Dell wants your laptop to wirelessly charge your phone
Wireless charging isn’t particularly new — a number of chargers have offered this feature for years. Samsung can even charge another phone via its Wireless PowerShare feature. But laptops that can wirelessly charge your phone? That’s an entirely different story, and a problem that a new Dell patent hints that it could solve.
Even the best laptops have tons of flat, “unoccupied” space on their keyboard deck. Dell’s patent proposes using this space for charging a wireless device, like a phone.
The patent application (number 20220239124, as unearthed by Patently Apple and Ars Technica) doesn’t propose building wireless charging coils directly into the laptop itself. Instead, the wireless coils would be designed into a “sleeve” of some sort, which would slide over the outside of the laptop. A small power connector (reminiscent of the magnetic connectors used by Apple’s older MacBooks and the first Microsoft Surface devices) would power the sleeve, which would then power the phone or other wireless device.
Dell / USPTO
The concept certainly seems intriguing enough, though some questions come to mind: first, how much power will the sleeve be able to deliver? Will consumers accept a smartphone that hangs over the side of the laptop, where it could easily slide off? For that matter, how easy would it be to type on a laptop with a smartphone crouched beneath your palms? The concept is easier to grasp if a user were to use a separate mouse and keyboard, repositioning the laptop as a smart display — but again, most laptop stands are designed to be tilted downwards, where the phone would slide off.
That’s not to say that Dell couldn’t solve those problems, though the patent application doesn’t indicate how that would occur. Remember, though, a patent application isn’t an indication that the patent will be granted, nor is it an indication that Dell will ever bring this concept to market. But the question it asks is an interesting one: Can we do something to make the big slab of open palm rest space more practical on laptops?
An illustration from Dell’s wireless charging laptop clip patent application.
An illustration from Dell’s wireless charging laptop clip patent application.
Dell / USPTO
An illustration from Dell’s wireless charging laptop clip patent application.
Dell / USPTO
Dell / USPTO
Author: Mark Hachman, Senior Editor
As PCWorld’s senior editor, Mark focuses on Microsoft news and chip technology, among other beats. He has formerly written for PCMag, BYTE, Slashdot, eWEEK, and ReadWrite.
Recent stories by Mark Hachman:
Dell hack: Personal info of 49 million customers allegedly breachedApple claims its M4 chip’s AI will obliterate PCs. Nah, not reallyWindows’ AI-powered future could feature ‘Qualcomm Inside’