I’ve never had a phone that supports wireless charging, never really saw the appeal of it, and the people I know who has a phone that supports it don’t even bother to buy a wireless charger. So I’m really curious since it seems to be on almost every phone these days, even budget ones. People who use wireless charging, what do you like about it? Is it actually that convenient over plugging in? Do you use the phone while it’s charging?

  • @Nyaa@lemmy.ml
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    52 years ago

    I don’t use it because it’s bad for batteries, I constantly have to fight it to position it properly, and they charge much slower at the same price point.

  • @sexy_peach@feddit.de
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    42 years ago

    Good question, I’d say having 2 day battery instead of 1 day is probably more useful than wireless charging. I have never used it though.

  • Sr Estegosaurio
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    2 years ago

    Tbh Wireless charging is bad for batterys so is a thing that I don’t use. (Also fast charge is bad too)

      • @AgreeableLandscape@lemmy.mlOP
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        2 years ago

        Wireless charging is at best about half as efficient as wired charging. Physics dictates that the lost energy had to go somewhere, and it is being converted to heat, which heats up the charging pad and the phone’s receiving coil. Problem is, these things are placed right against the battery, and exposing a lithium ion battery to more heat always reduces its lifespan due to the battery’s chemistry.

  • Victor von Void
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    2 years ago

    It’s not more convenient. It doesn’t matter whether you have a cable running to your desk or whatever to be plugged into the phone or to have placed a charging pad there. The clutter is the same unless you use a lamp or table with a built in charging pad. Plugging in a phone takes 2 secs, about the same as placing the phone correctly in the pad. IMHO wireless charging is just a way to squeeze now bones for useless stuff out of the customers. Don’t forget that wireless charging is also less efficient. It takes longer, wastes more energy, requires more materials to be used in the phone and the pad and thus crates more waste at the end of it’s life, so from an environmental POV you should avoid it.

  • @OsrsNeedsF2P@lemmy.ml
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    32 years ago

    The first thing I noticed when I got a wireless charger was that I still needed a cable for my charging pad.

  • m-p{3}
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    22 years ago

    My current phone doesn’t support wireless charging but it was convenient in a way. Being able to drop my phone on my magnetic cellphone holder in the card and have it charge at the same time in a single motion was nice. No need to fiddle with any cable, which is nice in a drive-thru with contactless payment.

    It also spares the USB port from additional wear. I also kinda expect this to become the norm at some point.

  • art
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    22 years ago

    I have a wireless charger next to my bed and on my desk. I just set my phone down on it without much thought. Chargers are cheap so having dedicated charger for each room was less than $20 USD.

    Wireless charging is often slower than wired, so I only use it when I know I got a couple of hours where I don’t need to touch it. Can’t really use while charging, it’s too awkward.

  • seb
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    22 years ago

    I have been charging my phone wirelessly for the last 3 years. I put my phone on it over night and is fully charged in the morning. Much easier than trying to fiddle with a cable in the dark.

  • Ephera
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    12 years ago

    I used to have a phone a few years ago with wireless charging and personally found no real use for it.

    Thing is, you need a spot for the charging pad where you’ll regularly put down your phone. That’s pretty much only ever gonna be the case, if you’re glued to your desk for your day job.
    Ideally, you do still need to get up every few minutes, though, so that unplugging and re-plugging your phone actually becomes annoying.

    Or I guess, it’s also cool, if you get annoyed by using your phone with the wire plugged in and you often just quickly pick up your phone to answer text messages.

    Otherwise, I doubt it makes up for the annoyances of wireless charging, which are:

    • Always have to put your phone down in (relatively precisely) the same spot.
    • Charging is slow.
    • Can’t really use your phone if you really do need it to be charged, because then you shouldn’t pick it up from the charging pad and you may push it off of the correct charging position when you tap the screen.

    I’m guessing, so many phones have it despite that, because as far as I’m aware, it just requires some copper wire rolled up to a coil in the back of the phone, so it’s presumably quite cheap to include.

  • @Echedenyan@lemmy.ml
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    12 years ago

    Well, I know people who break their MicroUSB type B every time and the connector on the phone. I don’t think that MicroUSB type C will improve the situation at all so wireless charge is an advantage.

    • @drb@lemmy.ml
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      12 years ago

      This is me. My USB-C port is loose so getting a charging connection is difficult. Unfortunately my phone doesn’t have wireless charging, but it will be a requirement for my next phone.

  • @3arn0wl@lemmy.ml
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    12 years ago

    I used to have it, and really liked it.

    It saved on wear and tear of both the cable and, particularly, the connectors too.