“Got a phone charger you can lend me? No, I need the new type…. Oh, forget it.”
To
ease the stress of a dying mobile phone battery and the hassle of
bundling wires into your bag, designers are hoping to make 2015 the year
of the wireless charger.
Companies
at the Mobile World Congress, a top telecom fair which wrapped up in
Barcelona, Spain, promised that soon you will just place your phone on a
table or lamp stand for it to absorb electricity through a wireless
surface.
South
Korean giant Samsung included wireless charging capability in its new
flagship smartphone, the Galaxy S6, unveiled on March 1 in Barcelona.
“This is probably the year of the wireless charger,” said Kevin Curran, a
senior member of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers,
ahead of the mobile fair.
“A
lot of the top-end phones now by default are coming with a wireless
charger. You just have to put the phone onto a mat or onto a stand.”
If
a phone has a wireless charging receptor, just placing it over the
charging pad on one of these items will transfer power to it. The piece
of furniture itself is not wireless, drawing its power from the mains,
but no wire is needed to plug into the phone.
Standard adapters
Different rival technologies for wireless charging have emerged over recent years.
For
their devices, Samsung and Ikea opted for the Qi standard — a system
developed by the Wireless Power Consortium, an alliance of 200 different
companies founded in 2008. The Qi consortium claims its standard is the
most widely used in the world with charging points in 3,000 hotels,
restaurants, airports and public spaces. It says its system can be used
in 80 models of mobile phone and various types of car.
The
product announcements at the Barcelona show “will allow a big step
forward,” eventually freeing users of cumbersome charging wires, said
Inge Tauber of the German company L&P Automotive, part of the Qi
project.
“People
have no need to fear that their chargers will become obsolete, because
these bases will be compatible with the new generations of smartphone.”
Even smartphones that were not made with a wireless charging receptor
can be fitted with adaptors in the form of an outer case or other minor
accessory costing from about 10 euros ($11).
Wireless charging race
Qi
is competing with two other standards, PMA and A4WP, which between them
group some 200 other telecom, computing and electronics firms.
The
PMA and A4WP camps will merge in mid-2015 “to accelerate the growth of
this nascent market,” they said in a statement. Tauber denied this
competition would hold back the industry from developing a common
standard for compatible charging pads. She reckoned it would drive it
towards a “homogenous standard”.
Makers
of smartphones have so far failed to find a common standard for any
kind of charger, despite attempts such as the European Union’s bid to
impose universal chargers by 2016.
Analysts said it was tricky to estimate the potential value of the market for wireless chargers.
The
Wireless Power Consortium estimates that 50 million chargers were sold
in 2014. According to technology consultancy Gartner, in that year
consumers bought 1.8 billion handsets — which typically come with a
charger included.
“In the next few years they will all have wireless chargers in-built,” Curran said.
Posted by : Gizmeon
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