That's a shame about USB-C. I thought it was supposed to be better all-round.
Do you think there could be an update to USB-C similar to how we have HDMI and USB 3.1 that will improve the stability and safety of USB-C?
Do you think there could be an update to USB-C similar to how we have HDMI and USB 3.1 that will improve the stability and safety of USB-C?
Another problem is, in the best case scenario and when you're lucky, the cable's box might say "good for up to 3A" (the most common cables). Yet USB-C power delivery supports 20V 5A chargers and charging, so if you tried to connect the above cable to a 5A charger (commonly provided with USB-C laptops), it might work but might also fry things. Heck, a 5A cable with a 5A charger might fry a phone trying to ask for a 2A charge if it's a really bad cable.
Micro-USB would simply not work if an attempt was made to do something it's not capable of, and devices on both sides could immediately see on a hardware level what the other side is capable of. For fast charging to work, appropriate wires have to be present on the cable and a proper pin has to be there on the phone's port. If any of those was missing, the charger would never try to push higher voltage, and that's it.
USB-C relies on the device transmitting the information to the charger over a cable that might or might not carry that information, over a cable that might or might not be capable of carrying such power.
It's insane that USB-C introduces such risks.
The conversion between USB-A ports and USB-C ports is also imperfect, especially since it's wrong to assume that every USB-A output will be a safe USB-C input.
I think the standards relating to what USB-C cables and peripherals can do and require needs to be fully enforced because otherwise, the standard is unsafe and currently requires the user to research and make appropriate choices. Even then it's not easy to research, as there's no spec sheet or easy way to figure out whether a cable is fine or not. There's pretty much no way to tell without relying on third-party tests and trust that the cable that they are recommending is safe. And USB-C device combinations range all the way from perfectly fine to hazardous.
lol that sucks about the LTE situation. I didn't know LTE and 4G were different. I did know HSPA was something different but also not sure in what ways. I think only TMobile has/had HSPA in the US.
What's annoying (other than Android lying here) is that there's no way to know how fast of a speed you're getting at the moment, since it either says 4G or LTE. When it says 3G, you can assume that you're connected to something slower than LTE, but you still don't know what that is, as Android is masking that.
I forgot to add, I don't know about your S7, but the Canadian stock ROM for the S8 also doesn't have the data toggle. As soon as I also saw that I assumed those were some insane things pushed by the local carriers who thought the phone users are dumb and it'll fly.
USB-C really was supposed to change things and people on Reddit slap their dicks for USB-C on their phones, but if there's a serious issue about burning out and lack of regulations on the accessories, then that's something that's not talked about often on forums.
I remember seeing those articles. I just didn't fully understand why they're making such a big deal out of it and didn't realize how serious the situation is until I got my own USB-C device. I thought USB-C was more like Micro USB with some easily fixable problems and some early faulty cables. Then I realized the standard is just more hazardous than Micro USB. It's certainly not fool-proof, and potentially very punishing if you're unlucky. You can't even rely on the major companies, as Anker cables aren't safe, Belkin and APPLE recalled theirs, but the faulty ones are still circulating. It's more likely than not that the cable you're buying is actually unsafe, as very few are safe for each USB-C use case, while most of them cost more than $20 each.
Micro USB was a perfectly safe standard in that regard. Frankly, it just needed a reversible connector, faster data speeds and extended power limitations and it would be what USB-C should have been.
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