Is it only the physical connector or also the Power Delivery protocol? Because if it’s only the connector you might end up plugging 2 things that are not compatible with each other.
- 0 Posts
- 9 Comments
Herowyn@jlai.luto
Technology@lemmy.world•Exoskeleton pilot project shows positive resultsEnglish
3·2 years agoManagement will say that they if they can offload 30% then we can increase the weight carried by the employee by 40%.
Herowyn@jlai.luto
Technology@lemmy.world•PlayStation To Delete A Ton Of TV Shows Users Already Paid ForEnglish
48·2 years agoNo DRM is the way to go, physical or digital. Some physical DRM can revoke the licence on the disk (like Blu-ray)
Herowyn@jlai.luto
Technology@lemmy.world•PlayStation To Delete A Ton Of TV Shows Users Already Paid ForEnglish
41·2 years agoThey can also revoke the licences on the disks.
Herowyn@jlai.luto
Technology@lemmy.world•Microsoft’s Windows Hello fingerprint authentication has been bypassedEnglish
7·2 years agoIt doesn’t need to be physical breach. If it’s stored somewhere it can (and might) be accessed by someone else and reconstructed.
Herowyn@jlai.luto
Technology@lemmy.world•Microsoft’s Windows Hello fingerprint authentication has been bypassedEnglish
18·2 years agoThe main issue with biometrics is that you can’t change them. If your fingerprints or retina are compromised you’re fucked.
Herowyn@jlai.luto
Technology@lemmy.world•Grayjay: A new app that merges different video platforms into oneEnglish
21·2 years agoYeah “Open source” can be many things and the definition is often misused. I would say it’s FOSS without being FLOSS. As you say “source available”.
Herowyn@jlai.luto
France@jlai.lu•[Potentiel repost] Afin d'éviter les fraudes, le site gouvernemental DossierFacile lance FiligraneFacile, le service permettant d’ajouter un filigrane à n’importe quel document.
3·2 years agoEn Belgique c’est déjà le cas. Nos cartes d’identité sont électroniques et chaque citoyen à un certificat et une clé publique. Nous pouvons signer électriquement grâce a la carte et un code pin.
I read the website but it doesn’t say. But it does say that the consumer will have to check that the charger is compatible with the device so you might end up frying your device if you connect them to the wrong USB C Charger (things that were prevented because of the different connectors). I don’t say that the directive is wrong but it doesn’t go far enough. It should force all devices manufacturers and chargers manufacturers to use the power delivery protocol so consumers don’t have to worry about power compatibility between chargers and devices.
The power delivery protocol allows for the device and the charger to negotiate a charging power.
Without delivery protocol the charger delivers as much power as it’s can so it might fry the connected device.