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š» Good morning, and welcome to a spooky edition of Tuesdayās Daily Authority. All Hallowās Eve is right around the corner, and Iāve been watching lots of creepy Halloween horror movies. Last nightās viewing was the classic Nightmare on Elm Street.
Green light for USB-C
Weāve 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 chargerās 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.
Whereās the charger?
Nowadays, itās pretty common not to get a charger in the box, a move thatās 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 āassess 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, āThis is just the EU,ā and to an extent, youād be right. The mandate wonāt 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 wonāt work with any of the Lightning chargers you already have, which surely isnāt great news for the environment.
- And USB-C isnāt a fix-all solution: The standard still has its problems in 2022.
Roundup
š± OnePlus Nord N300 launched: A cheap phone with a 3.5mm port and microSD support (Android Authority).
š· Now 200MP cameras are coming to budget phones: The upcoming Redmi Note Pro will have a 200MP camera when itās unveiled later this week (Android Authority).
š» Terrifyingly powerful: Lego unveils spooky one-of-a-kind haunted house-themed RTX 3090 gaming PC (TechRadar).
š§ Elon Muskās Neuralink delays show-and-tell event to November 30, but doesnāt share a reason for delay (Engadget).
š° 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).
š Appleās App Store will display more ads starting today (MacRumors).
š» Windows 7 fan? Soon Chrome will force you to update (Android Authority).
š YouTubeās rolling out a bunch of design updates, including Ambient Mode, and a darker dark mode (9to5Google).
š² New Wear OS teardown teases watch face backups and more Google Wallet features (Android Authority).
š Funtouch OS 13 is here: What to know about vivoās new Android 13 skin, currently available for the vivo X80 Pro (Android Authority).
š This computing breakthrough just transferred the entire internetās traffic in 1 second: The photonic chip transferred 1.84 petabits of data per second, roughly twice the entire internetās traffic (Digital Trends).
š¢ Plastic recycling a āfailed concept,ā study says, with only 5% recycled in US last year as production rises (CBS News).
š āTIL about the McTrain, McDonaldās attempt in the ā90s 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
It may sound like something straight out of a dystopian sci-fi movie, but Saudi Arabiaās mirrored megacity The Line is a real project. A city you can live in, work in, and wonāt 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 companyās also working on a couple of other projects or āregionsā called Oxagon and Trojena.
- Though we donāt 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.