The impossible dream of USB-C
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhZ-ozoA5vMSxrg_0in0TfJ4jwni5dUckd5QSU3dvJbLTt6I6TkC6RC4B7MMZvETVhuMDWPzH3qxt6nOZGZp93nJcyAd8b6HJdqxAlJx2Ckm1kFiyW_Y6ENAhwM2iS1YhkcuOD6/s320/SushiGo.jpg)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgOdUrpNboKh0e2gd7RLJNeUnQcMtnUH-vo5sXrhEAxGe7hW0SkMIgRxmILqzwmE_mteaeswkiJGMX5Yfg2ivUd9v6NoYw_YUVJVtv8KV0hjHaIZRiHJEtImN1YM7y2t-HY7TIp/s320/Screenshot+2%253A16%253A13+9%253A13+PM-2.png)
The impossible dream of USB-C
While a wide variety of USB-C dongles are available, most use the same handful of unreliable, mediocre chips inside. Some USB-A dongles make Wi-Fi drop on MacBook Pros. Some USB-A devices don't work properly when adapted to USB-C, or only work in certain ports.
Comments