Language changes and evolves over time, this is normal and natural. Just because "elecrocuted" at one time only meant died from electricity, it doesn't mean it can't mean now that one simply got a jolt and didn't die.
Or do you still think "Google" just means a big number? Do you "literally" means "exactly" or can also be used to show strong feeling or emphasis.
More specifically, you're using the non-grounded plug rather than a grounded one. Since the laptop is metal, it passes it to you and to the ground instead of through the dedicated circuit.
>More specifically, you're using the non-grounded plug rather than a grounded one
Yes, the one that comes with extremely expensive European 2019 16" Macbook Pro is not grounded.
I'm not sure they sell the grounded lead anymore. But maybe I should charge my work macbook with my personal xps 13 charger which is grounded (yay usb-c!)
According to the forum posts, it's happening to everyone who uses the default plug, the extension that comes with a 3 pin plug resolves the issue.
I have one short and one long cable, and am only just now realizing the issue. I'd simply assumed the short one was a fake I'd gotten.
Can't speak to why your iPhone and iPad do the same thing, I've experienced it when using sketchy cheap lightning cables or wall adapters (including ghost touching), but not when using better built stuff (like AmazonBasics or Anker).
That's assuming that your house have grounded sockets. My house does not and most of old houses in my country are the same, only new houses have ground.
Are you in Europe perchance? I have a feeling that wiring in the EU is more prone to sparks than in the US, so maybe grounding behaves differently as well, due to some sort of variation in building and wiring codes.
This is still a problem: https://discussions.apple.com/thread/3969131
https://forums.macrumors.com/threads/macbook-pro-giving-me-e...
https://apple.stackexchange.com/questions/10545/is-it-bad-th...