OP has one without the switch, so it shouldn't be the issue. Only happens because a trillion dollar company cannot account for the differences in their handful of devices.
I was shocked when my new realme, which uses the same tech, didn't even break 30°C while charging at 8+ Amps (should be around 80W). This was in a relatively warm room (25°C) and using the case that came with it, which surely doesn't improve thermals. It gets warmer when charging from other sources with only 2-3A, like USB-PD or QuickCharge.
Coupled with the fact that it's only accurate if you are constantly charging from below 15% to 100%, these are ranges that I rarely get my phone into.
AccuBattery needs a session to have 60% charged, so <20% to 80% works. Doesn't need to be every single one. I actually asked support about it and they said this was the lowest percentage they were comfortable with. I was requesting to make it adjustable.
Accuracy of the measurement isn't the entire point. I see the same issue, but since it helps track relative degradation over time it can still add value by giving more information when you suspect the capacity is getting worse.
Your Wi-Fi also needs a cable if you want to be pedantic.
The benefit is that there is no overhead involved, in theory you don't even have to think about charging your phone ever again. When it's not in use, just leave it on some of the dedicated places around the house and office that provide wireless charging.
If you don't require it to replace cables it doesn't need to. For adding some energy to the device while it's on your desk or nightstand it works perfectly fine.
The efficiency issue is also exaggerated, phones don't take much power to begin with. Anyone using AC or warm water for convenience is doing much worse in terms of spent energy.
I've tried it but it doesn't click for me. I can be more efficient with a normal launcher.
Niagara Launcher did teach me how to improve my setup: if something isn't important enough to be on the one and only home screen, it goes in the drawer. No more arranging folders for apps I rarely use.
Realistically, any job that you hire someone with a degree for will require training - the question is how much they'll understand and at what level the training needs to start.
It's the movie equivalent of trolling.