entirely a hole that the entirely-a-prong male plug goes into, whereas with USB (like with most connectors) the female side has something sticking up inside it that slots into the male plug. This means Lightning is much easier to clean, which becomes necessary because phones in people’s pockets collect lint.

            I’m thrilled that iPhone has moved to USB-C, but people forget how much better Lightning was than both the 30-pin iPod connector AND Micro-USB.

            • @Clusterfck
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              63 months ago

              Absolutely it was better. But it’s hard to believe that Apple, who was a part of the USB-IF, didn’t know USB-C was in the works. My conspiracy theory is they knew an open standard was imminent and launched lightning to keep getting those MFI licensing checks and purposely made that long of a commitment strictly so, when regulators asked why they hadn’t switched to the new standard yet, they could say it was to “help the environment.”

              • TheRealKuni
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                23 months ago

                Absolutely it was better. But it’s hard to believe that Apple, who was a part of the USB-IF, didn’t know USB-C was in the works. My conspiracy theory is they knew an open standard was imminent and launched lightning to keep getting those MFI licensing checks and purposely made that long of a commitment strictly so, when regulators asked why they hadn’t switched to the new standard yet, they could say it was to “help the environment.”

                Oh probably. We know that by the time they finally dropped Lightning, MFi certification was earning them like $4b per year.

                There was even rumor they were going to limit charging speeds over USB-C unless they were detectably “MFi” USB-C cables. Ostensibly to prevent damage to the phone from bad cables, but obviously an attempt to maintain MFi income. I don’t remember if they went through with it.

      • JWBananas
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        43 months ago

        The two are not mutually exclusive. The downvote button is not an “I don’t like this” button.

    • @bandwidthcrisis@lemmy.world
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      33 months ago

      Phones used to have a round charger socket, a USB socket that could also be used to charge, plus the headphone socket and SD card slot. I’m sure they could have found room for both USB C and Lightning, with all the other things that were removed.

    • @Honytawk@lemmy.zip
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      33 months ago

      “We promise to keep increasing our profit by overcharging customers for awful cables they can’t get anywhere else”

      What a dumb promise