Ichinisan
Lifer
- Oct 9, 2002
- 28,298
- 1,235
- 136
It's the difference between your counter or desk looking like this:
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and this:
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Why would my desk have a pile of European cords?
It's the difference between your counter or desk looking like this:
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and this:
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Picture this... Someday wireless charging will be the default standard for all devices. Phones, cameras, tablets, etc....
You'll have a wireless charging pad on your nightstand, on your end table, on your computer desk... More interesting will be when auto manufacturers build one in to the dash or center console of their vehicles, hotels will include one built into the desk. They will be universal and everywhere. Can't wait. I think we are still a few years away, but it is coming as long as everyone accepts the Qi standard.
If it's a Qi pad. It is the leading standard, but the other competing consortium groups have just merged. PowerMat, I believe, is a different standard based on the same tech.
There was one that promised to be more capable at a distance, but I have no idea what happened to that. That group merged with PowerMat's group, so... it may be dead.
I think Qi wins simply because it is being baked into devices, whereas PowerMat, save for at most a handful of phones, is an after-market product.
I have a Qi charger and never use it. Why? Because in the morning when I get up my phone (N4) is always at something stupid like 74% instead of the 100% I get from using a cable. Not sure if it is a wake lock issue or what, but it is never at 100% in the morning. That means I need to charge it when I get to work which is an extra step.
Might try it on my wife's N5 to see how well it works.
It's the difference between your counter or desk looking like this:
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and this:
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The analogy I think of is a docking station for a laptop. It is not technically "necessary", but it makes life so much easier.
But you can use a laptop while it's docked.
Pad? What pad? They're already demoing 20ft range wireless charging. It's only a matter of time before all of our mobile gadgets are continuously powered OTA
That is the rub... THey charge slower.. HOw low is your battery when you put it on the mat and does it ever get to 100% if you leave it there?
MONGO LIKE CANDY!because some people mongo force the charging plugs and end up damaging the plug or the port....
I guess...
....
Wireless charging also helps phones maintain waterproofness. Rubber gaskets at ports will wear out with repeated opening/closing or the plastic tabs can break off. Wireless charging lets you keep everything plugged up and just plop it down to charge. My Z3 needs to use those magnetic charging ports, but Verizon's version has QI, which allows you to just lay it down. Wireless charging was also great in the car docks. I put my phone in and it starts charging, no need to connect the cable when I get into the car.
Use it or not, nobody is forcing you, but it can be extremely convenient. The technology could use some more time to mature, and a single standard. Starbucks backing powermat made things a little more complicated.
http://www.computerworld.com/articl...ess-charging-won-t-work-for-most-devices.htmlThe Qi specification, however, has the greatest industry support. More than 200 companies, among them a veritable who's who of electronics, such as LG Electronics, Sony, Nokia, Toyota, Texas Instruments, Microsoft, Motorola Mobility, Samsung Electronics, and Verizon Wireless.
By comparison, the A4WP now has 100 members, including Broadcom, Delphi, Fairchild Semiconductor, Haier, Intel, LG Electronics, Microsoft, Qualcomm, Samsung Electronics, SanDisk, TDK and Texas Instruments. The PMA has 70 members.
Starbucks today announced the rollout of wireless charging nationwide, but nearly all mobile handsets and consumer devices currently in use that incorporate wireless charging technology won't be able to use it.

$23 is expensive? I make that in less than 30 minutes of work.
Yeah, when you realize you need 4 or 5 of them, plus A/C adapters, so all of a sudden you're looking at $150 for chargers, vs. $3 shipped for a 5-pack of knockoff direct-plug cables from Amazon![]()
