The Lightning port supported this to via a Lightning>USB-A adapter and then plugging in a USB to Ethernet adapter. I tried this as far back as my iPad Air 2 several years ago, this isn’t a new feature at all.
That makes sense. More power to the people who want to tether their phones to an Ethernet port, I suppose that would be nice if you’re downloading a large game or something just to speed it up a little bit.
There aren't any 10Gbps usb-c adapters. They are all thunderbolt. But you can get 5Gbps on regular USB-c. I've been looking for years, so I'd be thrilled to be proven wrong
Is this news? As someone else said, iPhones could already do this. I just checked, and my $400 android phone can also do this. Seeing as USB-C is just a data port, it makes sense that it can handle ethernet data.
Not an average use case, but I used to use iPads on a tradeshow floor demonstrating apps and controlling other smarthome devices on a network. Wi-Fi at tradeshows is abysmal at best, so we would connect the lighting to USB adapter, then connect a USB to ethernet dongle for hardwired network that was stable. Worked great for us.
Large network transactions (like an initial download when transferring phones) are a lot “kinder” to the hardware if you’re pulling through the port rather than running the wireless radios. There’s enough activity on the SOC already, can keep excess heat down by not needing the WiFi pumping at hundreds of MBs as well.
I could see people docking their phones, and having a keyboard, mouse, external monitor, ethernet, speakers, etc. connected to the dock. I do that with my steam deck to play games on the TV. Apple is pushing gaming hard with the iPhone 15. I could see that being a use case Apple would support for gaming.
Maybe it’s useful for IT stuff. To connect to a network that doesn’t have WiFi? Or to hook it up to server hardware that doesn’t have an exposed USB port.
It depends. I do it from time to time whenever my internet connection is faster than my mobile data or I want to avoid hitting my data limit needlessly when I have a cord already in the room.
I'm genuinely curious why wifi isn't an option in your scenario? If you're opting to use ethernet, with a USB adaptor no less, you'd surely be in range of wifi no?
I tried this just for the lulz, and it worked with no issue. Was able to get close to my rated gigabit speeds. Not of much use for normal people, but it's just a freebie from having a USB-C port.
Yes you technically can. POE to Usb-c 5v adapters exist but they're mostly intended for powering an SBC and in my experience they struggle with the current even an SBC can pull.