If I use the same sockets/chargers etc with USB-A to USB-C it's absolutely fine. -- Using the same ports with an USB-C to USB-C cable charge any other non-Apple devices without any problem (even a power heavy 15" PC Laptop). -- If a magsafe is used on the same ports, again charges completely fine. Just spent about an hour trying to get an iPad into DFU mode with an original Apple USB-C cable and I can confirm it does not work. Yes. This is documented on the site. FWIW, Apple USB C cables with USB 3.0 pinouts work, just not the ones with 2.0 (which is most of them) Some Apple devices - such as the iPad Pro and Mac laptops - use USB-C (left) while the iPhone uses Lightning (right) The firm said the USB-C cable - which already works with many Apple laptops and When I plug my Anker PowerPort Atom PD 4 100W charger with a first-party USB-C cable into my Magic Keyboard pass-through port, the iPad constantly switches between charging and not charging state. If I switch over to the Apple 87W USB-C charger, the iPad charges just fine. Seems like an issue with third-party/Anker chargers. The USB-C to Lightning port adapter allows users to continue using the Lightning cable they already have with a new iPhone 15 fitted with the USB-C port. The USB-C end must be plugged into the When the supplied cable is plugged in to a Windows PC USB-C port the iPhone 12 charges and makes the charging connection sound and Windows makes the new device found sound and shows up in Device Manager - Universal Serial Bus Controllers as – Unknown USB Device (Device Descriptor Request Failed). Probably a charging-only cable. The cable that comes with the iPhone is charging-only as well. The cable that comes with the iPhone 15 supports data transfer USB2 standard 480 Mb/s unless it’s different from what they sell in the Apple Store, which I doubt. The issue is most cars are still using USBA for data. Well, as of right now, there are no MFi-Certified USB cables (aside from USB-C to Lightning cables). Additionally, Apple's website makes no mention of certified or licensed USB-C cables. This may not mean much on its own, but USB-C is becoming the go-to for wired headphones and an alternative to HDMI (along with other wired accessories). q5vajZl.