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> Hasn't that problem mostly been solved already with switch mode power supplies that are pretty small.

Perhaps you are thinking of "wall wart" power supplies that used line-frequency transformers in their rectifier design. These have been replaced and miniaturized by using offline switched-mode power supplies and point-of-load converters, but the magnetic components remain the largest components in these designs.

> With most personal electronics being battery powered these days I'm curious where you see a real need for further reduction in the size of power converters.

It's now common for modern SoC devices to require multiple voltage rails. It may require 3.3 V, 1.35 V, 1.8 V on separate pins and each requires a point-of-load converter for efficiency, and each of these take up board space.



So wall warts are obsolete? What breakthroughs replaced them?


The cost of switching power supplies. (your USB charger the size of a plug puts out more power than a transformer wall wart 6x8x8 cm)




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