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October 25, 2022

šŸ‘» Good morning, and welcome to a spooky edition of Tuesdayā€™s Daily Authority. All Hallowā€™s Eve is right around the corner, and Iā€™ve been watching lots of creepy Halloween horror movies. Last nightā€™s viewing was the classic Nightmare on Elm Street.

Green light for USB-C

HUAWEI P50 Pro USB-C port and speakers up close
Robert Triggs / Android Authority

Weā€™ve been expecting it for some time now, but the European Council has given final approval to its common charger initiative.

  • This means from fall 2024, all electronic devices in the EU will be required to adopt USB-C.
  • That means phones, headphones, handheld game consoles, keyboards, tablets, and more will be forced to use USB-C charging.
  • As well as requiring USB-C, this new mandate proposes to introduce a pictogram that will tell consumers if a device comes with a charger and what that chargerā€™s performance is.
  • Though the new rules are expected to go into full effect in fall of 2024, the deadline for laptops is extended to spring 2026.

Whereā€™s the charger?

Nowadays, itā€™s pretty common not to get a charger in the box, a move thatā€™s divided our readers ā€” though there are good reasons behind the trend. With the introduction of this new legislation, EU consumers will have the option to choose whether to purchase a new device with or without a charger.

  • These moves aim to save consumers money and reduce electronic waste while harmonizing charging across devices ā€” one charger can be used for all your electronic devices.
  • Four years after the rule goes into effect the Commission will ā€œassess whether this unbundling of sales should be made mandatory.ā€
  • The Council may not stop there, though, and also has its eye set on harmonizing wireless charging too.

Worldwide ramifications

You might be thinking, ā€œThis is just the EU,ā€ and to an extent, youā€™d be right. The mandate wonā€™t technically affect devices sold to consumers in the US and other countries outside the EU.

  • However, these rules will have far-reaching ramifications worldwide.
  • Consumers outside of the EU will also be affected ā€” for example, Apple will finally be forced to ditch its Lightning chargers and adopt USB-C.
  • The new iPad, announced last week, is already there.
  • This could mean your next iPhone wonā€™t work with any of the Lightning chargers you already have, which surely isnā€™t great news for the environment.
  • And USB-C isnā€™t a fix-all solution: The standard still has its problems in 2022.

Roundup

šŸ“± OnePlus Nord N300 launched: A cheap phone with a 3.5mm port and microSD support (Android Authority).

šŸ“· Now 200MP cameras are coming to budget phones: The upcoming Redmi Note Pro will have a 200MP camera when itā€™s unveiled later this week (Android Authority).

šŸ§  Elon Muskā€™s Neuralink delays show-and-tell event to November 30, but doesnā€™t share a reason for delay (Engadget).

šŸ’° Apple raises prices on Apple Music, Apple TV Plus, and Apple One, with Apple TV going up by $2 a month to $6.99. Is Apple One worth the cost, though? (The Verge, Android Authority).

šŸ™„ Appleā€™s App Store will display more ads starting today (MacRumors).

šŸ’» Windows 7 fan? Soon Chrome will force you to update (Android Authority).

šŸŒ— YouTubeā€™s rolling out a bunch of design updates, including Ambient Mode, and a darker dark mode (9to5Google).

šŸ‘€ Funtouch OS 13 is here: What to know about vivoā€™s new Android 13 skin, currently available for the vivo X80 Pro (Android Authority).

šŸŒ This computing breakthrough just transferred the entire internetā€™s traffic in 1 second: The photonic chip transferred 1.84 petabits of data per second, roughly twice the entire internetā€™s traffic (Digital Trends).

šŸ˜¢ Plastic recycling a ā€œfailed concept,ā€ study says, with only 5% recycled in US last year as production rises (CBS News).

šŸš…ā€TIL about the McTrain, McDonaldā€™s attempt in the ā€™90s to turn dining service cars on German trains into mini restaurants. The cars had deep fryers, coffee machines, soda fountains, water heaters, and a 269-square-foot kitchenā€ (r/todayilearned).

Tuesday Thing

neom megacity the line
Neom

It may sound like something straight out of a dystopian sci-fi movie, but Saudi Arabiaā€™s mirrored megacity The Line is a real project. A city you can live in, work in, and wonā€™t ever have to leave (ummā€¦).

  • Drone footage shared yesterday shows construction beginning on the megacity, though not a lot has happened yet.
  • The Line is planned to be 105 miles (170km) long, 500 meters tall, and 200 meters wide, with a mirrored exterior.
  • Neom, the company behind the ambitious plans, was set up by the Saudi Arabian government and is a mash-up of sustainability, engineering, and architecture.
  • Neom claims The Line will have its own constant micro-climate, which actually sounds pretty good to us, as well as several neighborhoods walkable in just five minutes and end-to-end travel in 20 minutes.
  • The companyā€™s also working on a couple of other projects or ā€œregionsā€ called Oxagon and Trojena.
  • Though we donā€™t know yet when we can expect to see the completed city, a press release from Neom suggested around 2030 as a potential completion date, so still a while to wait.

Have a great Tuesday!

Paula Beaton, Copy Editor.

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