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The Telecom Digest for Fri, 17 Jul 2020
Volume 39 : Issue 180 : "text" format
table of contents |
Re: Pay no attention to that man behind the charger |
Re: Pay no attention to that man behind the charger |
Re: Pay no attention to that man behind the charger |
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Message-ID: <reoh3j$1ble$1@grapevine.csail.mit.edu>
Date: 16 Jul 2020 03:21:23 +0000
From: "Garrett Wollman" <wollman@bimajority.org>
Subject: Re: Pay no attention to that man behind the charger
In article <0fc4b088-b15a-8c93-9995-613645f44451@billhorne.com>,
Bill Horne <malQassRimiMlation@gmail.com> wrote:
>Why, I wonder, has this particular phone started demanding to go home
>to suck juice from it's mama's tap? Why, I wonder, does this happen
>after five years of fault-free service while charging from a USB cube?
>Could it be that Verizon has decided I've been away from their store
>too long?
This is going to blow your mind: every USB-C plug has an embedded
microprocessor, and with it an X.509 digital certificate that it uses
to authenticate itself to the device it's plugged into. USB-PD ("USB
Power Delivery") uses this mechanism to allow (among other things) the
device being powered to negotiate with the dock, cord, and power
supply how much current it can draw. When you're drawing 95 watts at
5 volts, that's a lot of amps over that tiny little connector and
cable.
The authentication mechanism was allegedly introduced to allow devices
to warn users about nonstandard, counterfeit, or even dangerous
chargers. Of course it's impractical for the USB Implementers Forum
to actually enforce this by revoking counterfeiters' certificates, and
many rather darker explanations have been suggested.
-GAWollman
--
Garrett A. Wollman | "Act to avoid constraining the future; if you can,
wollman@bimajority.org| act to remove constraint from the future. This is
Opinions not shared by| a thing you can do, are able to do, to do together."
my employers. | - Graydon Saunders, _A Succession of Bad Days_ (2015)
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Message-ID: <renfol$kan$1@dont-email.me>
Date: 15 Jul 2020 12:52:19 -0500
From: "GlowingBlueMist" <GlowingBlueMist@blackhole.io>
Subject: Re: Pay no attention to that man behind the charger
On 7/15/2020 12:01 PM, Bill Horne wrote:
>
> My wife has an LG "flip" phone, a basic voice and text device that
> serves her needs.
>
> We've always charged it from a cube USB power converter plugged into a
> wall outlet, with a USB cord connecting to the phone. Up until
> yesterday, that worked fine.
>
> Yesterday, she got a notice that she had to use the charger that came
> with the phone, and also that the unit would no longer charge from the
> power cube.
>
> I don't know where the charger that came with the phone is - no doubt,
> somewhere in the "wall of warts" that decorates my ham shack tool
> bench, each with two prongs for an AC outlet, and a cord dangling down
> to a connector that only fits one particular (battery charger|alarm
> clock|router|walkie-talkie|clapping monkey). I was able to combine a
> different USB cord with a different USB cube so that the phone stopped
> refusing to charge, but we'll see if the complaints start up again.
>
> Why, I wonder, has this particular phone started demanding to go home
> to suck juice from it's mama's tap? Why, I wonder, does this happen
> after five years of fault-free service while charging from a USB cube?
> Could it be that Verizon has decided I've been away from their store
> too long?
I would suspect the 5-volts from the charger now has a problem. It
could be sending Low voltage or is no longer a clean DC signal. A USB
cable can become partially defective as well. Either one can trigger
this kind of response from a cell phone.
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Message-ID: <7d3b6f43-4d73-689c-072a-5745c0b0a18c@ionary.com>
Date: 16 Jul 2020 12:36:33 -0400
From: "Fred Goldstein" <fred_qrm@ionary.com>
Subject: Re: Pay no attention to that man behind the charger
On 7/15/2020 1:01 PM, Bill Horne wrote:
> Yesterday, she got a notice that she had to use the charger that came
> with the phone, and also that the unit would no longer charge from the
> power cube.
It is most likely a result of an aging battery or charging circuit in
the phone. I have the same issue with a 5-year-old Dell laptop. Using
its original charger, it gives a warning that it is not connected to
the original charger. It is, but the battery is not keeping a charge
very well, and that is probably causing it to give the bad charger
message. So the LG phone is probably behaving the same way --
batteries do not last forever.
--
Fred R. Goldstein k1io fred "at" ionary.com
+1 617 795 2701
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End of telecom Digest Fri, 17 Jul 2020