Friday, April 22nd 2022

European Union MEPs Agree on Making USB Type-C the Standard Charging Connector

This past week, the EU's Internal Market and Consumer Protection Committee agreed on adopting USB Type-C as the union's standard charging connector, with 43 votes in favour and two against. It's part of the Radio Equipment Directive and it means that USB-C is now very close to becoming the de facto connector for charging a wide range of consumer electronics. The charging standard will apply to what the committee calls small and medium-sized electronic gadgets and include mobile phones, tablets, digital cameras, headphones and headsets, handheld videogame consoles and portable speakers. Exemptions will apply for devices that are too small to incorporate a USB-C port, such a smart watches, health trackers and some sports equipment.

The directive still has to be approved by the EU parliament, which is expected to happen in May during the plenary session. There will be an initial transition period and the new requirements aren't expected to start to apply until early 2024. In addition to the new directive, the MEPs also want to see clear labelling on devices in terms of how much power they can deliver, since this can sometimes be hard to figure out as a consumer. They also want to see clear labelling on product packaging if a charger is supplied or not. Furthermore, the MEPs want the European Commission to present a strategy with regards to wireless chargers by the end of 2026, to make sure there's some kind of minimal interoperability between the various wireless charging standards. This is said to be to try and avoid market fragmentation, as well as to reduce e-waste and to try and prevent consumer "lock-in" to proprietary charging standards. The EU is said to end up with 11 to 13-thousand tons of e-waste from chargers alone on a yearly basis, so it's not hard to see why the union wants to see a unified charging standard for most electronics.
Source: The European Union
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52 Comments on European Union MEPs Agree on Making USB Type-C the Standard Charging Connector

#51
Prima.Vera
zlobbyI miss a pure fiber-optic core with fat, round copper exterior. This way you get a decent bandwidth from the FO and nice ammount of juice from the thick copper. Oh, and did I mention it's round, so even Apple users won't have issues with it.

This of course is just the general idea. Lot can be improved from here on.
Fiber would never work for consumers. It's too expensive, too fragile and you would need 2 big converters at the end of each end. Plus extra shielding. Just look how the Optical cables look nowadays...
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#52
zlobby
Prima.VeraFiber would never work for consumers. It's too expensive, too fragile and you would need 2 big converters at the end of each end. Plus extra shielding. Just look how the Optical cables look nowadays...
Why would be extra shielding needed? If we are talking about EM shielding, that is.

Only issue is fragility. OE part can be entirely in the host devices. Although I guess for small distances some jelly-like materials can be utilized for core and cladding.

For example, there are even some high-grade HDMI cables that are running FO for the data paths. OE is integrated in the HDMI connectors.
This way you can run yards and yards of 8K-capable cables across your entire home.
The only issue I see with these is the cost, they cost over $1000 a pop!
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