I would disagree with your definition of terms, as terms like “travel charger”, “vehicle power charger”, etc, are used by the industry, especially in CTIA Battery Working Group, and they are used to refer to power supplies that charge batteries.
I would disagree with your definition of terms, as terms like “travel charger”, “vehicle power charger”, etc, are used by the industry, especially in CTIA Battery Working Group, and they are used to refer to power supplies that charge batteries.
That’s just not how cell phone chargers work. Cell phone chargers are designed to protect against, in rush current, over current, and shorts only. The cell phone itself will have a power management IC separate from the battery’s, and the battery will have at least one (CTIA requires 1, some members of CTIA may require…
Didn't the previous study on here show that it's not the lack of gap, but the slow acceleration after slowdown that causes phantom traffic? In the tool you could vary both variables, and wide spaces had a negative impact on congestion. Quick acceleration had a positive one.
Technically not EVERY device, but EVERY device certified by CTIA. The certification is IEEE 1725.
You don’t need to remove the charger after charging, nor do you need to worry about keeping the charge between 10%-90%. To understand why, you can read the IEEE standard.
That’s actually what happens. The need to monitor the discharge and charge is incorrect.
No, this isn't the job of the charger, this is performed by the battery protection circuit itself.
CTIA certified batteries should open the circuit once the village had reached the threshold as specified by the cell manufacturer. So for cell phones is unnecessary to disconnect the charger.
Verizon has an android and ios app that allows you access to texts from anywhere, I think it's called message+
Oh okay, nothing so nefarious, I'm a device test engineer.
Does that mean something? Am I too old to know things now?
I’m not the typical use case by any means, but being that I oftentimes swap my SIM at least once a week, sometimes multiple times a day, SMS is the convenient choice.
Is Stan Lee at the top of the list?
I have to cosign this. As an engineer, you don't need a reputation as the person who makes mistakes, which is very easy to get. You also don't want to make million dollar decisions based off a rounding error.
I use my GV number as my primary and I love it for the most part. But you are ignoring valid concerns.
When you say it doesn't work, what do you mean? Do calls not connect when you're not in LTE coverage? Do calls drop?
I don’t know anything about IFTTT, but your question piqued my interest, so I dug in a little. The answer apparently is Numerous.
Baby food is a supplement for formula, not a replacement.
Portuguese is closer to SOW-OO-djee
That’s too bad, my credit union is on board.