Bangkok Post

Pi wants to replace the charging pad

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SAN FRANCISCO: Silicon Valley youngster Pi on Monday claimed it had developed the world’s first wireless charger that does away with cords or mats to charge devices.

Pi chargers, about the size of a small table vase, operate on standard charging technology used in Apple or Android smartphone­s designed to be powered up wirelessly.

But instead of cords or mats, the conical creation charges smartphone­s with magnetic waves.

“Magnetic fields are an ideal way to safely send energy to portable electronic­s,’’ said Pi chief technology officer Lixin Shi, who co-created the charger with John MacDonald.

The trick was bending magnetic waves to find smartphone­s, the co-founders said during a presentati­on for an AFP journalist at the TechCrunch Disrupt startup scrum in San Francisco.

“The hard part was figuring out how to make magnetic charging more flexible, multi-device and extend its useful range,” Shi said. “It took us over a year to complete the mathematic­al proof that makes it all possible.”

The pair figured out how to shape the magnetic field so energy could be beamed to smartphone­s placed or in use within a foot of a Pi.

Shi and MacDonald were graduate students at the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology when they met and began to collaborat­e on the project about 3.5 years ago. Both have since graduated from university.

Pi’s magnetic fields are relatively weak, far less than the levels used for medical imaging, but allow devices to be charged at “full speed,” according to MacDonald.

A combinatio­n of smartphone­s and tablets could wirelessly charge on a desk if a Pi were placed near people working together.

Pi set up shop in the Silicon Valley city of San Bruno, and the co-founders said they raised $3.5 million in a seed funding round lead by SoftTech VC managing partner Jean-Francois Clavier.

MacDonald promised that Pi devices would begin shipping next year and be priced “well below $200.”

Apple this month unveiled three new iPhone models, including a 10th-anniversar­y edition iPhone X, all of which featured wireless charging.

The company said it would come to market with AirPower charging mats sized to accommodat­e an iPhone, Apple Watch and an AirPods earpiece case.

 ?? AFP ?? Pi co-founders Lixin Shi, left, and John MacDonald pose for a picture at a TechCrunch Disrupt technology conference in San Francisco on Monday.
AFP Pi co-founders Lixin Shi, left, and John MacDonald pose for a picture at a TechCrunch Disrupt technology conference in San Francisco on Monday.

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