>They'll either force them to charge wirelessly or design a new lightning hyper-charge capable cable that can do 101 watts.
>Either of these will exempt them from the EU law and allow for proprietary charging methods (proprietary wireless charging protocol or the lightning 101W connector)
>Edit: you're welcome to be mad about it, but like... read the text of the law then point out where I'm wrong and where Apple will happily give up their $4 per lightning connector royalty fee
Did you read the text? There is no 101W exemption in the directive.
>In so far as they are capable of being recharged by means of wired charging, —, shall: be equipped with the USB Type-C receptacle...
>
In so far as they are capable of being recharged by means of wired charging at voltages higher than 5 Volts, currents higher than 3 Amperes or powers higher than 15 Watts, —, shall: incorporate the USB Power Delivery...
The lawmakers acknowledge in the text that Type-C and USB PD have room to grow and that the newly updated USB PD already does 240W, that why they didn't write such exemptions.
Obliterators t1_irqm677 wrote
Reply to comment by ERRORMONSTER in Apple could bring USB-C to AirPods and Mac accessories by 2024 by athin_explorer
>They'll either force them to charge wirelessly or design a new lightning hyper-charge capable cable that can do 101 watts.
>Either of these will exempt them from the EU law and allow for proprietary charging methods (proprietary wireless charging protocol or the lightning 101W connector)
>Edit: you're welcome to be mad about it, but like... read the text of the law then point out where I'm wrong and where Apple will happily give up their $4 per lightning connector royalty fee
Did you read the text? There is no 101W exemption in the directive.
>In so far as they are capable of being recharged by means of wired charging, —, shall: be equipped with the USB Type-C receptacle... > In so far as they are capable of being recharged by means of wired charging at voltages higher than 5 Volts, currents higher than 3 Amperes or powers higher than 15 Watts, —, shall: incorporate the USB Power Delivery...
The lawmakers acknowledge in the text that Type-C and USB PD have room to grow and that the newly updated USB PD already does 240W, that why they didn't write such exemptions.