Bluetooth Won't Replace the Headphone Jack -- Walled Gardens Will (theverge.com)
Last year, when it was rumoured that the then upcoming iPhone models -- 7 and 7 Plus -- won't have the 3.5mm audio jack, The Verge's Nilay Patel wrote that if Apple does do it, it would be a user-hostile and stupid move. When those iPhone models were official announced, they indeed didn't have the audio jack. Earlier this week, Android-maker Google announced the Pixel 2 and Pixel 2 XL smartphones that also don't feature the decades-old audio jack either, a move that would likely push rest of the smartphone makers to adopt a similar change. The rationale behind killing the traditional headphones jack, both Apple and Google say, is to move to an improved technology: Bluetooth. But there is another motive at play here, it appears. Patel, writes for The Verge: As the headphone jack disappears, the obvious replacement isn't another wire with a proprietary connector like Apple's Lightning or the many incompatible and strange flavors of USB-C audio. It's Bluetooth. And Bluetooth continues to suck, for a variety of reasons. Newer phones like the iPhone 8, Galaxy S8, and the Pixel 2 have Bluetooth 5, which promises to be better, but 1. There are literally no Bluetooth 5 headphones out yet, and 2. we have definitely heard that promise before. So we'll see. To improve Bluetooth, platform vendors like Apple and Google are riffing on top of it, and that means they're building custom solutions. And building custom solutions means they're taking the opportunity to prioritize their own products, because that is a fair and rational thing for platform vendors to do. Unfortunately, what is fair and rational for platform vendors isn't always great for markets, competition, or consumers. And at the end of this road, we will have taken a simple, universal thing that enabled a vibrant market with tons of options for every consumer, and turned it into yet another limited market defined by ecosystem lock-in. The playbook is simple: last year, Apple dropped the headphone jack and replaced it with its W1 system, which is basically a custom controller chip and software management layer for Bluetooth. The exemplary set of W1 headphones is, of course, AirPods, but Apple also owns Beats, and there are a few sets of W1 Beats headphones available as well. You can still use regular Bluetooth headphones with an iPhone, and you can use AirPods as regular Bluetooth headphones, but the combination iPhone / W1 experience is obviously superior to anything else on the market. [...] Google's version of this is the Pixel Buds, a set of over-ear neckbuds that serve as basic Bluetooth headphones but gain additional capabilities when used with certain phones. Seamless fast pairing? You need Android N or higher, which most Android phones don't have.
So, does the new Bluetooth standards fix latency problems? Specifically, when watching video (hooked up to a monitor via HDMI) and listening to a bluetooth headset, the audio sync is *always* off.
Not going to buy a new set because Apple - or Google wants me to. Fuck them. I'd sooner switch cell phones. Eventually, the manufacturers will get the message.
HBI's Law: Frequency of calling others Nazis is directly correlated with the likelihood of the accuser being Communist.
> And Bluetooth continues to suck, for a variety of reasons.
Does it? I have bluetooth headphones. They are not made by a company affiliated to either my computer or my telephone, the two devices I use them with. I turn my headphones on and audio starts coming out of them. The audio sounds fine. What part of my experience sucks?
Most of the author's complaints seem to revolve around how most fast-pairing protocols are currently proprietary, but... pairing your headphones is something you don't do very often, so it's at best a minor inconvenience.
I already have audio technica m50x's and beyerdynamic dt770s. I'm not buying a phone that they won't work with, and I'm not switching to your fucking bluetooth beats you greedy fucks.
The reason why Apple (and Beats, and some other Mfgs) BT earbuds/headphones are superior is not dependent on Bluetooth 5.0; it is because they support a far-superior CODEC, namely AAC, than typical shitbox BT 'phones/'buds.
Mind you, stuff like Apple's W1/W2 chips helps; but the main improvement is due to AAC.
And no, the proprietary aptX is NOT an equivalent. And did I mention "proprietary" (owned by Qualcomm)?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
By contrast, AAC is an industry-standard (not Apple-proprietary, as many believe).
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
Look into it.
a move that would likely push rest of the smartphone makers to adopt a similar change
Not the ones that I'll be buying from, until there is an alternative to the wire that is at least as good.
If that means I'm buying a older model, so be it. It probably won't, though. My
prediction is that there will be high-end smartphones with headphone jacks for a few years yet. There will probably be at least one remaining manufacturer that will be happy to take the money from people Apple and Google have decided are no longer important to them.
Mhmm. Right. One should think of the headphone jack as a simple electrical interface, rather than some sort of magical sound-transport medium. Past a certain point in the hardware, it's all analog anyhow. We seem to be arriving in a brave new world where we eventually won't even be able to connect light bulbs directly to the power grid. Something something luddite. Something something courage. That is all.
There is no XUL, only WebExtensions...
The real problem with removing the 3.5mm jack is with headphone durability. If you use earbuds a lot chance are you wear them out at intervals. When you have a 3.5mm jack and you drop a bud in a glass of water, you say that sucks and go buy another cheap pair of buds.
weird, rest of the world will still have the headphone jack for maaany years
It adds extra bullshit to something that should be as simple.(like plug it in)
instead pair your device, make sure its charged and make sure to turn off Bluetooth when you are not using it! Then when done add those extra batteries to the electronic graveyard! I have had plenty of jacks work for years, I have also had Bluetooth transmitters that sucked so bad they were choppy from 3 feet away or burned out . I can replace a jack in most devices. Not an integrated Bluetooth chip.
Great Job!
Can one enable BT but not enable cell? If so it is not straightforward.
Yes, you can, and it's straightforward on every phone that I've ever used. There are separate controls to enable/disable each of the radios (cell/WiFi/BT), so you can mix and match.
The 3.5mm port can coexist with Bluetooth and USB-C or Lightning ports. Apple/Google apologists need to stop arguing as if newer technologies require removing the 3.5mm port.
was a depressed Goth teenager saying "don't bother... it's probably just going to suck anyways".
Hell yeah I want to move away from the 3.5mm audio jack!
Yeah, those damn audio-jack lovers, get them! I was completely unable to use bluetooth audio until apple had "the courage" to uninvent the audio-jack and i was finally free to not use it!
If there really is such a thing as a free market, at least one of the major manufacturers should keep making a phone with the headphone jack. There have to be millions of people who are entirely uninterested in finding themselves locked into what will probably evolve into a one-station radio, with its own stable of "approved" entertainers, and no doubt a "how often can we shear the sheep" approach to monthly fees.
I've calculated my velocity with such exquisite precision that I have no idea where I am.
While this is an interesting argument, I'd like to point out, as someone who has been using BT headphones for the last 3 years, that I have to replace headphones way more often than cellular devices. I think I'm on my 3rd set with this phone, and the right bud on this one has a short, so the third is not long for this world either.
So moving the "high end DAC" to the headset may have some advantages, but not having to rebuy it as often is NOT one of them.
Yes I am pissed at these assholes, Sony, Apple, Google and the whole shebang deserve to be roasted for what they do to classical recordings. Sell me pure 24 bit by at least 96 audio files of great well mixed recordings and I will pay but as long as you jackasses 'normalize' and compress the shit out of classical recording I want nothing to do with you and you will not get one more cent out of my pocket period.
This message was not sent from an iPhone because Peter Sellers really was a deviated prevert without a dime for the call
iPhone airplane mode only disables wifi and telephony. So buy an iPhone and some BT headphones.
The other is currently a non-removable battery. Sure, the "high end" crap is a no-go that way, but I will get a phone designed by actual engineers, not by marketing morons and wannabe "designers". It will also be much cheaper and do what I need.
Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
Yes. 10 year old used vehicles for $1500 can work 'pretty well' too. But people still buy new ones, imagine that.
Laws are rules for the court, but merely a bottom bar to hit for life. Think beyond laws in your actions always.
For the invisible hand of the free market to work, you need competition. You also need informed customers making rational decisions. If customers are not informed, or if they are apathetic or if they make irrational decisions, it would produce weird results.
Market bubbles from tulip bubbles to emu farming to credit default swap derivatives ... to million people a day buying phones sans headphone jacks.
sed -e 's/Chuck Norris/Rajnikant/g' joke > fact
âBluetooth continues to suckâ.
No it fucking doesnâ(TM)t, so stop with the BS. Yes, its true that cheapass bluetooth headpones are bad. Buy the good ones, of which there are many, instead. As more and more people move to wireless, their price will continue to go down. It was pretty hilarious to read about how the Airpods were supposedly âexpensiveâ. Apple literally came in and ate everybodyâ(TM)s lunch. Wireless headphones that used to cost $400 are now $200-250 all of a sudden because Apple forced other manufacturers to respond. Yes, I get that you want your âgood enoughâ headphones for $20 and these are not far away any longer.
Here is a hint from the actual real world: Even low-end audio DACs are much better than what a human can hear these days.
Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
I can't see any major player removing support for Bluetooth Audio. So consumers will end with a choice of either using BT, using a legacy headphone jack through a (hopefully free in the box) adapter or using a new one.
This is kind of the opposite of a walled garden, as I understand the term. Here consumers have a choice. In order to be a walled garden, they would have to start locking out all the non-proprietary methods.
Just what I need, to make sure my bluetooth device is charged regularly...and another device to buy and throw away when the battery fails, When my earbuds pop out, I don't have to go looking for them because they are still attached to the phone.
just make the new generation of headphones and earbuds use the micro-usb or usb-C or whatever usb the phones will have, it cant be that difficult to send audio that way, and we should not have to buy a 1/8 inch mini plug to usb adapter, include the adapter with the phone or make earbuds or headphones already compatible, (bluetooth is sort of a disappointment for music and streaming audio) about all bluetooth is good for is voice communications, the music stream is just a tad bit too much bandwidth for bluetooth to handle IMO
Politics is Treachery, Religion is Brainwashing
There's a pretty huge difference between saying for best audio quality you need headphones made by us, our subsidiaries, or those who are paying us a licensing fee (Apple) and "Seamless fast pairing? You need Android N or higher, which most Android phones don't have." (Google).
Google haven't added something to the phone that means only headphones they produce or license can work, instead they added something to a headphone. And others could make headphones that do the same thing without paying special fees to Google. And the OS requirement doesn't mean you need a Nexus or Pixel phone, it could be from Motorola, or Samsung or LG or countless others.
The problem is that you have requirements that the rest of the world doesn't care about.
What a bunch of bunk. Bluetooth audio is fantastic. They've even got lossless Bluetooth audio nowadays (aptX), so there is no quality lost. By moving the audio DAC and sensitive analog circuitry away from the noisy CPU and mass storage, we could potentially achieve even greater Signal to Noise Ratio. The consumer will only have to pay for a high end DAC -once- in his lifetime instead of paying for a mediocre DAC in every phone, tablet, and computer he buys in his life.
Every pair of headphones I buy inevitably ends up breaking a wire internally after so many uses, besides having those wires constantly in the way. Hell yeah I want to move away from the 3.5mm audio jack!
AptX-HD (lossless), from what I read, requires more bandwidth than Bluetooth can provide. If you are using Bluetooth, then you are stuck with AptX (lossy), not AptX-HD. While AptX is better than most of the current codecs, it still pales in comparison to analog.
Put the phone in airplane mode, then reenable bluetooth, and you're good to go.
A few months ago I bought Samsung U-Pro wireless headphones and granted they were cheaper than my 10 year old wired headphones which cost 10 times as much but the BT headphones weren't even as good as the headphones that came with my Walkman in 1985.
Through my laptop they sounded extremely tinny. Maybe it's just Samsung who I should know better than to buy anything from but I couldn't believe how bad they sounded. They sounded a little better through my phone which is NOT a Samsung - I read something after purchase which suggested Samsung phones have something built in which takes advantage of some bullshit buzzwords Samsung was garbling about. I'm kind of skeptical of that, but what good are headphones if they rely on software or hardware from a specific vendor?
And even at full volume I can't drown out even the muzak they play in a grocery store.
Both laptop and phone use the same version of bluetooth. I love the idea of wireless and I've used BT earpieces for voice calls which weren't horrible but for music? Is there anything good? I don't mean super hi-fi or anything but just adequate.
I'm inclined to want a headphone jack for now and I almost bought a Pixel a year ago just so I could have the latest version of Android but now that my phone is a year older and the new Pixel has no headphone jack it's a non-starter for me.
The removal of the headphone jack is trading up the inconvenience of wired audio with the inconvenience of having to recharge headphone batteries. Last year's models offered the choice of either inconvenience which is great. Personally, I prefer a wired option that will always just work versus a wireless one that may die at some inconvenient time when I can't do much about it.
Apple and Google competitors. Just start buying from companies that don't suck as bad.
If I was forced into a situation where no analog audio outputs were available, I'd have to opt for some sort of external bluetooth+DAC combined with existing analog headphones, provided tolerable codecs could be had. Best of both worlds, imo. Easy interfacing to any existing home theater equipment, and broad support for audio sources. I'm also averse to stuffing LiPos into my earholes (mild sarcasm), but there's nothing requiring that here anyhow. I think too many people try to present the false dichotomy in which if one wants 3.5mm jacks, they automatically abhor Bluetooth.
Another alternative is software to stream the audio to another machine over WiFi, if audio quality is a problem but latency is not.
There is no XUL, only WebExtensions...
no, it won't happen because consumers will want to use a variety of headphones
Until they cant.
also, bluetooth whilst not perfect works pretty-well these days in most cases
Bluetooth will never beat the reliability of a wire, which by the way, also doesn't need it's own battery and charger.
That is actually one thing I have applied pulseaudio to with good effect... merging sound outputs from multiple machines with no audio hardware to my main machine at the time, which was running windows. Very low latency, and it was not all that awful to configure.
There is no XUL, only WebExtensions...
Output filtering is probably a relevant concern; a lot of cheap hardware really skimps there.
There is no XUL, only WebExtensions...
I got bluetooth headphones from Aliexpress for 12 bucks and they're better than the white wired free ones.
Why would anybody shell out lots of dough for a cable?
...honestly, I keep BT off most of the time unless I really need to use it as that saves the battery power. Not to mention there's a nice little hack going around that's enabled via BT.
I'll keep my wired, 1/8" jack than you.
Truth is like the sun. You can shut it out for a time, but it ain't goin' away. - Elvis Presley (source: imdb.com)
Right now my bluetooth headset sucks walking around in center city Philadelphia. It keeps cutting in and out and is very annoying. I dont know if it has to do with the number of bluetooth devices around me. Makes listening music threw them a trying experience. So I use the headphone jack to get around it. But out on day hikes bluetooth headset works fine.
What am I being locked into, exactly?
Plugging the headset in every night. You have become a slave to your devices. Plugging in a phone or a tablet I can understand because the alternative is to use them plugged into a wall which makes them less portable obviously. But you have lost the freedom to be able to use them 24 hours a day if you want, you have to take time out for charging. And you have lost the freedom to be able to throw them into a drawer for a month and take them out afterwards and use them right away.
Laws are rules for the court, but merely a bottom bar to hit for life. Think beyond laws in your actions always.
Except for the fact that you're not supposed to use any transmitting or receiving function and bluetooth would qualify.
Laws are rules for the court, but merely a bottom bar to hit for life. Think beyond laws in your actions always.
All arguments against removing the headphone jack ironically seem to be complaining because users now have more choices, not less... listen to what you are saying people!
Your statement would be true if people were complaining that phones support Bluetooth audio. But nobody is complaining about that.
What we're complaining about is the loss of functionality, not the existence of other technologies. In other words, the complaint really is about having less choice.
Hmmm. I hope I didn't drive down the moderation on this. Yeah, it was phrased a bit trolly, and I (IMHO) had a valid qualm, but the rest of the info in here I would have given an "Informative" for if I still had my points.
Complete with the latest and greatest vendor-supported security patches?
Don't you mean flip phones? Because many of those are just fine running factory firmware forever and ever.
will never beat the reliability of a wire, which by the way, also doesn't need it's own battery and charger.
And that's exactly why cell phones failed to make a dent in the telecom market.
Seriously, your inability to identify a quality vendor after three long years is germane to this discussion?
What you actually mean is that the replacement cycle for the bud is by no means guaranteed to be any longer than for the phone if you're too lazy to do proper homework.
Of course, proper homework is also a cost, and it might (in some cases) be rational not to bother with this, except for that little phrase "high end DAC", because I've never bought a "high end" anything where I didn't do proper research beforehand.
So you argument boils down to: assume you're already trapped in the disposable technology mindset, then this too is not a free lunch.
For the rest of us, much of the debate here concerns our resentment about being nickel and dimed into the disposable technology mindset against our established preferences.
I also own a Sony voice recorder, very high quality microphones, good enough for the highest certification of speech recognition, since before speech recognition was worth shit. I could dictate on my phone, but I prefer this. It also has rock solid pitch and playback speed adjustments, using buttons that always stay put.
However, it doesn't have Bluetooth and never will.
Great, now I get to carry both kinds.
Whatever happened to tools that were good for one thing only with convenient, baseline interoperability?
Please don't post comments to stories if you don't like the stories.
Even if the magically fixed bluetooth latency lots of new problems will certainly arise. Surely if everyone started using bluetooth it would cause interference? My wireless headphones already stutter and fail whenever a Taxi drives past.
I realise google probably wish for an invisible UI and replace mobile with a pair of very losable, wireless earphones controlled with just your voice. Great for some, but for me and the wife, our Scottish accents rendered a recent purchase of Amazon Alexa, absolutely fucking worthless.
https://youtu.be/5FFRoYhTJQQ
I doubt it. This stuff is all digital PCM these days. Unless you have some bizarre resonances, the headphones will correct any missing filtering, as they are basically mechanical low-passes called. I used to be one of these people that had dedicated sound cards and I even used to replace cheap OpAmps and drivers on them. Not anymore. The low-end stuff that comes with mainboards these days is quite enough. Of course, I am not talking about the extremely cheap stuff here that may not even have 16 bit resolution or come with max sampling rates below 44kHz, just the cheap stuff.
Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
Do they want to drive consumers mad ?
Count me in.
I want to keep my 3 years old Note 4 as long as possible. Any news from LineageOS on this one ?
Totof
AptX uses the same codec many home cinema fans value a lot in DTS. It's insane that over Bt it should suddenly suck...
or, they're doing because bump stocks has nothing to do with headphone jacks or bluetooth
Plugging the headset in every night. You have become a slave to your devices. Plugging in a phone or a tablet I can understand
I have absolutely refused to become a slave to my devices. I never plug anything in. When the device stops working, I go to the store and buy a new one.
Now, in reality, this is a bit of a problem because of the tube cellphone that I use to get the warmth of vacuum tubes in my audio. It will only run for five minutes on one charge. Instead of going to the store every five minutes for a new tube phone, I keep it plugged in to the USB charger. I don't need multiple charging cables because the one I had to build using 8 gauge wire (for better bass response) is hard to lose.
But you have lost the freedom to be able to use them 24 hours a day if you want,
If you have to stay up for 24 continuous hours, you have worse problems in your life than poor audio from a bluetooth headset.
Cell phones are more convenient and flexible than landlines. Bluetooth headphones are not more convenient than the just as portable wired headphones.
, the obvious replacement isn't another wire with a proprietary connector like Apple's Lightning or the many incompatible and strange flavors of USB-C audio. It's Bluetooth. And Bluetooth continues to suck,
Why isn't a connector the obvious replacement? What do you mean incompatible and strange flavors of usb-c, what the hell are you talking about?
XML is like violence. If it doesn't solve the problem, use more.
What we're complaining about is the loss of functionality,
So just to be really super ultra amazingly clear here, let me restate my argument simply:
HEY YOU RETARDS THERE IS NO LOSS OF FUNCTIONALITY YOU CAN USE AN ADAPTOR FOR ANALOG AUDIO WITH ZERO LOSS OF QUALITY.
"There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
And that adapter uses the USB slot, so it can't be used for other things. That's a loss of functionality.
You could, of course, use a USB-C hub to connect multiple devices, but then you've added yet another thing to carry around. That's a loss of functionality.
Plus, the Pixel 2 doesn't do analog audio through USB-C, so any audio device you plug into it has to has its own DAC. That's a loss of functionality.
An argument could be (and has been) made that the loss of functionality is minor enough that people should just deal with it. But an argument that there's no loss of functionality is simply false.
So I'm supposed to believe someone who has a history of getting things wrong... Nope.
I love not having a headphone jack. Well, actually, my iPodTouch has a headphone jack but I don't use it. I use the BlueTooth to a nice set of $50 Bluetooth and noise canceling headphones. Works great!
don't stay up 24 continuous hours, but I listen while I go to sleep. So when am I supposed to charge? During the day when I want to use the headphones some more?
Laws are rules for the court, but merely a bottom bar to hit for life. Think beyond laws in your actions always.
some people dont understand and complain about
1/ pairing bluetooth - this is the manufacturer not following guidelines
2/ Audio "quality" - simply you need either aptX or AAC in your headphones AND phone/device otherwise it degrades to a low bitrate codec
people simply dont understand that the codec matters and complain their MP3 does not sound as good... and it wont on standard bluetooth because the codec between the headset and device is built for low bandwidth
look on the spec for a AAC for your bluetooth speaker if you want a decent connection
Sleeker housing should last longer. Less warranty issues, tiny bit more space. Better water , dust protection etc... I prefer a cable for power so donâ(TM)t need to bother with charging headset. I am ok with a dongle but prefer the old fashion headphone jack, but aware it is a bulky and damage prone hole on the sleek handsets. If decent selection of USB C or lightning direct fed headphones available I will consider buying for convenience. Boo to wireless headphones only.
You're not the only one. I'm keeping my note 4 until someone comes out with a phone that can at least match it's functionality.
Wider screen than the new notes, replaceable battery, HDMI (MHL) output, headphone jack, expandable storage. Those are just table stakes. I also like the IR blaster, and textured back that makes it easy to hold without dropping.
Nothing new is at all appealing in comparison.
I'm not sure if this is cheap shitty DNC propaganda, or brilliant NRA propaganda.
Ironic that Bluetooth is so crappy that we're going backwards. In film production video is delayed and is in real time. So backwards that the final display mechanism reversed that.
Oh...so you never got to the Li-Ion (or whatever battery) wear. I still have working wired headphones from early 2000. BT headphones that old would need 3-4 battery replacements (which would force you to replace the whole headphone, as good luck finding the right batteries).
I never understood the rationale of BT headphones for music: you have a 2nd battery to keep track of (and increase the weight) and you drain 2 batteries when using them. When the market of no-jack devices will be big enough, I'm sure the stand-alone media player business will rise again.
So, I built an internet radio station on my LAN (with FLAC and 320kbps MP3 output)......and some MP3s sound HORRIBLE over the mp3 stream. That's one of the reason I hate BT audio (for music at least) even if I cannot "hear" artifacts, I don't know when I will get something that will.
:) Is one of my best anecdotals for taking quiet swipes at Lennart, etc.
There is no XUL, only WebExtensions...
So, no headphone jack. but people only use headphones out of consideration for other people - otherwise they shout down their phone for the other end to shout louder, or crank up the volume to drown out the screeching din of the 7 other people in the room listening to their "music" over the air. Is there any credible use-case for in-ear loudspeakers at all?
Birds are not dinosaur descendants;birds are dinosaurs, for all useful meanings of "birds", "are" and "dinosaurs"