n̛̠̫̪̰̜̗̭͇̊͂̋́̒̾̐ͯ̈́̓̑͛̉͒͡ͅͅỉ̷̷̴ͦͦ̇̋̈ͪͣ̽ͥ̽͗̔ͨ̎̚҉̣̝̘̺͚̥̱̜̹̪͎̣̱̳̠̰ͅh̎ͧ͐͐̑̆̃̈́̀̌͛̏͒ͣ̾̓͟҉̡̘̥͖̺͓̫̬͕̕i̷̢͍̫̫̩̮̖̥̫̣̦̯̖̰̼̟͚̎̇̎ͩ͛̉̓̑̾̒ͧ̈́̍ͨͩ̓ͤ́̕͡͞l̵̷̡̯̼͈̯̥͖͈̪̻͚̙̭̘̻̣͙̠͂ͫ̃̈́̚ ̩̙̥ͭ̋̇̌̂͐ͮ͐̓ͮ͢͞t̸̸̢̻̤̣̬̗͚̜͇̼͈͍̥͍͎̟̤͖ͭ̒͆̌͢͠i̶̴̞̣̫̹̥̥͎͉̱̖̦ͧ̊͊̄̊͋ͭ̀͜m̨͚̟͖̻̮̖̞͙̣̠͖̦̉̽̃ͬͯͣ͐͆͌͐̿̃̋̃̇ͫ̚ę̃ͬͧ̄̇͑ͥ̋̓̿̂̐͘͠҉̵͕͓̳̤̻̖̳̞̦̳͎̙̰̱̣̱͇n͈̜̦̣͉͓̗̓̍ͮ̇̎͜͟d̠̝̲̹̠̰̞͎̘̖̮̹͗̃̅̄̀͢͡͡ͅṷ̷̧̮̫̬͔̽͛ͧͥͧ̈́̎̒̋͊m̏̃ͥ̓̌͌̓̃́͒͏҉̺̬̞̪̝̰̯͓̱͈̘̥̞͙̮̦ͅ



posts from @hellscape tagged #apple vision pro

also:

People trying to justifying Apple using a proprietary port on the Vision Pro because “eughhhh, it uses 13V batteries to increase the total watt hours >>>>:((” when the USB-C PD 1.0 standard literally includes a 12V profile. 😐

And the USB-C PD 2.0 & 3.0 standards include a 15V profile. 😐😐

Not to mention, Apple’s proprietary port can’t transmit data, as is, meaning if you brick your device during a reset or update, you have to take time out of your day and pay an Apple Store to fix it. 😐😐😐

Meanwhile, the USB-C PD standard includes support for USB 3.0 10Gbps speeds. 😐😐😐😐

And Apple literally helped design USB-C, so their insistent refusal to use it on their products is 😐😐😐😐😐

But don’t worry! Apple will, actually, sell you an adapter, so you can plug a USB-C cable into your $3,500 headset… as long as you pay a $99/year developer fee 😐😐😐😐😐😐

And then pay $300 for the dongle, itself. 😐😐😐😐😐😐😐