Hey guys,<p>Sorry for the silly question but I go to Apple every two months on average (November--January--yesterday) to replace my EarPods.<p>Every time it's the same issue: the remote starts accidentally pausing/playing music or activating Siri. The culprit ends up being the connection near the jack but every time I am assured by Apple employees that nobody ever goes back to them this often to replace their headphones.<p>I don't know if they assume I am running a scam or something but am I really the only one who has such a poor experience with the EarPods?<p>I'd be happy to upgrade to something more sturdier if my experience is unique but I am curious if it actually is...
I've had the same pair for almost two years now and I use them almost every day. I carry them around in my pocket and throw them wherever. I've never had a problem. But I'm also extra careful about not crushing them or really tangling up the wires. Before I put them away, I full extend them out and then fold them up in halves until they get to the size I need to store them. They've kept up very well this way.
I've never had a problem. Probably you have some special use case that puts extra strain on the weakest link in the cord. Don't worry about it, you are the person warranty replacement is meant to protect.<p>Occams Razor tells me the Ear Pods are well made, given that Apple replaces them for free during the warranty period, and if you are nice to Apple Store personnel sometimes even out of warranty.<p>I have lots of criticisms of Apple, esp. the long delays in refreshing the Mac lineup. But of all their flaws, not knowing their costs ain't one of them (esp. with Tim Cook in charge), and so is not fixing them when it becomes a problem.
I have the same issue; bought about three EarPods over the past three years!<p>Now, first of all, I'm not sure if I'd have been better off with other options. Most of my friends with EarPods seem to be fine with theirs, so there's something 'off' about how I use them. On the other hand, multiple friends have had to buy new MagSafe adapters while I've never had to, so it's not just that I'm rough with all my stuff.<p>Secondly, I went ahead and bought AirPods despite the fact that for me it's a huge price to pay for audio thingies. In hindsight, they're the best piece of technology I bought since my iPad 2. The main downside is not having the forward/backward buttons, but for me the advantages <i>vastly</i> outweigh the disadvantages.<p>Third, if you're like me there's a decent change wireless might solve your problem. I have no clue if the AirPods are actually worth the price, but I've heard very good things about the Anker Sports thingies, which are also bluetooth. Might want to give those a try!<p>By all means email me if you have any AirPod-specific questions. For what they cost me I did a ridiculous amount of research before buying them (although I do that kind of stuff for fun, so maybe the price didn't play much of a role).
I've had every pair of EarPods I've ever used break in some form. Either issues with the remote, or the non-dominant ear losing sound (% of volume, or entirely). This has probably happened to 5+ pairs I've had from various Apple devices.<p>I just use them until they break, then use something else.
I have the same issue in the same timeline. Sometimes the sound goes out on one side before the controller stops working. I tend to plug and unplug the headphones frequently which I think is the culprit.
~10 years, every 3 to 6 months. Longest is 9 months. Shortest is 3 weeks.<p>The cable starts to fail underneath the strain relief boot. It unwinds, individual strands of copper start to break, and it shorts out. The play/pause (or ending a call) is the cable shorting causing the phone to interpret that command.<p>It happens most to people who walk with a device in their front pocket while listening to music. This accelerates the rate of failure of the cable underneath the strain relief boot.<p>I even brought it up at WWDC. Twice. Still the same boot after a decade. My AirPods show up in 4-5 weeks.
Honestly, buy a set of NICE headphones or earbuds where the cable is replaceable rather than integrated.<p>Your going to get better sound quality, a better cable and be happier with the product in the long run.
I dont have to return mine but I have to buy new ones very often. My rabbit (Boots) finds them tasty and ruins them with only a single nibble. This alone makes me consider getting the AirPods, but reviews seem to state that the audio quality is not much improved, so i'll wait.
If a product breaks once, it could be the product, if it breaks multiple times - you might want to rule out something you are doing that could be breaking it.