Ditching the iPhone Headphone Jack Is Annoying for Everyone Except Apple

Advertisement
By Hayley Tsukayama, The Washington Post | Updated: 24 June 2016 09:28 IST
Look. I didn't want to get into this. I feel like we probably have better things to talk about.

But the furor continues over reports that Apple is doing away with its standard 3.5 mm headphone jack, a piece of technology that has existed in a recognizable version of its current form since the late 19th century.

That we still use it is honestly a rare example of an "if it ain't broke, don't fix it" mentality that is somewhat unusual in an industry that enjoys changing its products at a pace that leaves consumers dizzy.

The knee-jerk reaction, of course, is to be upset about the rumors. We went through a wave of garment-rending and chest-beating when these reports last surfaced in January; we're going through a wave again now. This is like the kerfuffle over Apple changing its charging cable from the old 30-pin standard to its Lightning cord except multiplied by 1,000, since the headphone port is an industry standard and not just something Apple uses.

Advertisement

The "con" arguments are plentiful. For one, it probably means you have to go and buy new stuff either new headphones or a new attachment to modify your old headphones which is never a happy thought for folks already buying a $550 phone. If Apple does this and doesn't include a set of Lightning-enabled headphones with every phone, it will look like a particularly soulless money grab.

Advertisement

Secondly, it tightens Apple's control on the accessory market, and possibly over digital music as well. Nilay Patel at the Verge makes the argument that these headphones would make digital music the industry norm, and that doing that tacitly supports DRM a.k.a. digital rights management, a.k.a. the thing that keeps you from being able to freely move media files between devices. Get rid of the analog headphone jack, he argues, and you lose the motivation to support anything analog. Daring Fireball's John Gruber isn't so sure about that argument, but does point out in his rebuttal to Patel that anyone making Lightning headphones will require certification from Apple.

Beats, one imagines, would be among the brands to support the new standard.

Advertisement

No matter what, that's more control for Apple, which can be a bad thing for consumers moving from an open standard to a closed one often leads to confusion and higher costs for consumers.

Finally, if Apple doesn't add a second Lightning port to the phone an addition that seems unlikely if Apple wants to make more room inside the phone it will also mean that you can't charge your phone and have your headphones plugged in at the same time. Even the one-port MacBook, which has its own power port pull double duty, lets you do that.

Advertisement

And what of the "pro" arguments? They are few, but arguably pretty strong. One is that the sound quality can be better over a Lightning port certainly the argument made by the few manufacturers that make these headphones now which may be a welcome change for people who mourn the lossiness of today's music.

It's also supposed to make the iPhone thinner, or alternately create more room in the iPhone for something like a bigger battery. Thinner is probably not what people are clamoring for out of the iPhone right now, but a boost in battery life would be appreciated.

As trade-offs go, that's probably a pretty good one. Particularly if it can stop you from needing the official Apple charging case with its weird fanny pack-like bump.

The truth is, yes, if this change happens, it's probably not the greatest for consumers. It certainly is not "user-friendly." Apple has an okay track record of weathering legacy technologies disk drives, CD drives, that old 30-pin charger.

And perhaps the realer truth is that Apple's going to do what Apple's going to do. Perhaps these reports are a test balloon to see what reaction would be like. Yet even with this controversy, if the pros for Apple outweigh the cons for Apple, chances are we're going to see a change.

Sometimes companies are on your side, sometimes they're not. But they are always on their own side.

© 2016 The Washington Post

 

Get your daily dose of tech news, reviews, and insights, in under 80 characters on Gadgets 360 Turbo. Connect with fellow tech lovers on our Forum. Follow us on X, Facebook, WhatsApp, Threads and Google News for instant updates. Catch all the action on our YouTube channel.

Further reading: Apple, Mobiles, Smartphones, iPhone
Advertisement

Related Stories

Popular Mobile Brands
  1. OnePlus 15 Price in India May Have Leaked via Listing Ahead of Launch
  2. Exclusive: iQOO 15's Launch Price Is Not What You'd Expect
  3. Nothing Phone 3a Lite India Launch Confirmed by the Brand
  4. Latest Pixel Drop Brings Several New Features to Pixel Phones
  5. Vivo X300 Series Teased to Launch Soon in India
  6. Oppo Reno 15 Pro Features Leaked; Could Include a Reno 15C Model
  7. Elden Ring Nightreign Is Getting Its First DLC Next Month
  8. Google Says Private AI Compute Will Keep Your Conversations With Gemini Secure
  9. Realme GT 8 Pro Price in Europe Leaks Ahead of Global Debut
  10. Moto G67 Power 5G With 7,000mAh Battery Now on Sale in India
  1. OpenAI Tipped to Release ChatGPT Group Chats Feature to Let Multiple Users Collaborate
  2. Bitcoin Slips to $103,500 as Market Consolidates Amidst Mixed Global Cues
  3. Google Introduces Private AI Compute for Privacy-Safe Cloud-Backed AI Processing
  4. Elden Ring Nightreign DLC, the Forsaken Hollows, Announced; Launch Set for December
  5. Oppo Reno 15 Pro Specifications Leaked; Compact Model Could be Called Reno 15C
  6. Perplexity, Anthropic and Other Big AI Companies Might Have Exposed Secrets on GitHub
  7. Realme GT 8 Pro Price in Europe, Storage Variants Reportedly Leaked Ahead of Launch
  8. Vivo X300 Series Confirmed to Launch Soon in India: See Expected Specifications, Features, Price
  9. Amazon Prime Video's Ad-Supported Audience Hits 315 Million Monthly Viewers Globally
  10. OnePlus 15 Price in India Reportedly Leaked via Retailer Listing Ahead of Launch
Gadgets 360 is available in
Download Our Apps
Available in Hindi
© Copyright Red Pixels Ventures Limited 2025. All rights reserved.