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by glogla 3520 days ago
And having to use a special Apple dongle to connect normal mouse or flash disk is downright embarassing.
3 comments

Nothing special about it, its standardized. Actually Apple just released a Notebook that has NO proprietary ports anymore. As a Surface User I find this astonishing and great.

On top of this I find it weird that people say they have to carry 20 Apple branded dongles. Depending on your use-case there is already type-c usb hubs with HDMI Ports, or Ethernet Ports, or both.[1]

The thing is, I love the USB-C TB3 Ports and I love Apple's decision to drag the industry kicking and screaming into a reality where an Office can have a Monitor that is a Thunderbolt 3 Hub, connected with Ethernet and peripherals, that work with both Windows and Mac. This will revolutionize flex-desk setups for big organizations and Co-Workingspaces everywhere. Imo it's worth to have this transition period where people drag a dongle with them to achieve this.

[1] https://www.amazon.com/Resolution-Aluminum-MacBook-ChromeBoo...

And then replace laptop with your phone. Continuum.
macbook users tend to overlap with iphone users. so there's that, no hub I know has also a thunderbolt. will happen given enough time and the current demand, but if this was the direction engineering went with the laptop, a revolutionary iphone would have had two usb c
> no hub I know has also a thunderbolt

Belkin, Elgato, OWC and others sell them. I use the Belkin one and it works great.

Correct, Apple's decision to insist on lightning for the iPhone is a bad one considering where the wind is blowing.
Why would it be a special Apple dongle? Any USB-C to USB-A adapter would work, until you get a USB-C mouse.
USB C mouse? Let me know when you can pick one of those up at Staples or Best Buy
Why the snark? It'll probably take a year before you can get a cheap throw-away mouse with USB-C at Staples or Best Buy.

But assuming you're a professional, you either already have a bluetooth mouse/trackpad or you'll want some quality and order a mouse from a reputable brand.

Does Logitech make a USB-C receiver for their wireless mouse yet?
Heh, that's an interesting point you make. Assuming you can't or don't want to use Bluetooth, I was surprised to see that in The Netherlands, there's only 1 brand that carries an USB-C mouse, and it's a budget brand as well: http://www.trust.com/en/product/20969-usb-c-retractable-mini...

So I have to admit it's indeed very, very slim pickings.

How about a $10 USB-C mouse from Amazon?
My flash drives will be a minor pain in the rear, but the disks I use more often (4TB+ externals) just take a C-to-B cable and I'm done.

I don't think this is going to be as big a deal as people say. Honestly, the biggest beef I have is removing the SD card slot, because I do a lot of photo/video work.

>> I don't think this is going to be as big a deal as people say.

I think it depends on the type of user you are. If you're a true "mobile user", it's probably not a big deal, because you put a value on mobility over other stuff.

If you treat your laptop as a "portable desktop", it can get annoying. The ability to not have dongles for everything is one less thing to think about. Yes, it's not the end of the world to have dongles, but if you're used to not needing dongles, being forced to use them is going to make you unhappy.

I'm not really a "mobile user". But I'll be happy to be able to run my entire desk off of one plug rather than the five (power, two monitors, two USB, one of which is a hub) that are currently plugged into my 15" MBP.