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As the largest consumer electronics show in the world, CES often gives us a hint of the technologies we can look forward to in the near future, based on the products that are shown off at the show. In 2013 and 2014, there was a heavy focus on wearables, and this year's emphasis on home automation suggests 2015 will be a big year for connected home products.

There's one other important emerging technology that we may see explode over the course of the next few years -- wireless charging. Several companies, including Energous and WiTricity, demoed upcoming wireless charging solutions, and the Alliance for Wireless Power had a booth showing off how wireless charging will work in the Home of the Future.

MacRumors had a chance to sit down with Alex Gruzen, the CEO of WiTricity, who walked us through the company's technology, its existing partnerships, and gave us details on when we might see the debut of the first products using WiTricity's technology, which uses the Rezence specification agreed upon by the Alliance for Wireless Power. WiTricity's wireless charging solutions, which we have covered multiple times in the past, works using magnetic resonance, which is able to transfer power over distances using the magnetic near-field.

In the past, wireless charging solutions like the Powermat (which uses a competing technology from the Power Matters Alliance) have required the electronic device being charged to rest directly on the power source, but WiTricity's wireless charging technology is unique because it does not require direct contact. The magnetic field used for charging is able to wrap around barriers, letting WiTricity charging pads be placed in unassuming locations like under desks, rugs, tables, and more.

In our time at the WiTricity booth, we saw charging pads that were placed under concrete, under desks, and more, hidden out of sight but still capable of delivering a full charge to a device (or multiple devices at once) equipped with WiTricity's technology. This type of hidden charging technology is what we can expect in the future, and Energous, previously mentioned, also debuted a similar "WattUp" technology that uses radio frequencies to charge devices, replacing a charging pad with a transmitter that can provide power up to 15 feet away.

The Energous technology is quite new, but WiTricity has been working on its wireless charging solution for a number of years and already has several partners in the works. Intel, for example, is using WiTricity's technology in its upcoming Skylake processors, and according to Gruzen, we're going to see the first Ultrabooks able to charge wirelessly before the end of 2015 as a result of this deal.

witricitybooth2.jpg
The WiTricity CES booth
Apple itself uses Intel's processors for its range of Mac products and based on past history, it's likely that Apple will adopt Skylake processors, which means wireless charging for MacBooks is a possibility in the future. Apple has explored wireless charging based on past patents, and has even looked at a technology that's very similar to what WiTricity offers. Apple was rumored to be experimenting with wireless charging capabilities for the Apple Watch, but went with a MagSafe-style option instead, suggesting it isn't quite ready to adopt wireless charging technology at this point in time.

Apple is not a member of the Alliance for Wireless Power and does not work with WiTricity currently, making it unclear whether the company will develop a proprietary solution if it chooses to adopt wireless technology or use the standard that's been agreed upon by a huge number of tech companies including Intel, Panasonic, Acer, Broadcom, Microsoft, Dell, HP, Qualcomm, Fujitsu, Lenovo, LG, Samsung, and more.

witricitybooth1.jpg
WiTricity technology being used to charge a Smart Car​
In addition to Intel, WiTricity has a range of high-profile partners and Gruzen expects those partnerships to result in a slew of products that use the company's technology in late 2015, like cell phones, electric vehicles, computers, and even accessories designed to work with Apple products. At CES, Gruzen demoed an iPhone 6 case the company's engineers had built to demonstrate how the technology could be used, which was similar in style to a Mophie charging case.

witricityiphone6case.jpg
iPhone 6 case concept built by WiTricity engineers
WiTricity's technology is essentially able to be used in any product that needs charging, ranging from the large to the small. Toyota's next Prius, coming in 2016, will allow its users to charge the car using a wireless charging pad powered by WiTricity's technology, and WiTricity also showed off packaging created in conjunction with Gillette. Razors were packaged with a pulsing blue LED charged on the shelf with a hidden charging pad, and were designed to draw the consumer's eye towards the product.

Gruzen showed MacRumors the chips that WiTricity has developed to enable wireless charging in a range of devices, which were paper thin and in some cases, tiny enough to be incorporated even into small wearable devices. In the very near future, likely before we see the end of 2015, wireless charging is going to make its debut in a big way.

In several years from now, it's quite possible that charging our electronic devices through cables and cords will be a thing of the past, replaced with technology that allows us to hide away charging pads or eliminate them all together. It isn't clear what stance Apple will take on wireless charging, but its inevitable adoption in the technology space suggests Apple won't be able to ignore it for long.

Article Link: Wireless Charging Looks to Go Mainstream in 2015
 

nutjob

macrumors 65816
Feb 7, 2010
1,030
508
Will it give everyone cancer like power lines do? Maybe it'll just erase all your credit cards and hard drives.
 

rnizlek

macrumors 6502
Mar 31, 2004
335
176
Washington, DC
I wonder what sort of efficiency loss wireless charging creates. I imagine it is not as efficient as directly connecting a cable. Obviously the actual loss will be quite small for something like a smartphone, but if they want to scale these to charge a smart car, it's a little more relevant.
 

elvisimprsntr

macrumors 65816
Jul 17, 2013
1,028
1,532
Florida
Let me guess, the "specific frequency" is unregulated 2.4 GHz. You can cook popcorn and your brain in the middle of your living room.

Magnets, *****!

 

2457282

Suspended
Dec 6, 2012
3,327
3,015
And we will all walk around like this
 

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thejadedmonkey

macrumors G3
May 28, 2005
9,183
3,343
Pennsylvania
I love how, before Apple adopts it, it's not mainstream. And as soon as Apple starts using it, it's "mainstream".

I've had wireless charging in my cellphone for over 2 years, and console's have been doing it for even longer. It's already mainstream, and most non-Apple high-end cellphones already have it as an option.
 

cmChimera

macrumors 601
Feb 12, 2010
4,273
3,762
I love how, before Apple adopts it, it's not mainstream. And as soon as Apple starts using it, it's "mainstream".

I've had wireless charging in my cellphone for over 2 years, and console's have been doing it for even longer. It's already mainstream, and most non-Apple high-end cellphones already have it as an option.

You didn't read the article did you?
 

pgiguere1

macrumors 68020
May 28, 2009
2,167
1,200
Montreal, Canada
I love how, before Apple adopts it, it's not mainstream. And as soon as Apple starts using it, it's "mainstream".

I've had wireless charging in my cellphone for over 2 years, and console's have been doing it for even longer. It's already mainstream, and most non-Apple high-end cellphones already have it as an option.

Depends what you mean by "wireless charging". Current wireless charging solutions have such a close range that the device still has to touch an inductive surface. It's not much more wireless than say, using a charging dock. When we'll be able to use our devices while they charge, that'll be a completely different thing.
 
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Lazy

macrumors 6502
May 27, 2003
305
335
Silicon Valley
I love how, before Apple adopts it, it's not mainstream. And as soon as Apple starts using it, it's "mainstream".

I've had wireless charging in my cellphone for over 2 years, and console's have been doing it for even longer. It's already mainstream, and most non-Apple high-end cellphones already have it as an option.

You're unintentionally unironic. It is correct that somethings aren't mainstream untll Apple does them, because the difference between tens or hundreds of thousands of units (pre-Apple) and millions or tens of millions of units (Apple) is exactly the difference between niche and mainstream.

I can't think of a good example besides USB at the moment, but let's just assume there are others. :)
 

elvisimprsntr

macrumors 65816
Jul 17, 2013
1,028
1,532
Florida
Didn't JP Morgan burn down Tesla's facility which was trying demonstrate wireless electricity. If it can't be controlled and metered, it can't be charged for.

 

AppleScruff1

macrumors G4
Feb 10, 2011
10,026
2,949
You're unintentionally unironic. It is correct that somethings aren't mainstream untll Apple does them, because the difference between tens or hundreds of thousands of units (pre-Apple) and millions or tens of millions of units (Apple) is exactly the difference between niche and mainstream.

I can't think of a good example besides USB at the moment, but let's just assume there are others. :)

Like large screen phones, BluRay, USB 3, notifications, and things like that?
 

quickcalibre

macrumors regular
Sep 20, 2013
191
32
London
Interesting, but won't this be wasting electricity and give a high utility bill?

Not so great for the environment, even if the ad did start up with batteries going to landfills.
 

Keirasplace

macrumors 601
Aug 6, 2014
4,059
1,278
Montreal
Prediction.

Apple comes out with its own flavor of wireless charging that doesn't work with anything else.

I don't care who gets this out... I don't care in the way they are selling it.

If they can stream continuous power to a device (the device would probably need to be pretty low power), say a watch from the phone, or a power pack in my purse, then I'd care (It would enable very small devices with real function to be distributed everywhere), that's something I would find useful, otherwise MEH.
 

t0mat0

macrumors 603
Aug 29, 2006
5,473
284
Home
The iPhone's new metal Apple symbol would be an interesting way to provide wireless charging for a future iPhone and iPad
 

lowercaseperson

macrumors 6502
Oct 5, 2006
294
87
Interesting bit from WattUP:

For the full consumer full-featured product:

* <5 feet, with 4 devices calling for full power, devices charge at ~same rate as being plugged into the wall

* 5-10 feet, with 4 devices calling for full power, devices charge at ~same rate as being plugged into a USB port on a computer

* 10-15 feet, with 4 devices calling for full power, devices charge at ~1-2% per minute, depending on the device and how much charge it has remaining
 

stewy

macrumors regular
Jul 12, 2008
235
208
Kingston, ON
I don't care who gets this out... I don't care in the way they are selling it.

If they can stream continuous power to a device (the device would probably need to be pretty low power), say a watch from the phone, or a power pack in my purse, then I'd care (It would enable very small devices with real function to be distributed everywhere), that's something I would find useful, otherwise MEH.

I have a qi wireless charger for my phone now and it's great! It's on my night stand. I just put my phone on it at night and it's ready to go in the morning. No fumbling with cables that fall behind the night stand. If I want to check something I can just pick it up. No plugging and unplugging. Admittedly I kind of didn't see the point until I had one.
 
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