Adrian Kingsley-Hughes/ZDNET
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There's a long-running joke that some of us who live and work with gadgets have accumulated too much tech detritus. We have boxes of old cables and adapters that should have been tossed many moons ago, but we hold on to these things like life preservers because "they'll be useful… one day." Sure, it's been a long time since anyone needed a VGA-to-HDMI adapter, but -- and hear me out on this one -- what if my Auntie Jackie's next-door-neighbor cat sitter needs to borrow one?
Seriously, though, I'm going through a phase of minimization in my life, and while I'm still a long way away from achieving Feng Shui enlightenment, I have been getting rid of a lot of stuff. And one collection under consideration is cables, adapters, and dongles.
Also: This Bluetti power station with wheels has spoiled the way I charge my tools and devices
But while I furiously load stuff into boxes to send off so the seagulls at my local recycling center can deal with them, I'm aware that there's a selection of cords and adapters that I need to keep. Not for that one-in-a-million request from a cat sitter, but because they continue to be useful despite being functionally obsolete.
Of course, just because something is old doesn't mean it's useless. At least, not yet. As I go through boxes and drawers of stuff, I'm holding onto some things. It's a small proportion of the overall bulk, but it's stuff that's still important, or at least still might be needed.
Let's take a look.
USB-A-to-USB-C cables
The experts told us that USB-C connectivity would make everything better; one cable and charger for everything. But you'd be surprised how many gadgets with a USB-C port won't charge when a USB-C-to-USB-C cable is attached to a USB-C charger. That issue often occurs because the gadgets lack the circuitry to activate the charger.
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