Not OP, but I'm using a Pixel 7 Pro with this phone charger in my car. My wife doesn't have wireless charging through her phone, so she just added a magnetic ring to hold the phone and charge it over USB-C. The magnetic field is quite strong, I don't have the feeling it will fall by accident.
I have a Magsafe compatible Rokform case for my S23U. It works great except that Samsung only allows 15w charging for Samsung chargers, so I can only charge at 10w. All the same, I have a plug in my USB port and only charge wirelessly.
I'll be honest, having had something like that in the past and having had it for a kindle... I still don't get the point.
It's... "neat". Neat is how I would describe it. All "ooooh"and "aaaaah". And then you forget about it 5 days later and it would matter fuck all if I had it at that point or not, my brain never actively differentiates the minute detail of engaging charging any more.
Of course that doesn't make it a bad thing either. I just don't get the hype, basically. I suspect it's good if you inherently need the part where it's held still, like in a car mount?
I just plug a cable in, tbh. Or have a stand the phone sits on, which automatically aligns it with the charging circutry, too.
That's wht I mean. It's neat. It solves the problem of needing a specific stand for a specific phone to ensure alignment. Of course in an age of 3D printing, a 3D-printed stand that aligns the USB-C cable actually works exactly as quick when putting the phone down, so eh. So yeah. Neat. But is it in any way transformative? No, not at all. In fact a day after I no longer notice it existing. Which speaks to good technology, sure, but also means I struggle a bit to understand why people make a bit deal out of:
I really like the idea, but I have no use for it. AFAIU wireless charging is pretty inefficient, and I'm happy to plug my phone in. I don't need to mount my phone anywhere. I don't want to stick a wallet on the back of my phone. I don't want a pop socket.
Again, the idea seems neat, it just isn't part of any of my use cases.
Lol, are you joking? I've been 50W wirelessly charging my phone for YEARS. One of my current phones does 67W wireless charging and 120W wired charging. The other does 50W wireless and 67W wired but that's a limitation based on other design features, this is like the bottom spec acceptable now...
The only people excited for 10 year old technology are Apple fanbois that don't understand the world has left them behind.
Most of the features already exist in extended Qi 1.5 standards. These are not new features, they are a consolidation.
And just so we're clear, I've designed in and designed for Qi specs. I'm very familiar with the landscape. It's a marketing nothingburger to appease idiots that don't understand what already exists. You aren't going to get actual new tech in this release or the next (which is already almost finalized just not public).
Almost all the phones not destined for the boring American market. Most Xiaomi, Huawei, and Oppo phones as an example.
Xiaomi has demonstrated 200W wired charging (20V @ 10A) and 120W wireless charging which is really 134W wireless charging capable as dual 67W into a 2 cell battery charged independently.
It's amazing and I can't understand life with a 10W charger like apple people or "fast" 15W charging... I can plug in my big foldy phone after draining it on a long flight and get 50% added in 10 minutes. My smaller phone, 100% from dead in less than 15mins. And the batteries still last years. My MI 9 and 11 are still kicking. Those are 3 and 5 years old and abused daily with 100% charging at max wattage.
For phones available in the US, the Pixel 8 and Pixel 8 Pro do 18W and 23W wireless charging respectively when using the Pixel Stand 2. I don't really see why you would want to do more when wireless charging is so inefficient and thus generates so much heat. Every high powered wireless charger needs fans to keep both the charger and phone cool enough during charging. Even wired charging can start making a phone heat up quickly above 20W, though PPS chargers that can vary the voltage on the fly have helped improve that situation a lot.