Apple Discontinues iPhone X, No Longer Sells iPhones With Headphone Jacks (theverge.com)
Apple just killed the iPhone's headphone jack for good. Not only is the company no longer selling iPhones with headphone jacks, as they've removed the iPhone SE and 6s from their website, but they're no longer including a Lightning to 3.5mm headphone jack adapter with the purchase of a new 2018 iPhone. The Verge also reports that the company is discontinuing the iPhone X with the introduction of its three new iPhones today. From the report: With the iPhone XS starting at a price of $999, and the addition of the cheaper $749 iPhone XR announced today, the iPhone X has become redundant. [...] There's no longer a good reason to shell out for the more expensive iPhone X, except maybe the exclusivity of owning a phone that was ushered in with the 10th anniversary of the original iPhone. It was the first to introduce the now-ubiquitous notch that's influenced the entire mobile industry with a wave of copycat designs, and the first iPhone with Face ID. It introduced intuitive gesture controls and with the phone came wireless charging, plus AirPods.
"It was the first to introduce the now-ubiquitous notch that's influenced the entire mobile industry"
No, the first phone with a notch was the Sharp Aquos S2, followed by the Essential phone. Both before Apple.
Not that introducing that butt-ugly "feature" is worth any sort of bragging rights.
"National Security is the chief cause of national insecurity." - Celine's First Law
I have Bluetooth earphones and they are a pain - I can't see the charge level and thus don't trust them for going out on a walk but mostly for home exercise.
Worse, on my last flight I heard the flight attendant announce that Bluetooth headsets are not allowed at all in flight. Good thing I brought the wired!
Why Apple is doubling down on this seems more bullheaded than intelligent.
Apple's removal of the 1/8" headphone jack
...is because they bought a headphone company (Beats) and want to sell wireless headphones. That's it.
The music Apple sells hasn't had DRM for years, and nobody bothers "ripping" ("dubbing" would be the proper term) anything via analog, except for vinyl records. Back in ye olden days when iTunes music did have DRM, people removed the DRM using their computer (remember those things?) - not their phone.
That being said, Apple is no saint when it comes to DRM. I've had paid apps disappear from my purchase history because Apple pulled 'em, paid apps that died in the 32-bit purge, and I've read of people who've lost movies they'd purchased (I only buy Blu-Rays, so I haven't experienced that one).
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DRM is like antifreeze, to the MPAA/RIAA it's sweet, to the consumers it's poison.