

zip) and scroll down to page 213, there is a whole section on it.Tobenone USB C to USB Adapter with 2 USB Port, USB C Male to USB 3.0 Female High Speed Data Transfer, USB C to USB A Adapter for MacBook Pro 2021 MacBook Air 2020, More Thunderbolt 3/4/Type-C Devices Or just download the official PDF (warning, 20MB.

and neither statement is true, at least according to the USB-IF, the only body who has any authority on the matter.

What I see most often is something along the lines of 'USB-C is digital audio only' or 'USB-C doesn't have any audio pins'. I do not know why, but there seems to be a ton of misinformation regarding this online which it sounds like you've likewise encountered. These usually come in the form of single chip solutions and will include multiple input and output channels, so this can be done effectively for free. If the device is a phone, then it already must have a DAC of some kind or it would be unable to drive the speaker that lets you hear the person on the other end of a phone call. It would not make much sense to use a dongle that had an entire DAC and USB audio profile chipset inside it, as this would incur a good deal of cost, consume more power, and be physically bulkier. So in most cases, yes, the dongle is merely an electrical/mechanical connection that is adapting a USB-C port to a 3.5mm audio jack directly. They're the exact same signals that get sent through any other 3.5mm headphone jack, and generated in the exact same way, by some kind of DAC inside the device with the USB C port. However, for most phones with a USB-C to 3.5mm dongle, the DAC is in the host device, meaning that the signals going out of the USB-C port and into the dongle are, in fact, analog ones. It's more like a USB 'sound card', and will often be a little bulkier and more expensive.

So, in this case, the DAC is very much in the dongle itself. This is a DAC that appears on a USB bus as an audio device, and will work just as readily on a desktop or any other device with USB-C and an OS that supports it. The first way is the same way USB to Audio dongles work right now: The dongle is an actual USB device itself, one that supports one of the USB Audio profiles. There are a few different ways to send audio over USB-C.
