The writing has been on the wall for Lightning for a long time, and it seems like Apple was hoping to be able to wait it out before it ever so courageously ( ahem) ditched any connectors on the phone in favor of full wireless everything. Personally, I think it’s pretty lame that Apple didn’t lead the charge (pun so very much intended) several iPhone generations ago. Today, as part of its iPhone 15 launch, the Cupertino-based org announced that the Lightning connector was going bye-bye, 11 years to the day since its introduction.Ĭatch up on all of our Apple Event 2023 coverage here. In 2022, the European Parliament, with an overwhelming 602 to 13 vote, voted that all devices (phones, tablets, cameras, headphones, headsets, video game consoles, portable speakers, earbuds, and laptops up to 100 W of power delivery) would need to be equipped with a USB type-C port. It seems like the entire world was switching to USB-C - and one major driver for that was that the EU had enough of the e-waste and complications of too many different chargers. And probably other parts of the iPhone, too. I guess I was excited about the Lightning connector 11 years ago. Apple’s remote for the Apple TV 4K became the next harbinger of the beginning of the end for Lightning, also sporting a USB-C socket. In 2020, the iPad Air followed suit, followed by the 10th-generation iPad in 2022. As early as 2018, the iPad Pro models switched to USB-C. However, as devices became more power-hungry, Apple realized that USB-C might be a better bet. With its small footprint and ubiquity - everyone had an Apple charger or two kicking around - it became a friend to billions of devices. Yes, it charged our iPhones and iPads, but the connector also found its way into keyboards, AirPods, the Apple Pen, and many other small peripherals. For Apple fans, it became the One Connector to Rule Them All and was omnipresent across all of Apple’s portable devices. It served the Apple ecosystem well, with a flexible array of power and data transportation options. If there's no visible water in the port, I have - at times of real need - cleaned the connector with a dry cloth, plugged it back in, and then used Emergency Override to charge up the iPhone.On September 12, 2012, Apple said farewell to its clunky 15-pin connector and brought in a sleek, smooth, reversible 8-pin connector called the Lightning plug. However, the iPhone's moisture detection mechanism is very sensitive and can be triggered by the slightest bit of moisture or even condensation in the port or on the charging cable. Blowing a fan or a hair dryer on a low, cold setting will help speed up the process. Ideally, if you get this message, you should do what the iPhone suggests, and disconnect the charge lead and allow the port to dry. Pressing this overrides the warning and instructs the iPhone to proceed with charging. One is Dismiss, which, as the wording suggests, dismisses the warning, and disables the charging process until the next time the charging cable is connected.Īlso: Phone overheating? Here are 8 potential causes and their solutions "Liquid Detected in Lightning Connector" message in the iPhone Adrian Kingsley-Hughes/ZDNET
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