@kat Different current (colloquially called amperage); the voltage is always the same 5 V (except for things using Qualcomm quickcharge or USB-PD)
-F
@Felthry so you can just plug any current into a smartphone and it's fine??
@kat it's a voltage source, not a current source--the voltage is decided by the power supply but (up to the supply's limits) the current is decided by the phone
if it's a 2 amp power supply and your phone only needs 1 amp it'll only draw 1 amp
-F
@Felthry but if amperage is decided partly by voltage, isn't a higher voltage power source going to create higher current?
@kat yes, but all USB power supplies are 5 V (except for quickcharge and USB-PD, which start at 5 V and can increase that but only if the phone sends a special signal asking for higher voltage)
-F
@Felthry but like it doesn't matter how much current there is because it's always going to get limited by the phone which doesn't have to do anything to do that?? i'm kind of lost
@kat not exactly, but sort of? in this application, that's how it's used, but the signal that adjusts the resistance can be separate from the current, which enables things like amplification and stuff--here, though, it's being used to sense current and control its resistance to keep the current constant
-F
@Felthry i was assuming that's how it worked for this specific thing, not in general, am i getting things wrong again? i really am too stupid for this
@kat no you're right actually! that's how it worsk for this thing -F
@Felthry ah okay, so the more current the transistor gets, the more it resists to balance it out, okay