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by delinka
5012 days ago
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I don't believe that's possible. Looking at my Thunderbolt cable and ports, I notice: 1) The cable is not reversible. It's a shaped barrel to fit one way. 2) The cable has many connection points (I think I count 10) above and below the inside of the barrel at the cable's end. 3) The inside of the cable is an innie and the inside of the port is a outie, opposites of Lightning (Lightning doesn't have this shaped barrel thing going on, the cable's just an outie with connections on both sides, so the port's just an innie.) And I also know from other reviews that Thunderbolt cables aren't just powered with electricity, but powerized (?!) with processors at each end. My fingers suspect this is true because the ends get damn hot. |
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The biggest restriction on getting Thunderbolt on an iOS device is not going to be the connector or cable. It will be the controller chips necessary to support such a fast protocol. And fast enough flash chips to provide the data quickly enough.
Lightning can act as both a USB controller or peripheral. It can already provide or receive power. The active elements inside Thunderbolt won't be the limitation.