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CNET's Scott Stein shot to the top of Reddit in this Apple AirPods meme. I've gotta agree with Leo here. Seriously: The 3.5mm audio jack is more universal than the USB port itself. After all, there are at least six different USB ports still in use. (The "U" in USB stands for "Universal," in case you didn't know.). Yes, Bluetooth is becoming nearly as ubiquitous -- but when we're talking about the breadth of devices on the market, Bluetooth isn't not nearly as simple as plugging in a solid, mechanical jack.
Pairing and unpairing Bluetooth devices is still generally a pain in the ass -- particularly in cars -- and not all Bluetooth devices offer the same wireless range, (It's way easier and more reliable to plug wired headphones into my PS4 controller than use a Bluetooth set.), So what about the dongle, Sean? I'm so glad you asked -- "dongle" is definitely one of my favorite words in the English language, Practically every headphone-jack-less phone technically does come with a 3.5mm headphone jack -- on the end of a inch-long converter cable that uses USB or Lightning to plug it iphone case 8 plus designer into your phone..
(Such dongles even have tiny digital-to-analog converters -- DACs -- inside which could theoretically make my wired headphones sound better someday.). But I've lived the #donglelife, and it's not for me. When I reviewed the Essential Phone and inevitably needed to plug in a pair of headphones, I found I'd absentmindedly left the dongle in a drawer at home. And when I bought Google's very first Android phone from 2008 -- which, coincidentally, didn't have a headphone jack -- I completely lost its crazy 3.5mm-to-ExtUSB dongle. I still don't know where or how.
I suppose I could just leave a dongle connected to my Bose cans 24/7, But the first time I try to plug those headphones into something else, I'll have to remove that dongle, and I don't necessarily trust myself to put it back iphone case 8 plus designer again, And I chafe at the idea of just buying a half-dozen dongles (roughly $7 a pop) and leaving them in all my bags, my desk at work, and at home, None of these reasons are truly why I'd abandon my dreams of Pixel-y goodness, though, My real reason is a matter of principle, There's simply no good reason for Google to abandon the headphone jack, Nobody's asking for it to go away..
The T-Mobile G1 (aka HTC Dream), the first Android phone. Hardware keyboard. 3.5-inch screen. No headphone jack -- which was unusual back then. Plus that crazy chin. The loss of the headphone jack feels like yet another choice that's being forced on smartphone owners -- another way phones are being hammered into forms that are roughly indistinguishable from each other. Remember when hardware QWERTY keyboards were an option? Remember when flagship phones with small screens were, too?. Those things went away not because phone buyers were asking for bigger screens and software keyboards, but because phone makers and cellular carriers needed big, bold features to drive a new upgrade cycle. Big screens trumped everything else.
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