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heywoods | 1 month ago
Did LEGO solve this problem and Apple didn’t? The Apple AirPower is what I’m referring to and it was a matter of physics that was the mighty hurdle Apple had to contend with. But they were also trying to pump out ~15w per device. These bricks will be measured in milliwatts per brick. But I’m curious if there is any additional information about this? How many bricks can be charged at a time? Can they be placed anywhere on the pad? (I hope so.) It would be great if specs were released. I would buy the pad alone just for charging other IoT devices.
https://www.hardwarezone.com.sg/incoming/tech-news-apple-s-a...
Edit: It will not be usable by anything other than Lego Smart Bricks. It will use a proprietary or highly customized inductive standard designed specifically for the new Lego Smart Bricks.
legitster|1 month ago
I'm sure these tiny, low wattage devices don't really pose a problem.
crooked-v|1 month ago
micromacrofoot|1 month ago
https://www.theverge.com/tech/855520/i-played-with-the-lego-...
eclarkso|1 month ago