I'm an Apple fanboy and all, but it's stuff like this that feels so nickel and 
dime-ish sometimes. 
Like really? Folks are dropping $1000 on your stuff and you're still going to 
squeeze them for a  few extra on this?
OH well... Not much you can do other than I guess try to score a deal on an 
adaptor.

Cristóbal

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] <[email protected]> On Behalf Of Sieghard 
Weitzel
Sent: Sunday, September 23, 2018 1:38 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: RE: Apple should have included a USB-C cable with the new iPhone, 
Business Insider

My guess is that is is less an oversight than a business decision and that 
Apple knows by not including a USB-C to Lightning cable they can make another 
few Million in profits since people will of course buy them.
It also means accessory manufacturers who also make such cables and adapters 
are also happy.


-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] <[email protected]> On Behalf Of M. Taylor
Sent: Sunday, September 23, 2018 12:25 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Apple should have included a USB-C cable with the new iPhone, Business 
Insider

Apple's big bet on the future of USB is increasingly looking like a rare 
misfire By Matt Weinberger
 
Starting in 2016, the MacBook Pro ditched separate charging and display ports, 
and whittled everything down to two USB-C ports. Apple AAPL Apple
217.66 -2.37 (-1.10 %)
Disclaimer Get real-time AAPL charts here > 
.       Apple's newest MacBook Pro laptops got rid of the separate ports for
charging and accessories, and instead whittled it down to two USB-C ports.
.       USB-C is hyped as the replacement for regular-old USB, also known as
USB Type-A. It can handle charging, plugging in external monitors, and any and 
all other kinds of accessories from a single cable. It's neat!
.       But also, it means that you have to buy pricey, annoying dongles if
you want to plug in any of the existing flash drives, mice, keyboard, or other 
gadgetry you already own. It's frustrating!
.       Ultimately, it's hard to take Apple's big bet on USB-C seriously
when not even its own iPhones come with a USB-C cable. That's right: You can't 
connect a new iPhone to a MacBook or MacBook Pro without shelling out for a new 
cable or adapter.
.       It's an annoying oversight from a company that's known for nailing
the details.
A few months ago, our I.T. department sent me a mid-2017 model MacBook Pro to 
replace my fast-aging MacBook Air. 
To catch you up, Apple gave its premium, top-shelf MacBook Pro lineup a 
controversial new design starting in 2016. Its keyboard was flimsy and prone to 
breaking (hasn't happened to me yet, and largely fixed by a new model in 2018); 
some versions sported a strange Touch Bar above the keyboard (mine doesn't have 
one); and, worst of all, it replaced the traditional USB ports with the new, 
cutting-edge USB-C (the bane of my existence). 
Yes, it's the last one that really gets under my skin. Starting with the
2016 MacBook Pro, Apple took out the charging port, the mini-HDMI port, and 
indeed everything but a headphone jack, and replaced it with nothing more than 
two USB-C ports. It could be worse, though: The regular MacBook only gets a 
single USB-C port. 
It's easy to see where Apple was going with this move. USB-C offers many 
benefits over regular USB (which, by the way, is officially called USB-A) - it 
means that the same cable can be used for charging, for plugging in a monitor, 
or attaching any number of other accessories. And it sidesteps the most 
annoying thing about USB: The connector plugs in no matter which side is facing 
up. It's elegant in a way that feels very Apple-y, for lack of a better term. 
It also means that any USB-C charger can work with any USB-C gadget. When I'm 
traveling, I don't need to pack a separate charger for my Nintendo Switch - my 
MacBook Pro charger will power it up just fine. (I mean, I pack a separate 
Switch charger anyway, but that's because I'm neurotic, not because I have to.) 
If you have a phone or tablet that charges via USB-C, like a Google Pixel 2 or 
Microsoft Surface Go, you'd be able to charge it from there, too. 
This is the gear you would neat to give your iPhone the fastest possible 
charge. The cable on the right connects USB-C to Lightning - the kind of cable 
you'd need to connect an iPhone to the newest MacBook Pro line. Apple It's not 
unusual for Apple to get out ahead of the curve on new standards like this. The 
original iMac caught a ton of flack in the '90s for not including a floppy disk 
drive, but that turned out to be the right move, as the rise of the internet, 
re-writable CDs, and USB flash drives combined to make them quickly obsolete. 
This time, though, Apple may have outsmarted itself. Because while a handful of 
gadget-makers, like Google and Nintendo, have pushed boldly into the USB-C 
future, the rest of the world still runs on good ol' reliable USB-A.
If you want to plug in your existing mouse and keyboard into the MacBook Pro, 
you still need some kind of adapter, hub, or dongle. It's what gadget-heads 
have dubbed "dongle hell," as plugging in everyday accessories becomes a 
headache. 
Indeed, the largest sign that USB-C just isn't quite ready for prime-time comes 
from Apple itself. 
Apple's newest phones, the iPhone XS and iPhone XS Max, do not include a USB-C 
cable, or a fast-charging power adapter with which to use one. That means if 
you buy Apple's most expensive new iPhone, which starts at $1,000, you can't 
use it with Apple's most expensive MacBook Pro without buying a new cable, or 
at least, an annoying dongle. All told, an Apple-branded USB-C cable, and a 
fast-charging wall plug to go with it, will run you another $70. 
It's not the end of the world; I have to imagine that most iPhone owners charge 
from the wall anyway, or at least own a computer that still has an 
original-recipe USB port. 
Still, it's a surprising oversight from Apple, which loves to boast about how 
well the iPhone and Mac work together. Software like iMessage and Photos works 
seamlessly across phone and computer, but a single cable, not in the box, makes 
it that much harder to connect the hardware. 
Maybe Apple is once ahead ahead of the curve, and USB-C will be the dominant 
standard everywhere before too long. Ultimately, though, it's hard to take 
seriously Apple's implicit claims that the USB-C future is upon us, when not 
even its own megalithic iPhone business seems to believe it. 
Of course, if you want to be cynical, you might point out the hesitance to go 
all-in on USB-C is because Apple owns the standard for Lightning, the current 
cable standard in the iPhone and iPad - meaning that Apple does a brisk 
business in licensing the technology to accessory manufacturers, not to mention 
its own wide range of cables and adapter it offers for sale. 

Original Article at:
https://www.businessinsider.com/apple-macbook-pro-iphone-usb-c-2018-9


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