Napoleon
[H]ard|Gawd
- Joined
- Jan 27, 2003
- Messages
- 1,072
get jack(ed)
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I know there are still a lot of people using headphones with 3.5mm jacks, but is anyone really interested in continuing to use them with their phone?
Yep, you are absolutely correct that audio quality while driving through traffic means very little to me since my attention is on the road.. not whether my music is crystal clear since it is just background noise. I'll also admit that I can't tell a damn difference between listening to straight FM radio vs Pandora via the FM transmitter on my '03 4Runner stock audio systemClearly audio quality isn't important to you. Those FM adapters sound like complete ass.
I know there are still a lot of people using headphones with 3.5mm jacks, but is anyone really interested in continuing to use them with their phone?
I really dislike these "Pretty much everybody" answers. I don't know anyone I work with that still uses analog headphones, most have bluetooth of one kind or another and I haven't ridden in a single coworker's car in 3 years that used an AUX port (most have Bluetooth enabled stereos). On my last couple flights from Houston to Nashville, I would say the headphones in use were a 50/50 mix of bluetooth and analog. So from my experience, it is a pretty far cry from "pretty much everybody"...Seriously? Pretty much everybody. What else would you need to regularly plug headphones into? Other than your portable music player?
I really dislike these "Pretty much everybody" answers. I don't know anyone I work with that still uses analog headphones, most have bluetooth of one kind or another and I haven't ridden in a single coworker's car in 3 years that used an AUX port (most have Bluetooth enabled stereos). On my last couple flights from Houston to Nashville, I would say the headphones in use were a 50/50 mix of bluetooth and analog. So from my experience, it is a pretty far cry from "pretty much everybody"...
And I get that, but you can't say that most people suffer the same regulations, which gets to my viewpoint that it isn't "most people" wanting an analog jack to remain. If anything, IMO there are most likely less people concerned about things like quality DACs, workplace restrictions, and other things that would prevent them from using Bluetooth. Those that need an analog port for headphones are becoming the minority.So I, and others have mentioned, am not allowed to have any kind of Bluetooth in their work environments. Hell I can't even take my phone in the building and have to lock it in a box outside or leave it to cook in my car. I can have an MP3 player as long as it has no mic or wireless capability, but those are actually getting hard to find except on ebay. Used Nanos are the easiest to still find.
I'm not alone either, I know others are in the same boat.
Even without a 3.5mm jack, your phone has a DAC. You've got a speaker (or multiple speakers), and those require a DAC.Oh no, I get it, the 3.5 mm jack is an analogue device, you have to convert said analogue from the digital source so there is a tiny DAC in there. I do get it, the engineers wish they didn't always have to build around that shit. There's only one problem, people still want it. And some people actually make buying decisions based on it. When all other things are equal, a 3.5mm jack can make the difference for some people.
You must be ignorant to what high quality audio is.... FM transmitter? LOLI have no use for the headphone jack and consider wired headphones a waste of money. Been using a pair of LG Tones for 2 years, never feel like I'm inconvenienced to charge them, haven't ran into an issue where I ran out of battery and best of all I don't have some dumb cord to get caught when mowing the yard or doing anything else while listening to music. Have a bluetooth FM transmitter in my car for playback since the car is old enough to not have an aux port or bluetooth options. Have a small bluetooth speaker on my desk at work for when no one else is in the office. Embrace the wireless!!!!
And I get that, but you can't say that most people suffer the same regulations, which gets to my viewpoint that it isn't "most people" wanting an analog jack to remain. If anything, IMO there are most likely less people concerned about things like quality DACs, workplace restrictions, and other things that would prevent them from using Bluetooth. Those that need an analog port for headphones are becoming the minority.
Don't get me wrong, I could really care less if they stayed or went away. Sort of like parallel ports on computers. Yeah, I know someone that still insists on having one on his computer...
https://www.statista.com/chart/5733/headphone-sales-in-the-united-states/I really dislike these "Pretty much everybody" answers. I don't know anyone I work with that still uses analog headphones, most have bluetooth of one kind or another and I haven't ridden in a single coworker's car in 3 years that used an AUX port (most have Bluetooth enabled stereos). On my last couple flights from Houston to Nashville, I would say the headphones in use were a 50/50 mix of bluetooth and analog. So from my experience, it is a pretty far cry from "pretty much everybody"...
I really dislike these "Pretty much everybody" answers.... So from my experience, it is a pretty far cry from "pretty much everybody"...
I really dislike these "Pretty much everybody" answers. I don't know anyone I work with that still uses analog headphones, most have bluetooth of one kind or another and I haven't ridden in a single coworker's car in 3 years that used an AUX port (most have Bluetooth enabled stereos). On my last couple flights from Houston to Nashville, I would say the headphones in use were a 50/50 mix of bluetooth and analog. So from my experience, it is a pretty far cry from "pretty much everybody"...
I'm curious, why don't the DAC in headsets match the quality of the ones in the phones? Are there some technical reasons for it?Even the cheap DAC used in phones is better then what you'll get in headsets.
Because a good dac costs $4 and a shit one costs a few cents.I'm curious, why don't the DAC in headsets match the quality of the ones in the phones? Are there some technical reasons for it?
most of us here do, clearly, but seeing as it was around 15-20% of sales last year wireless could become the norm soon... I wouldn't mind it if they offered good connectivity, sound quality, and battery life... but they simply do not yet...it isn't "most people" wanting an analog jack to remain
Close your eyes and imagine how much more satisfied you'd be if it was 6.87mm.I'm pretty satisfied with the LG V30's thinness at 7.39mm and it has a headphone jack.
AmenLike other commenters here I really don't see thinness of a device as being something people look for when buying a device (although I'm sure some do) and I'd be happy to trade some thinness for toughness, water proofing, battery life, and a headphone jack.
Hmm, ok 17% of total units.. I can admit to be being wrong in my opinionhttps://www.statista.com/chart/5733/headphone-sales-in-the-united-states/
So in 2016 it was still pretty much everybody.. but also another answer, there is more money it bt headphones.. also planned obsolesce is easier to achieve with bt headphone: battery goes bad, software /hardware incompatibility with updates leading to connection issues, losing one bud buttons go bad.. stuff like that.
I'm curious, why don't the DAC in headsets match the quality of the ones in the phones? Are there some technical reasons for it?
Yes, for two reasons.
1: My work forbids the use of any bluetooth enabled device in the building. It's 3.5mm or bust.
2: All Bluetooth/USB based headphones have to have an internal DAC, which is typically shit quality. Even the cheap DAC used in phones is better then what you'll get in headsets.
And I get that, but you can't say that most people suffer the same regulations, which gets to my viewpoint that it isn't "most people" wanting an analog jack to remain. If anything, IMO there are most likely less people concerned about things like quality DACs, workplace restrictions, and other things that would prevent them from using Bluetooth. Those that need an analog port for headphones are becoming the minority.
Don't get me wrong, I could really care less if they stayed or went away. Sort of like parallel ports on computers. Yeah, I know someone that still insists on having one on his computer...
I'm going to use a pretty well known example/comparison here. When people ask, "mountains or ocean" I'm like, why not both?
Why not headphones and bluetooth options in every phone? I find it hard to believe that a) the headphone jack is taking up so much space that you can't find room for it in a device, especially in top tier, large screen devices and b) it's affecting the ability of manufacturers to make devices thinner.
I'm pretty satisfied with the LG V30's thinness at 7.39mm and it has a headphone jack.
Like other commenters here I really don't see thinness of a device as being something people look for when buying a device (although I'm sure some do) and I'd be happy to trade some thinness for toughness, water proofing, battery life, and a headphone jack.
It *might* have made sense back when every manufacturer was trying to make their phones thinner and thinner. But the last 3 generations of iPhone have actually gotten thicker, from 6.9mm (iPhone 6) to 7.1 (iPhone 7) to 7.3 (iPhone 8), which further pokes holes in the idea that "there's no room for the headphone jack." Apple fit both the taptic engine and the headphone jack in the iPhone 6. The Samsung Galaxy line has also increased in thickness the last generation--the S6 was 6.8mm, the S7 7.9mm, and the S8 is 8mm.Why not headphones and bluetooth options in every phone? I find it hard to believe that a) the headphone jack is taking up so much space that you can't find room for it in a device, especially in top tier, large screen devices and b) it's affecting the ability of manufacturers to make devices thinner.