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Difference between revisions of "Lightning"
(Created page with "'''Lightning''' matches up with the existing Thunderbolt branding as noted by Phil Schiller. According to Apple it as an all-digital connector and "features an adaptive interface...") |
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+ | #REDIRECT [[Lightning Connector]] |
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− | '''Lightning''' matches up with the existing Thunderbolt branding as noted by Phil Schiller. According to Apple it as an all-digital connector and "features an adaptive interface that uses only the signals that each accessory requires." |
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− | *Lightning is adaptive. |
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− | *All 8 pins are used for signals, and all or most can be switched to be used for power. |
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− | *The outer plug shell is used as ground reference and connected to the device shell. |
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− | *At least one (probably at most two) of the pins is used for detecting what sort of plug is plugged in. |
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− | *All plugs have to contain a controller/driver chip to implement the “adaptive” thing. |
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− | *The device watches for a momentary short on all pins (by the leading edge of the plug) to detect plug insertion/removal. |
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− | *The pins on the plug are deactivated until after the plug is fully inserted, when a wake-up signal on one of the pins cues the chip inside the plug. This avoids any shorting hazard while the plug isn’t inside the connector. |
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− | *The controller/driver chip tells the device what type it is, and for cases like the Lightning-to-USB cable whether a charger (that sends power) or a device (that needs power) is on the other end. |
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− | *The device can then switch the other pins between the SoC’s data lines or the power circuitry, as needed in each case. |
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− | *Once everything is properly set up, the controller/driver chip gets digital signals from the SoC and converts them – via serial/parallel, ADC/DAC, differential drivers or whatever – to whatever is needed by the interface on the other end of the adapter or cable. It could even re-encode these signals to some other format to use fewer wires, gain noise-immunity or whatever, and re-decode them on the other end; it’s all flexible. It could even convert to optical. |
Latest revision as of 02:11, 7 November 2012
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