After a User Dies, Apple Warns Against Counterfeit Chargers 457
After a Chinese woman was earlier this month evidently electrocuted while talking on her iPhone while it was plugged in to charge, Apple is warning users to avoid counterfeit chargers. From CNet:
"Last week, reports surfaced in China that suggested the woman, Ma Ailun, might have been using a third-party charger designed to look like the real thing. Although third-party chargers are not uncommon, they vary widely in terms of safety and quality.
Earlier this year, safety consulting and certification company UL issued a warning that counterfeit Apple USB chargers were making the rounds and that consumers should be on the lookout for them due to their lower quality and possibly dangerous defects. The company posted the guidance on its site after a woman was allegedly electrocuted while answering a call on her iPhone."
Huh. (Score:5, Insightful)
There are lots of "third-party" Android chargers out there -- ordinary MicroUSB things. If "counterfeit" (i.e. non-Samsung, or whatever) chargers were a problem, wouldn't this happen all the time with Androids?
Sounds like Apple is just taking advantage of the opportunity to scare people into paying the Apple Tax.
Re:Huh. (Score:2, Insightful)
You mean that I can't transfer data with my USB cable?
What kind of Apple fanboy retard are you?
Not impossible with some legitimate chargers. (Score:3, Insightful)
When I finally dumped my iPhone 3G, it was because it kept shocking me every time it rang. I don't know about the iPhone 5, but I think blaming the charger might be a little simplistic given that experience.
Re:Smart move (Score:5, Insightful)
I never understood why iPhone's adapter is a completely retarded pile of junk. What's wrong with the standard USB adapter like everyone else? Oh aside from them making a cock load of money from cables.
Re:Smart move (Score:4, Insightful)
the charger that plugs into your wall is IS a usb connection, the same type that comes with your android tablet, phone, camera whatever these days
the problem is some dipshit designer makes knockoffs and does not adhere to basic common sense principals
I am no apple fanboi, have no apple products, but your post serves no point other than to be a shit tosser when you clearly dont have the brains to comprehend that ANY SHITBALL EL CHEAPO CHARGER CAN DO THIS not just apple's
so feel safe next time you charge up your precious chintek android using a wall wart you bought for 99 cents off of ebay
Re:Smart move (Score:5, Insightful)
Not that I particularly like the cable, but some reasons are: It predates USB being a standard for charging devices. It used to need to support FireWire in addition to USB. It still supports running audio and video over the wire in a "raw" form (rather than as some USB data device), which is actually a fairly useful feature.
Only the last of these is really useful any more. If that feature happens to be useful, the iPhone implementation is actually fairly good. Using Android phones as video sources tends to suck. A few phones have mini HDMI connections (note that the iPhone connector predates HDMI, too), but not many. A few have stupid proprietary HDMI + USB ports that at least are compatible with conventional USB-only cables. Some phones support screencasting or video sourcing through DLNA or proprietary solutions, but those require a network.
Re:Smart move (Score:5, Insightful)
The old iPhone connector was excusable for the reasons you've stated... the new one has no excuse to not conform to the new standard aside from Apple wanting to further bleed their customers of money.
Re:Smart move (Score:3, Insightful)
The Apple charger has a standard USB power port.
"Has a" is not the same as "is a". Even in a reality distortion zone.
Re:Smart move (Score:4, Insightful)
Two things:
1) the iPod was released in 2001
2) USB charging as an industry-wide standard likely didn't happen until later than 2004 (though not 100% certain on this one).
Designed that Way (Score:5, Insightful)
The new "lighting" connector is very solid and handy, contrary to micro USB.
Its designed that way for obvious reasons.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/USB#Mini_and_Micro_connectors [wikipedia.org]
"The Micro plug design is rated for at least 10,000 connect-disconnect cycles—significantly more than the Mini plug design.[38] It is also designed to reduce the mechanical wear on the device; instead the easier-to-replace cable is designed to bear the mechanical wear of connection and disconnection"
Re:Designed that Way (Score:5, Insightful)
Lightning is also symmetric. I can't figure out why they didn't poka yoke USB-Micro. Every single USB standard is just slightly different but not easily apparent in the dark which way is up.
USB-A, USB-B, Mini-A & B, Micro A & B. Would it have been impossible to make it completely symmetric and eliminated 90% of the problems I have with USB?
Re:Smart move (Score:5, Insightful)
Stinks of BS PR to me. "Might" have been using a 3rd party charger? Please... Get the facts first and then release the article. What if it turns out the charger was an official apple one? Huh? Then what?
It is also irrelevant. If the iPhone allows high current to pass through from the charging port to the user, the iPhone has a defective design.
Re:Maybe make certification cheaper, easier (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Designed that Way (Score:4, Insightful)
The MicroUSB connector may be able to handle the cycles, but the PCB connectors seem to fail regularly. The connector itself is reasonably solid compared to lightning, but using it as a dock connector is ill advised.
Lightning connectors add the benefit of symmetry to the equation and also gives a more robust/flexible data link.