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'Plugspreading' is an Abomination (cnet.com) 362

Mark Serrels, writing for CNET: A man [on a train], a human man as he lives and breathes, has put his bag, his stupid goddamn bag on the seat. He thinks his bag is more important than your buttcheeks. Than your tired legs. He is undermining your right to rest those legs, to plank those weary buttcheeks on a seat. This train is busy. He is a bad person. He doesn't care. This is a metaphor. In this metaphor the terrible man-person is a tech company. The bag is their terrible plug. A plug that is not content with taking up one slot on your powerboard, but needs two. Not for power, oh no. It just wants the space to... christ, I don't know. Mess with your day? Piss you off? Make your life worse? Stop you from plugging an extra device into your powerboard for no goddamn reason. Jesus wept. I call this phenomenon "plugspreading" and it's an abomination. [...] This is bad behaviour. This is a problem. That second socket was innocent man, it was collateral damage. He did nothing to deserve this. You ruined its life, starved that socket of its purpose, its reason for existing. Plugspreading is everywhere. It's a disease.
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'Plugspreading' is an Abomination

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  • Plug-Spreading? (Score:5, Informative)

    by Gerald Butler ( 3528265 ) on Wednesday July 04, 2018 @03:04PM (#56893044)

    I'd really be afraid to Google that without "Safe-Search" turned on. That being said, I agree with your premise. How come if I have a power-strip with 8 sockets I can only ever plug-in 3 damn things? Crap Design! As usual. I don't know where all the "Designers" came from, but, be toasters, coffee-pots, vacuum cleaners, plugs, or software interfaces, they are ALL universally worthlessly incompetent and should be beaten with the "You have failed at your job Stick" until they leave the profession.

    • Re:Plug-Spreading? (Score:4, Interesting)

      by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday July 04, 2018 @03:15PM (#56893096)

      The purpose is to avoid you cramming in too many things without a chance of airflow for cooling. Hot electronics fail. It's also why many electronic devices have cases with curves or "unnecessary" protrusions: So you don't put things on top or right next to them.

      • Re:Plug-Spreading? (Score:5, Interesting)

        by Hognoxious ( 631665 ) on Wednesday July 04, 2018 @03:23PM (#56893134) Homepage Journal

        The purpose is to avoid you cramming in too many things without a chance of airflow for cooling.

        I'd always wondered why the size of the plug was proportional to the power it draws.

        Oh wait, I haven't. Because it isn't.

        • > The purpose is to avoid you cramming in too many things without a chance of airflow for cooling.

          We're still talking about electrical outlets and plugs aren't we?

      • Re: (Score:2, Funny)

        by Anonymous Coward
        The solution is simple. Plug in a 6-port power strip, then plug in 6 more 6-port power strips to that. Then plug in 36 space heaters. Problem solved!
      • And the proper solution is a big-enough case (the ones that cover half an outlet on each side are, often times, not) and a pigtail.
      • Except that a good chunk of these are a plastic shell with some potted electronics inside without anything resembling attention to heat transfer or air cooling.

        I realise that this brings the cost down and that manufacturers would prefer to go with a standard case regardless of what is going inside it, and that people who'd pay a little extra for a smaller overall package with decent thermal design are too small a market to address ...

        So yes. It's about cooling. Inefficient, 'good enough' but most importantl

    • I think Plug-Spreading is when the base of the butt-plug is so wide, you can't plug anything else into the adjacent outlet - so to speak.

      (Not sure why Mark Serrels is writing about his love-life problems on CNET ...)

    • Re:Plug-Spreading? (Score:4, Insightful)

      by barc0001 ( 173002 ) on Wednesday July 04, 2018 @04:17PM (#56893408)

      > How come if I have a power-strip with 8 sockets I can only ever plug-in 3 damn things?

      I have 11 things to plug in for all my living room multimedia... stuff. Most of them have the damn spreading wall-warts, and I have only a single standard pair outlet behind the entertainment unit for it all so it led to an octopus abomination of power bars, until I had salvation and tidiness visit me in the form factor of a 3 foot long shop power strip that I attached to the back of the entertainment unit. At last all is clean, tidy and off the floor. But NONE of that would have been necessary if I could have plugged 11 things into the standard 12 plug powerbar I had. Seriously, people shouldn't need to buy a shop power strip with 4 inches of separation between each outlet to be able to use them all.

    • Power bar extension cords [aliexpress.com]. It will take 3 months to get to you, so order about 40 of them and keep them in a drawer.

      To answer the question why, for almost every one of the examples given in the article, for example the Samsung, Nintendo, and Apple plugs, there is a geometry of power bar or splitter that they will fit nicely for. The Samsung and Nintendo ones, for example, are designed to play nicely on a power bar. Since most people use power bars, it is obvious that the article author went to some troub

      • Re:Plug-Spreading? (Score:5, Interesting)

        by batkiwi ( 137781 ) on Wednesday July 04, 2018 @06:15PM (#56893838)

        In Australia, where this article was written, almost every home power outlet is side by side, so he didn't go to ANY trouble to find a power outlet which was side by side.

        Also your standard "buy it at the shops" power board has that same spacing since it's a standard. You have to buy a special hugely spaced power board. Notice this one has only one specially spaced one: https://www.target.com.au/p/us... [target.com.au]

        This one has none: https://www.officeworks.com.au... [officeworks.com.au]

        This one has actual spacing markers to show you where they will fithttps://www.officeworks.com.au/shop/officeworks/p/hpm-5-outlet-power-surge-protector-hpd1055

    • The term seems to be a play on man-spreading. The tendency for men to sit with their legs spread [wikipedia.org], thus taking up more than one seat.

      Power strips are designed to mimic wall outlets. AC adapters with the transfer stuck onto the plug are a cost-cutting measure. The manufacturer didn't want to pay for a second cable between the outlet and the transformer, so built the plug into the transformer. In low-volume usage this actually makes sense, as it keeps the transformer off the ground where it's out of the
    • Re:Plug-Spreading? (Score:5, Interesting)

      by Plus1Entropy ( 4481723 ) on Wednesday July 04, 2018 @07:42PM (#56894106)

      The reason companies use wall warts is because of certification. If you are going to sell a device that takes AC from the mains directly into itself, whether it converts it to DC internally or not, it has to pass a far higher bar than one that takes in DC directly.

      So instead of trying to pass those regulations, it's much cheaper to simply buy an AC/DC power supply which has already been certified and ship it with the product you design. The alternative is what a lot of laptops have, the power brick style, which is AC to a little box (certified) and then DC to the laptop. The manufacturer designs one supply to certify and sells it with multiple laptop models.

      For example, any device which takes in AC from the mains will have to pass a HiPot test, which is where you apply 2x(device rating) + 1000V DC* between the input terminals and the ground for one minute, during which the device cannot pass any current to ground (i.e., short). So a laptop which would be powered by 120V directly would have to withstand 1240V for one minute.

      *These are Canadian Standards Association numbers, but I know that CE and NEC requirements are similar.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday July 04, 2018 @03:07PM (#56893050)

    Are you on drugs?

    • by Travelsonic ( 870859 ) on Wednesday July 04, 2018 @03:08PM (#56893054) Journal
      He is talking about, I think, plugs whose designs are such where if you needed to plug it in to a power strip, you needed to fit it in on one end, or else you're covering up one or more other outlets in the strip (and as a result unable to use said plugs).

      Seriously, why couldn't they design the plug to take up vertical space, and not horizontal space?
      • by war4peace ( 1628283 ) on Wednesday July 04, 2018 @03:13PM (#56893082)

        Seriously, why couldn't they design the plug to take up vertical space, and not horizontal space?

        They have. And it's equally bad. There's even an animation in TFA depincting that very situation.
        What needs to happen is to have a regular, small footprint plug continued with a wire which goes into the AC/DC converter itself. problem solved. Everyone's happy.

        • by sjames ( 1099 )

          HERESY! That would cost an extra $0,05!

        • That has its own downsides:

          Firstly, this would make smartphone chargers unneccessarily big. Those things fit in a pocket and it's good that way. (The oh-so-terrible waste of space by a smartphone charger shown in TFA could have been solved by moving the charger one outlet to the right. The horror.)

          Secondly, this would mean adding cables rated for 240V AC to devices that are supposed to supply 5V or maybe 12V DC. That's a waste of copper.
          • Yes, for small ones all you need is to have the USB port protrude from the back of the charger.

            Secondly, this would mean adding cables rated for 240V AC to devices that are supposed to supply 5V or maybe 12V DC. That's a waste of copper.

            Cables are rated for power consumption (amperage). A fast charger (1.67A @9V) would consume a maximum of 20W, maybe, considering efficiency loss. That would be equal to 0.09A at 240V AC.

          • Firstly, this would make smartphone chargers unneccessarily big.

            Why? All you would need to add is essentially a 2 inch long extension cord. How much bulk would that add? Seems like they would still fit in a pocket just fine.

          • by vux984 ( 928602 )

            (The oh-so-terrible waste of space by a smartphone charger shown in TFA could have been solved by moving the charger one outlet to the right. The horror.)

            Sure that would work, unless you have 2 devices and they both "spread" right.

            Firstly, this would make smartphone chargers unneccessarily big. Those things fit in a pocket and it's good that way.

            Clearly, the Samsung charger is not the only way to do it:
            https://www.apple.com/us/shop/... [apple.com]

            Of course $19.00 USD for a 50 cent part is a whole other issue.

        • I think this is a regional difference. Where I am all plugs are stacked on top of each other not side by side. So that Samsung design is Perfect. Compare that to an old DC Wall wart where you can't plug it in the top plug with out blocking the bottom plug.

          Power strips come in both orientations so as a designer your screwed. Thing that really bugs me about that article is his complaint about the apple charger. When it has a removable plug adapter so you can plug an extension cord in to it. We can make fun of

      • The one in the video in that article does just that: it's narrow enough to only take up one slot. In order to plug it in he just needs to flip it around. Oh wait, he can't, because of the weirdly designed wall plug that only accepts one orientation...
        • Australian, I think. Yoorpan ones (at least the 2 pin kind) are flippable.

          Though in both cases he could have put it in the other socket of the pair...

          • It's a Type I http://www.iec.ch/worldplugs/t... [www.iec.ch], found in 20 countries. Probably Australian in this case.

            The Type I was originally an old USA 220v design. It's the standard Type A, but with the prongs slanted so you can't mistakingly plug 110v into 220v or vice versa, plus with an earth pin added (but you can still use a 2-pin Type I plug in a 3-pin socket, just like you can use a Type A plug in a Type B socket). Plus, for those distribution systems that use phase/neutral, if makes sure that the phase plug

      • by gweihir ( 88907 )

        Maybe don't buy cheap crap or stop complaining that it is cheap crap? I really do not have that problem, but my power-strip was not the cheapest bargain-bin item either.

  • I love 2018 (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday July 04, 2018 @03:13PM (#56893080)

    When you can't tell anymore whether articles like this are satire or not you know why "millenial" has become an insult.

  • by PhotoJim ( 813785 ) <jim&photojim,ca> on Wednesday July 04, 2018 @03:16PM (#56893100) Homepage

    https://www.amazon.com/Etekcit... [amazon.com] Like these ones, as a simple example.

    These things (or other similar ones by other companies) are a godsend, even if they are somewhat overpriced. I must have 30 or 40 of them in my house.

    You can also get long power bars with as many as ten outlets that are well spaced - enough to permit use of most wall wart-type plugs without needing these cords.

  • Extension Cord? (Score:4, Insightful)

    by jellomizer ( 103300 ) on Wednesday July 04, 2018 @03:17PM (#56893106)

    Actually the real problem is most homes are not wired for DC power. The plugs in the wall are designed for high powered appliances like Vacuum cleaners, Air Conditioners, Fans, Mixers, and Incandescent light bulbs.
    Most of the devices we plug in today are DC power. So we need a rather large brick to convert the AC current to DC at the correct levels, and safety.

    If homes and offices were wired for DC plugs (Say the High Power USB Standard) then we wouldn't need such bricks, and wouldn't need to carry around these devices that are heaver then the devices we are actually wanting to use. I expect if homes has a Single AC to DC converter then we would probably on the average save a lot of energy as well.

    However in the mean time, either get an Extension cord to give some space for the brick and room for an other plug, or deal with it.

    • Re:Extension Cord? (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Miamicanes ( 730264 ) on Wednesday July 04, 2018 @04:19PM (#56893418)

      You'll "never" see "whole-house" 12v (or less) DC converters, because the cost of the thick wire you'd need to supply potentially dozens of amperes to every outlet in the house would cost a small fortune. 48v might be do-able... but at that point, you almost might as well just leave it as 110-240v ac, because either way, you'd need voltage conversion at the device itself.

      Embedding the DC adapters into the outlet itself is somewhat viable (witness the popularity of power outlets with embedded USB power ports). The problem THERE is, every goddamn time we get what appears to be a viable standard, it ends up becoming obsolete within 2-3 years ANYWAY.

      So far, I've personally been through four rounds of outlet-replacement:

      Round 1: put outlets with a pair of built-in 500mA USB ports in 3 places.

      Round 2: replaced the 500mA outlets with new ones that could supply 1A to one port, and 3.1A to the other, and moved the 500mA outlets to 3 new locations.

      Round 3: replaced the3.1+1.0 outlets with new ones capable of Qualcomm Quickcharge, replaced the 500mA outlets with the 3.1+1.0 outlets, and threw away the 500mA outlets because they were only usable with single-gang configurations, and all of the remaining outlets in my house where I wanted to put them were double-gang.

      Round 4: replaced the 3 quickcharge outlets with new ones that had one quickcharge 2.0 outlet that could also supply 3.1A to an iPad, and one USB-C outlet.

      There isn't going to be a Round 5. When the day comes that I get my first device that genuinely needs 12v+ via USB power delivery, I'm screwing a 2-to-6 outlet adapter into the existing outlets, buying a half-dozen 99c power adapters from China, and just leaving an appropriate assortment of them permanently plugged into the lower 3 outlets. I've had it with endlessly replacing power outlets every 1-2 years.

      • I'm screwing a 2-to-6 outlet adapter into the existing outlets, buying a half-dozen 99c power adapters from China, and double checking my fire insurance

        FTFY.

        • No kidding. If there's any reason an insurance company will deny a claim, it's electrical equipment not rated by underwriters laboratories - that will almost certainly be in the policy fine print.

    • by sjames ( 1099 )

      You'd lose that bet. You'd need wires the size of small tree trunks to keep the resistive losses under control.

      • Re: (Score:2, Funny)

        by Anonymous Coward

        You'd need wires the size of small tree trunks to keep the resistive losses under control.

        Not always, just for most places.

        In California where you may only have two rooms in your home total, you could likely get away with wires only as thick as your arm.

        Going more than about 50 feet of course would be about as thick as a chunky leg, and 100 feet would need the tree trunk tick wiring.

        Not sure what rich people would do in their mansions. Probably a kitten burning generator in each room or something...

    • The other problem with DC power has to do with fire safety and arcing. With AC, the current goes to zero and arc are self-quenching. Not true with DC, so you have a greater likelihood of fire. It also has to do with safety if you get shocked by DC versus AC your chances of injury are much greater.

      The ease of transforming voltages with transformers gives AC an advantage. And if you look around your home, you'll see a fair number of high current devices -- heat producing, or motors (ovens, ranges, toaster, c

  • by fahrbot-bot ( 874524 ) on Wednesday July 04, 2018 @03:17PM (#56893108)

    OMG! Too bad there's *no* way to solve [amazon.com] this problem.

    [ Sigh... (a) Why is this a story and (b) Why is this a story on /. ? ]

    • by Gerald Butler ( 3528265 ) on Wednesday July 04, 2018 @03:24PM (#56893142)

      That's not a solution. That's a work-around to design that does not bother to take even the slightest consideration of actual usage. Of course you can fix it. I can take the damn power supplies apart and internally connect longer wires and re-encase the transformers if I wanted to. I don't want to. I want to buy a power connector that takes these things into proper consideration. I shouldn't have to work around it. Somewhere, there was somebody actually "PAID" to "DESIGN" this crap. Don't you think they should be held accountable for their incompetence?

      • by fahrbot-bot ( 874524 ) on Wednesday July 04, 2018 @03:32PM (#56893196)

        That's not a solution. That's a work-around to design that does not bother to take even the slightest consideration of actual usage. Of course you can fix it. I can take the damn power supplies apart and internally connect longer wires and re-encase the transformers if I wanted to. I don't want to. I want to buy a power connector that takes these things into proper consideration. I shouldn't have to work around it. Somewhere, there was somebody actually "PAID" to "DESIGN" this crap. Don't you think they should be held accountable for their incompetence?

        Whoa. No more coffee for you today.

      • Agreed, and can we finally decide on ONE fucken plug type, tired of adapters for that shit as well. My brother visited from Oz and brought me an external hard drive as a birthday present (I'm a packrat and he knows it) voltage fine, frequency fine, plug on the wall wart is - fuck! Australian (of course). Go to buy an adapter and they are called "Traveler adapters" and are horribly overpriced for the function they fulfill. A couple minutes with the soldering iron sorted that wall wart out, not paying tha
    • by Trailer Trash ( 60756 ) on Wednesday July 04, 2018 @03:32PM (#56893202) Homepage

      [ Sigh... (a) Why is this a story and (b) Why is this a story on /. ? ]

      *cough*msmash*cough*

  • Obviously it's a very slow news day.

  • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • Agreed

    • True - but aren't modern switching supplies tiny? Most wall-wart plugs are for systems that are only a few watts. Seems like that should fit in a slightly larger than normal sized plug. Should be>90% efficient, so there shoudln't be much power loss.

      I assume the standard transformers are cheaper?

    • No wall wart made in the last 15 years has used a transformer to step down. Switching supplies use small ferrite types but they don't get nearly as warm under load.

    • Those plugs are designed to contain the transformer, and give it space to cool.

      also to keep your derpness from plugging 12 things into a single outlet and burning your house down.

      Sounds fishy. It's like saying those javascript bitcoin miners are not "designed" by lazy, greedy people and instead had an imperative to even consider keeping my computer "safe" by alerting me indirectly (via slowdowns and subtle 100% CPU results --only if someone technical knows where to look) when I get myself too many tabs mining and watching videos on multiple sites all at once.

      Replace this well-known maxim so you put goodwill and profits in place of malice and stupidity: Never attribute to *malice* wh

    • Those plugs are designed to contain the transformer, and give it space to cool.

      also to keep your derpness from plugging 12 things into a single outlet and burning your house down.

      Seriously, who writes this garbage and how does it get on /. ? Next week we'll have some executive's coming-out-as-a-brony as front page news.

      FFS.

      Giving the transformer space to cool was literally a larger problem with the magnetic coupled copper based old school design that went out of fashion around 2010 and now is rarely seen. With the advent of cheap efficient switching circuits, modern designs can be shrunk due to greater efficiency, due in large part to high frequency low loss designs where you can pump a small amount of energy (small cheap parts) a very large number of times a second instead of huge parts at 50/60.

      tl;dr There really is no

  • The short answer is that devices are designed for use in multiple markets with varying plug arrangements. To reduce cost, the form factor of the conversion hardware is unchanged between markets; only the prongs are changed. That which is inconvenient in Europe may be perfectly fine in the US. It's not evil. It's a natural consequence of global commerce without global power connection standards.

    • It's entirely possible to design a single, generic low-voltage-output wall-wart that will fit comfortably within the minimum power-socket dimensions across all target markets

      However, because this requires a little time, effort and money, the accountants and MBAs running pretty much every company instead source a brick from the lowest-cost Chinese provider... with, I am loathe to say it, the exception of Apple, as I've yet to see one of theirs overlap other sockets on a power strip of any country, unless the

  • So spread the plugs (Score:4, Informative)

    by HalAtWork ( 926717 ) on Wednesday July 04, 2018 @03:27PM (#56893170)

    Look up "octopus power strip", these should be everywhere. As for the man, politely ask him to move his bag.

    • This. Also, you can buy large quantity packs of 1" power "extension" cords for a single device (works like the octopus power strip but with flexibility to use it on any plug). I use them all the time, I carry a few in my car in fact.

      Also, USB power receptacles are gaining in popularity. It's becoming less necessary to have an A/C power adapter to charge a mobile device.

  • by oldgraybeard ( 2939809 ) on Wednesday July 04, 2018 @03:32PM (#56893198)
    just giving your devices a rest during your trip home. Once there you can charge them any way you wish. I always laugh when I am out and about, 7 of 10 individuals everywhere have their device in their hand. They look away every so often in an attempt not to trip over the curb, run in to a door or wall or pretend to be working in case their boss walks by.

    But then I am different, I create tech but don't have much use for it.

    Just my 2 cents ;)
  • by Doub ( 784854 ) on Wednesday July 04, 2018 @03:33PM (#56893208)
    I pay extra whenever I can to get my devices with a built-in PSU.
    • I pay extra whenever I can to get my devices with a built-in PSU.

      I've noticed with alarm that more and more non-laptop devices are forcing these on us. Cableco boxes and smart tv shouldn't be reminiscent of laptops. The brick will likely end up hanging badly from a corner and have one of the brick-touching segments end up tearing itself. This will either stop the power transit altogether one day, or cause a short circuit.

  • I am lazy, and didn't bother to make sure all parts of what I bought are to my satisfaction.

    If you knew and bought it anyway, well live with it because money talks and you know the rest.

    Yes, some 'transformer' designs suck and are just awful for the sake of cuteness, you still bought it.

    • "You still bought it" assumes that the client was aware of the adapter minutiae at purchase time rather than unboxing time. NOPE.

      When you buy that expensive smart tv, samsung phone or iPhone you do not get to choose the type of adapter --there may be some outcry when Apple changes ports to kill your historical investments, but there is only ONE Apple just like there is only one Samsung. You do not get to vote with your wallet.

      So if you want the device, you buy it and sigh.
      There is no interchangeable parts s

  • by gweihir ( 88907 ) on Wednesday July 04, 2018 @03:57PM (#56893318)

    Seriously. And the thing about the bag? Are you unable to open your mouth and ask? Is it an imposition to you to be asked to communicate with another human being?

    • The general consensus on rude train/subway passengers is 'do not engage' unless you want to get punched or stabbed. Living in NYC, I can assure you some people react *very* poorly to being asked to move their bags/legs/self so someone can sit.
      • by vlad30 ( 44644 )
        Take a tip from a old lady I once saw on a train many years ago, she asked politely and was ignored twice the umbrella she was carrying then found its mark between his legs with the pointy end (best legal weapon you can carry anywhere) he moved painfully and covered his damage with his bag. then the old lady and her hubby had a seat Hubby was smiling probably knew what was going to happen
  • by Ol Olsoc ( 1175323 ) on Wednesday July 04, 2018 @04:09PM (#56893374)
    Is Slashdot taking a turn to rampantt festering assholism? While I usually try not to comment on stupid articles, this one is worthy of Jezebel or Infowars if not in topic, in sheer base worthlessness.

    Is this what Slashdot has come to? I wonder if the writer got a little treat from some woman he was trying to impress?

  • We have a type of surge protector/powerboard sold commonly in California called a âoeSquidâ. It resembles a squid: it has an oval body and five short cords of varying lengths, each one ending in a female power socket. It can power five wall warts at once regardless of their egregious size.

  • by Rick Schumann ( 4662797 ) on Wednesday July 04, 2018 @04:12PM (#56893388) Journal
    Whose Line Is It Anyway is funny; this article is not funny.
  • I just got rid of my cable a couple weeks ago. Disconnecting everything I ran across 1 plug I remember hating. It plugged in such that it took up 4 plugs. You couldn't put it at the end because one way it covered the power switch and every breath of air turned the entire power strip off. You couldn't hang it off the other end because it had polarized plugs and only went 1 way.

    I had an entire power strip dedicated to 1 fricken power brick.

    On the other hand, I had jury duty a few years back. I brou
  • Because you never read the fucking manual, they have to do it in hardware.

    Also you must be new here to use train analogies in a car analogy forum.

  • When I bought my first macbook, it came with an extension cable for the charger so that it only took up one slot on the power strip. Now you get the charger "brick" [apple.com] with the $1000 laptop and Apple charges you $20 for the extension cable. [apple.com] . The cable is the only thing that carries over from mac to mac.

  • Each company makes a thing (external HDD, Phone, whatever) then finds a power source, transformer. Cheapest wins. I have two power strips behind the desk, with the various gadgets plugged in four different ways.
  • https://www.amazon.com/dp/B075WC3LZG/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_awdb_t1_fiupBb28ZM5DB

    Obviously, not a solution for every case. But in many, many cases, these are all you need to stop the scourge of "Plugspreading". As an aside, if this term has not yet been co-opted by the adult community, clearly this post will be its genesis. I expect an entire category on pornhub within weeks!

  • ..something different

    The engineers may be optimizing for cost, conversion efficiency, component availability, EMI rules, reliability or development time

    The designers want it to look cool and different and fit the overall design aesthetic

    Very few or either group care about encroaching on nearby devices

    • They may be optimising for durability (Samsung example, less protrusion straight out means less chance of brushing and breaking the USB connector) and/or reducing the likelihood of pulling on the cable pulling the plug out of the wall (Nintendo example - with a nod to durability because the cord is also more protected from being brushed by passers-by, although a bottom or top entry would also do that at the possible expense of usability in low-mounted outlets).

      That square and angled one, though? Yeah, that

  • by rhadc ( 14182 ) on Wednesday July 04, 2018 @07:21PM (#56894044) Journal

    The problem comes down to economics. You're buying a device that requires DC power, and the manufacturer is not going to decide the converter; it is going to choose an existing DC converter and supply it with the device. They might put a sticker on it. The socket-friendly option would cost a dollar or two more, which, when included in the Amazon price, just might give the competing device the edge. You and the other buyers didn't research the socket friendliness of the device, and there would be little opportunity for the manufacturer to convey this advantage in the first place.

    What incentive does the manufacturer have to improving products this way? Not enough to add $1 to the price. So there you have it.

    BTW, the article was incoherent. Let me coin the term "blogspreading" to refer to an article that takes up space and makes you spend more time than necessary to figure out what it's talking about.

  • by kenwd0elq ( 985465 ) <kenwd0elq@engineer.com> on Thursday July 05, 2018 @11:10PM (#56900226)

    I suppose it is entirely too ... "masculine" ... to ask "May I sit here?" People don't put their bags, or briefcases, or backpacks on the seat just to piss you off; they put it there because that seat was empty when they sat down.

    You need or want that seat. An ADULT would say "Excuse me, my I sit here?" Nine times out of ten, the person will say something like "Oh, excuse me. Sure." and move the bag between his feet. The 10th time is probably some sort of hostile/drunk/drugged out boor, and you probably don't want to sit next to him anyway.

    Of course, if it's a woman - as it sometimes is - she'll often say "NO", because she doesn't want to share the seat with me, a man. I sort of understand that, because she can't see that I'm a former Boy Scout, absolutely honorable retired military officer who would sacrifice his own life to save hers. She just sees "Creepy old man!"

    No woman would ever refuse to allow another woman to share the seat, of course.

Nothing ever becomes real till it is experienced -- even a proverb is no proverb to you till your life has illustrated it. -- John Keats

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