iPhone 12's MagSafe is the sleeper feature that's a bigger deal than you
think, cNet News
Commentary: The fast-charging feature that snaps into place opens up the
possibility for an array of wild new attachments.

The MagSafe is one of the quietly coolest features on the new iPhone 12. 

Apple's unveiling of the iPhone 12 family fittingly shined a spotlight on 5G
-- not a surprise given the amount of hype and investment dollars that have
been poured into the next-generation wireless technology. While 5G continues
to mature into the technological foundation for countless innovations,
however, it's the low-profile MagSafe feature that may offer consumers the
most immediate impact. 

It's almost sacrilege for me to write that 5G still needs to time to
develop. After all, I've been covering the potentially game-changing nature
of 5G since 2015, when I first wrote about Verizon's intention to field-test
the super-fast cellular technology. But the truth is that initial
deployments don't represent huge boosts in speed.

MagSafe, on the other hand, offers some tangible benefits regardless of
where you live or whether you're near the right cell tower. MagSafe charges
faster than previous iPhones, bringing it on par with the quick charge that
Android phones have long enjoyed. And, as dumb as this sounds, there's
something cool about watching your phone snap into place, visual
confirmation that you didn't fumble the placement of your device. 

"There's no more guessing where the sweet spot is," said Ramon Llamas, an
analyst with IDC. 
MagSafe has its own long-term potential. The magnetic pins on the back of
the phone harken back to other attempts to push an ecosystem of attachments,
from Motorola's Moto Mods to the Essential Phone PH-1's modular camera.
Neither of those companies moved enough phones -- the Essential, in
particular, was an outright flop -- to really interest many accessory makers
to take risks on bold ideas. Most of the time, we got extra battery packs. 

Apple's scale changes everything. 
Paving the way 
Apple's enormous reach -- Strategy Analytics estimates it will sell 180
million units next year -- means a potentially huge market for anyone
looking to build MagSafe accessories. The opportunity is particularly rich
for anyone looking at attachments beyond the basic wireless charging stand.
Think game controllers, camera grips, selfie sticks and, yes, wireless
charging battery packs that could change the way we hold or interact with an
iPhone. 

"We can't wait to see the innovative way that others will use MagSafe,
creating a robust and ever expanding ecosystem," Deniz Teoman, vice
president of hardware systems engineering at Apple, said in the Apple
presentation on Tuesday.

That isn't hyperbole. Apple has a way of popularizing and legitimizing tech
trends, from mobile payments to wireless charging. Where Motorola and
Essential fell short, Apple could popularize the notion of magnetic
attachments. 

Apple itself filed a patent for a folio case with additional power supply
and the ability to charge AirPods, according to Patently Apple. While those
patents don't always yield products in the real world, they're an indication
of where the company may go in the future. 

Phone accessory maker Belkin , meanwhile, has already unveiled two MagSafe
accessories, a charging stand that can handle an iPhone 12, Apple Watch and
Apple Airpods, along with a more conventional car mount. Steve Malony,
senior vice president of Belkin, said the initial products were more "bread
and butter" when compared to future accessories on the roadmap. 

"Some of the ideas that we see come across our desk are pretty wild," he
teased. "It's going to be fun to take those ideas and put them in play." 

Modular dreams
MagSafe feels like a spiritual successor to Google's Project Ara, a modular
phone that used magnets to attach smaller components to the handset,
allowing you to build it up like you were assembling something out of Legos.


Modular was hyped as a potential breakthrough innovation in smartphones. LG
tried its hand with its G5 phone, which allowed you to swap out the bottom
of the device for different attachments like grips and hi-fi speakers. The
trend died off as quickly as it rose, with Google putting the project on
hold, then quietly scrapping it. The G5 was such a flop that LG followed up
with a far more conventional phone the next year.   

"The bigger issue is that fully modular designs are more appealing to
engineers than to consumers," said Avi Greengart, an analyst at
Techsponential. "Smartphones are highly evolved products, and people buy the
best phone they can afford that meets their needs now, not a platform to
tinker with later."

Moto Mods represented a streamlined version of the modular concept, offering
a full phone with different backs you can swap in and out. That concept
allowed Motorola's Moto Z3 to be the first 5G phone on Verizon's network,
thanks to a 5G Mod that slapped into the back of the device. But even then,
a Mod-less phone felt like half of a device, and the gimmick was core to the
phone. 

Apple has refined it further, offering a complete handset in the iPhone 12,
but with the option to magnetically attach accessories.

"MagSafe is brilliant in its simplicity," Greengart said. 
Malony called the advent of MagSafe a "transformational time" for the
accessories market, and he expects a wave of different attachments to come
from the industry. 
"Things like this change the game," he said.

Original Article at:  
https://www.cnet.com/news/iphone-12s-magsafe-is-the-sleeper-feature-thats-a-
bigger-deal-than-you-think/?ftag=CAD090e536&bhid=226946673816868391723152096
28767&mid=13115619&cid=643954770


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