I own this iPhone since decembre 2018, and this issue only appeared this week. However when I plug in my iPhone to a wall outlet, it charges perfectly. I also noticed that there is a lag time before my phone starts charging when connected to my Macbook (before disconnecting right away, and then reconnecting etc).

I tried to connect my iPhone to both USB ports of my Macbook, with many different Apple lightning cables and also my Anker cable (MFI certified), but the issue substains. I plugged in my mother's iPhone 6 to my Macbook and it charged perfectly. I plugged in my iPhone to my brother's former Macbook pro (15" from 2008) and my iPhone could charge normally.


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It comes down to power, or more importantly "current". Specifically, with an iPad, USB power consumption is very finicky. So in order for the USB direct connection to your PC, USB hub, or laptop you need to make sure your iPad is charged to over 51%. This will reduce the power draw the iPad will attempt to pull from the USB connection. This should give you flawless charging and syncing capabilities. Now you can sidestep this in some cases by using USB ports on your hub, PC or laptop that are closer to the power supply, or series on the circuit board.

If your iPad is below 51%, you need to use the "cube" or power block that came with your iPad. (The smaller one for your iPhone is not recommended as it lacks the internal transformer that the iPad power block has) The reason for this is that your iPad is attempting to draw too much current from the USB connection through a substrate, i.e. the PC, USB hub or laptop connection. They are only designed to allow a limited amount of current through those connections, thus your iPad continues to "trip" the charging circuit in the device because the power draw is too low.

One thing I notice is that the phone very quickly flashes a pop-up ("modal") asking if I should trust this computer or not. But it's gone before I have a chance to press "Yes". (Actually, I once got it in time, and a screen for me to enter my PIN appeared, but only for a microsecond.) The connect/disconnect also stops briefly when the laptop pops up that "A new network interface has been detected: the 'iPhone USB' network interface has not been set up. To set up this interface use Network Preferences". But no matter what I do next, the cycle starts again.

The phone connects correctly to an older iMac running 10.7.5, so I suspect the issue is with the software on the laptop, but perhaps is a cycle of each wanting to verify that I should trust the other and getting in each other's way?

On the hunch that the computer was trying to set up a network connection via the phone while the phone was trying to do something else, I went into the network settings and found that in the list of services I had an entry for "Thunderbolt Bridge." I thought it was off, because it was listed as Inactive and the configuration I could see said "Configure IPv4: Off". But to make sure it was really completely disabled I pushed the "Advanced" button to change the configuration details (after clicking the lock icon and authenticating, of course). I changed "Configure IPv6" from "Automatically" to "Manually" and saved that.

If you use multiple desktops with one desktop handling photos (ImageCapture), and another desktop handling iTunes, the madness that ensues is impossible to reconcile, because the macbook pro jumps from one desktop to the other while you are trying to accept a trusted connection, and the iPhone is doing its thing - connecting and disconnecting.

The solution is to make sure iTunes is not running when you connect your iPhone - and be on the same desktop as ImageCapture will be when it automatically starts. When you connect your iPhone remove (swipe away) all active apps so that when you get the message to 'trust' this computer you can answer it.

For me this failure to connect occurred when I must have changed from the Wifi to LAN (via thunderbolt) connection. If I changed USB port and set WiFi ON it connected without a problem. But I got curious as to why I could not connect with the first USB port, and the above solution evolved.

However in the above scenario my Macbook was jumping from any desktop i tried to work in back to the desktop where I was running iTunes. By the time I had selected any other app (terminal included) I was thrown back to iTunes because it wanted to show me a message. I never saw this message because it got hidden behind the iTunes window. I only discovered the message after taking a guess at what was going on. So with terminal I would have had no chance to type anything, because as soon as I selected the correct desktop (where I keep terminals assigned) I would not get the time to even select the terminal let alone be able to type something into it. It would be far better if this message (regards trust) was thrown up in the notifications sidebar where it would have less influence on the behaviour of Apple's display manager. But seeing Apple have done nothing to improve the display manager with regard to the reliable positioning of apps on desktops I don't expect a change in this area either - a means to interrupt the display manager when it goes berserk - not even being able to reboot via the applet on the top left of the screen. My only solution was to log in from another computer and reboot.

The above worked for me. To add a bit: You click on the upper right of your screen where there is a magnifying glass and search "activity monitor." Keep "CPU" highlighted. Type "usbd" into the search box. Now plug in your phone. It'll connect, reconnect, connect, reconnect and so you have to be quick and double click on "usbd" even though photos and itunes keeps popping up. then once you've successfully double clicked "usbd," click on "quit" which takes you to a screen that says "force quit" and click "force quit."

I had issues connecting my new (to me) iphone XS to my macbook pro running High Sierra (becasue I love how solid it runs). None of teh suggestions helped so I manually downloaded and reinstalled iTunes and when I did it told me I needed an extra update to make my iphone work with it. Suddenly everything started working. You can manually download iTines here - =en_GB

This error means something went wrong while establishing the connection between the Mac and the iPhone. These suggestions are largely useless - a lot of things could have gone wrong, and things like restarting the Phone or changing the cable won't fix any of them. This has happened to me twice over the past few weeks - it turned out there was a corrupted file that caused the problem. Deleting the file let the phone sync again. I don't know what the implications are for my music library - I'm a recents switcher from Android, and haven't synced anything yet. In any event, I can't think of an excuse for Apple not to have fixed this in the 10 years since it was first reported here: =3

On my iPhone 5 screen all there is "iPhone is disabled, connect to iTunes". I tried connecting to iTunes but on iTunes it says cannot connect to your iPhone because it is not unlocked. Someone please help!! :/

Open iTunes on computer, connect iPhone to computer with USB cable. Hold both Home and Power buttons on iPhone until iTunes recognizes iPhone in Recovery Mode. This usually takes about 20 seconds of holding both buttons. Restore the iPhone Firmware.

I just had this problem. There is no chance to recover anything which you didn't back up on itunes. Today 12th of July 2017 i contacted apple customer service. The only way to use my iphone again is first to erase all its content. So your finger prints as password before can't even help to disable the phone. So for mothers who might have small kids playing their iphone, be careful. You might locked out and never have the chance until today to access your data specially photos if you had your iphone in flight mode. No iclouds back up for it either. I hope Apple should improve in this case if it is really the owner who was locked out anyway.

Just starting to learn Xcode and I can test the first chapter's app on my iPhone if it's conncted via USB-C. The book walks me through the part where I can allow Xcode to connect to the iPhone via WiFi, just checking "Connect via Network."

On some vehicles, after you start Apple CarPlay using a Lightning connection, you're asked if you want to enable wireless Apple CarPlay for future use. If you agree, the next time you go for a drive, your phone will automatically connect wirelessly with Apple CarPlay.

Apple CarPlay works on iPhone 5 or later. For 24MY vehicles, Apply CarPlay will only work for devices with iOS 14 or later through both wired and wireless connections. For information about phone compatibility, visit the Apple CarPlay site.


I'm pretty sure that iCloud will sync Wi-Fi information from your iPhone to your Mac, but I've connected to a network with a "secure" password and typing it on my phone is a pain. Can I use the fact that I've connected to the network on my Mac to have the iPhone connect without wasting time entering the password on the phone?

I looked at the screenshots of Apple's own apps (e. g. Pages). They do leave the status bar in, but it doesn't show a carrier and times is set to 9:41. This can be done by connecting the iPhone to a Mac and using it as camera input through Quicktime on Yosemite (like for app-previews). e24fc04721

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