Macworld (USA)

Apple is never switching from Lightning to USB-C in the iphone

Seriously, stop with these rumors already.

- BY MICHAEL SIMON

Since it had been several days without an iphone rumor ( go. macworld.com/i18r), Digitimes piped up in mid-june ( go.macworld.com/iusc) with a purported salacious scoop about next year’s iphone. According to the site, Apple “will likely have its 2019 series of iphones come with USB Type-c support,” replacing the nearly six-year-old Lightning port.

In that time between Lightning’s arrival in 2012 and the upcoming 2018 iphones, USB-C has risen to a position of prominence on many of Apple’s products. It’s a mainstay on Apple’s Macbook, Macbook Pro, and imac computers, and nearly every Android phone maker has adopted the symmetrica­l port as the

charging solution on its handsets. USB-C is vastly superior to all other forms of USB, and it comes as no surprise that it’s taken over the finicky microusb and lessversat­ile USB 3.1 ports on phones and PCS.

But this isn’t the first time this rumor has circulated and it’s no more credible now than it was then. Last year, The Wall Street Journal reported ( go.macworld.com/cvsc) that the as-yet-unnamed iphone X would use a “USB-C port for the power cord and other peripheral devices instead of the company’s original Lightning connector.” That turned out to be false (as did its prediction that the iphone X would have an outwardly curved screen).

Granted, Apple does sell a Lightning–to– USB-C adapter in its store ( go.macworld. com/bylc), but the cable in the iphone X’s box was the same Lightning–to–usb 2.0 cable as the iphones 8, 7, 6, and 5. I’m not going to debate the merits of The Wall Street Journal’s versus Digitimes’s sources, but let’s just say I believe this new report even less than that one. And I didn’t believe that one at all. And while as a part-time Android user I would love, love, love it to be true, it’s not going to happen. Ever. One more time: Apple is never going to replace the

Lightning port on the iphone with USB-C.

A BOLT OF LIGHTNING

When Apple switched from the 30-pin dock connector to Lightning back in 2012 ( go.macworld.com/lt12), it created quite the stir. Lightning’s benefits were obvious—it was smaller, thinner, and reversible, was backward-compatible (with an adapter), could deliver higher wattage for charging, and could send data at faster speeds. And we all knew that Apple couldn’t hang on to the clumsy 30-pin ipod connector forever, and all things considered, the transition was smart and mostly painless.

Apple was way ahead of the curve with Lightning. While the rest of the industry was still in the explorator­y phase with USB-C back in 2012, Apple not only saw the benefit of a reversible cable, but understood the power and speed demands that future phones would have. Lightning was so far ahead of its time, USB-C is only now, six years later, bringing that level of convenienc­e and versatilit­y to a majority of Android phones and Chromebook­s. Even Microsoft’s Surface Pro ( go.macworld.com/mp17) is still using full-sized USB ports.

But while Apple may be using USB-C on its laptops and chargers, I’m comfortabl­e in saying it will never come to iphones. Sure, it would be nice to carry one cable that can charge all of your devices, but otherwise there’s no advantage to Apple or iphone users in switching. To use an enormous generality, USB-C is basically the everything-else

version of Lightning. They both have reversible plugs. They both transfer data and power at high speeds. And they’re both small and thin. The only reason to switch is to make the iphone like every other phone, and if you haven’t noticed, Apple isn’t afraid of proprietar­y tech.

NO USB-C CHANGE

Honestly, I can think of more arguments against switching to USB-C than for it.

Such a dramatic change would require Apple VP Phil Schiller to get on stage and sell the new port to Apple’s most die-hard customers, and there isn’t a single reason I can think of as to why he would tout USB-C as better than Lightning, even when I run it though the Reality Distortion Field. The only possible explanatio­n would be to carry one less cable, but you need look no further than the Macbook’s family of dongles to see that Apple doesn’t really care about that.

Thirty-pin to Lightning, USB 3 to USB-C, even 3.5mm to Bluetooth, I can understand Apple’s line of thinking, even if I don’t agree with it. But Lightning to USB-C is at best a lateral pass, at worst a capitulati­on to the rest of the industry that Apple’s proprietar­y path is the wrong one to take. Plus, USB-C is a millimeter or two thicker than Lightning, so it would take up more room on the iphone, a move that is anathema to Apple.

Now, I’m willing to admit that it’s possible that Apple goes with USB-C on the ipad, given Apple’s ideas for the tablet, but even that seems unlikely. IOS and Lightning go together like peas and carrots, and I can’t imagine that changing anytime soon. If Apple ever moves away from Lightning it will either be for something even thinner or to go full wireless. And until then, we’ll just have to carry two cables around wherever we go.

This won’t be the last time this rumor surfaces. But next time, remember these words: It’s not happening. Ever. ■

Thirty-pin to Lightning, USB 3 to USB-C, even 3.5mm to Bluetooth, I can understand Apple’s line of thinking, even if I don’t agree with it.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? USB-C is great for Android phones like the Galaxy S9 but it has no place on an iphone.
USB-C is great for Android phones like the Galaxy S9 but it has no place on an iphone.

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