Apple removed the headphone jack almost 1.5 years ago. Google followed suit, among others. In my personal experience, this has held me back on upgrading phones (I was set to go Android until Google released the Pixel 2 without a headphone jack). Recently, I am using an iPhone 8 for work, and I get annoyed with having to use a dongle to use my favorite headphones. I have a Bluetooth headset but hate that it is unusable unless charged.<p>Thoughts on your experience so far? Do you miss the headphone jack as much as I do?
If I could change one thing about my phone that would be it.<p>It would be great to<p>* not have to use a dongle for my headphones and other audio devices<p>* not have to buy replacement dongles when I lose this one, and the next one<p>* not have to deal with lag in video and games<p>* not have to charge things that did not need charging before, and by extension create billions of batteries with limited cycles to end in toxic landfills<p>* be able to charge and listen to music at the same time (when using cable connection)<p>Using an over engineered expensive low quality unreliable technology to replace an ubiquitous cheap ultra-reliable one is not so great. It’s a good addition but removing the choice without my consent is an insult.
See, for me, I only buy devices that have 3.5mm headphone jacks. I won't give up a viable and fairly open technology for a mass of expensive walled-garden nonsense. When I can buy non-3.5mm headphones at Dollar Tree, I'll consider moving away from that standard.
Yes, but mostly due to the alternatives being pretty terrible (or expensive).<p>Previously I'd use sub-$30 sports earphones for the gym/exercise. These broke with regularity, mostly due to mistreatment, but I was fine with that since I didn't want an expensive accessory which could get lost, stolen, or broken.<p>Now without a headphone jack my choices are either a dongle which cost almost as much as the headphones and is about as reliable, or cheap Bluetooth headphones which sound terrible, have bad battery life, and are cumbersome. I'm absolutely certain that if you can spend enough quality Bluetooth accessories exist, but that doesn't fit into my use-case.<p>I wound up grabbing an old Android phone w/headphone jack, installed Spotify, and use it on the Gym's WiFi. Leave my actual phone in the locker, but still wound up with two devices to charge instead of one.
At first I was very annoyed with the change. I often need to charge my phone while listening to podcasts, and the adapters would always crap out on me.<p>Eventually I switched to a cheap bluetooth headset, then switched from that to airpods without looking back.<p>Wireless is really the way to go. No more getting caught on random objects and getting yanked out of your ears. If someone is talking to you and you take the headphones out they pause so you can talk to the person, then automatically resume when you put them back in. Quick tap on the ear pauses or skips the current song.
Yes, I've been using the usb-c adapter on my pixel 2 xl this week at work and more than one time already music has come blaring out of my phone speaker. I have to fiddle around with the adapter while mumbling about it. Absolutely annoying.
I don't particularly miss the jack. I lost the jack when i went to a 7+ in 2016.<p>Personally on the go I use a decent bluetooth headphone, and have done for the past 2 years. At home I use a proper amplifier set up for my headphones.<p>If I do wish to listen with a wired set the cheap dongle provided by apple is good enough, and if I want better amplification I'll strap a portable headphone amp to it.<p>I'm a bit of an outlier however, most people prefer to use one set of headphones across all their stuff - I have quite a few sets...<p>Edit: however I do lament the choice being taken away from me.
Not so much, but I wish my iPhone had two charging ports so that I’d never have to use a cumbersome splitter dongle to both charge and use accessories at the same time.<p>I can’t deal with wireless stuff.
Not at all. Used to be a huge fan of the Koss Porta Pros.
Every pair I owned had problems with the headphone jack.
When my 3rd pair finally broke I had enough and picked up the Sony MDR X 1000. Love them and love the bluetooth. I truly think they will last a long time because without the headphone jack, I don't really know what would break first.
Surprisingly I do not miss the jack.
Using my Bluetooth headsets and speakers do the job for me BUT..<p>While in a room with others or in bed on a sleepless night sometimes I miss the speed of the jack and not having to wait for connectivity or if they are charged.<p>What I definitely do not miss are the tangled matrix of wires.
Yes. Plain and simple. I own multiple Bluetooth headsets and they all are not reliable. Using the adapter and cable headset gave me electronic shocks couple of times. :)
two things i make sure all devices i'm plannig to buy must have: removable battery ( less and less common ) and 3.5mm headphone jack. Without these, it won't see my money.<p>(a microsd expansion is also a plus ).
Meh, I don't miss the headphone jack. Nor do I miss PS/2, VGA, DB13W3, ADB, parallel, serial, or SCSI ports.<p>You know what sucks? No lightning port on my Mac!