Quote:
Originally Posted by rantanplan
This limits the transfer speeds to like usb 2.0 which is definitely a design fail. They could just have chosen to have the adapter be the micro-USB on top of a super-speed certified USB-C cable.
|
Except that would complicate the design. With this design, the micro-USB is straight through. Any USB-C specific things can be put into the adapter.
But, it should be possible to use cable of appropriate quality to support the USB-C data rates. Maybe it can't get certified or whatever, but, I think anyone using a cable like this is after the convenience of having one cable rather than the utmost in speed.