Wireless charging company Powermat has joined the Wireless Power Consortium (WPC) in a move that looks to further unify wireless charging tech behind the popular Qi standard.

Powermat—which has long pushed the PMA wireless charging standard as Qi’s primary competitor—quietly announced the move last week. The company is a leading player in the AirFuel Alliance, a wireless charging standards body that formed in 2015 with the merger of two other organizations, the Alliance for Wireless Power and the Power Matters Association. Powermat has largely stood opposite Qi and the WPC.

Qi has won the lion’s share of the wireless charging market in recent years, though. Its dominance came to a head last fall after Apple threw its weight behind the standard with its new iPhone X and iPhone 8 phones. This more-or-less sealed Powermat’s fate and led stores like Starbucks—which had previously supported Powermat over Qi through its in-store wireless charging pads—to update its chargers to support both formats.

Powermat CEO Elad Dubzinski suggested as much in a press release announcing the move. “Qi has become the dominant wireless charging standard on the market, and the recently launched Apple iPhone lineup is evidence of this success,” Dubzinski said in a statement. Both Powermat and the WPC say the company will contribute its technology and expertise in an effort to improve wireless charging tech behind Qi.

None of this immediately changes the fact that wireless charging is still slower than using a more traditional wired connector like USB-C. (Nor does it change how you still need a cable to connect a “wireless” charger in the first place.) We’re still waiting to see what Apple is up to with its upcoming AirPower mat, too. But fewer competing standards should allow the wireless charging world to progress more smoothly going forward, even if it annoys the minority that uses Powermat chargers today.