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USB Type-C Headphones Were Nowhere in Sight at CES 2019 (androidauthority.com)

In a sea of 3D audio products and true-wireless earbuds, USB Type-C headphones were nowhere in sight at CES 2019. From a report: This absence isn't an accident, however. Rather, it's the deafening silence of an abandoned product category. While many looked to USB-C audio as the successor to the famed physical port, the available models aren't catching on, and they don't seem to be going anywhere. Their absence at CES 2019 doesn't paint a rosy picture of their future, either.

In general, it takes new standards quite a while to catch on, however, USB-C was thrust into the limelight far before its time. When Apple and Google ditched their headphone jacks, it limited the pool of audio peripherals to Bluetooth, or the very young USB-C category. Perhaps with a little more time and backing from a few more serious partners this could have matured alongside its older brother the TRRS plug, but it just wasn't to be. [...] One of the biggest issues that companies need to navigate pertains to source and peripheral device compatibility. USB Type-C headphone cables can either be active or passive -- or manifest as a dongle adapter. This inconsistency, paired with the fact that Audio Accessory Mode has yet to be universally supported, results in a barrage of compatibility issues. Hence why many users are unable to operate playback controls or use a headset's integrated microphone.

5 of 197 comments (clear)

  1. I take it as a point of pride by olsmeister · · Score: 4, Insightful

    that I still use a 1/8" headphone jack.

  2. There's no mystery here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Those of us who prefer the advantages of wired headphones over the advantages of Bluetooth ones see no advantages at all in USB-C.

  3. shouting by tcc3 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    3.5mm FOREVER
    3.5mm FOREVER
    3.5mm FOREVER

  4. No jack, no sale by nctritech · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I refuse to buy a phone without a 3.5mm jack and SD card slot. Removing either of those is extremely user-hostile and based solely in corporate greed. The argument about people wanting thinner phones is total bullshit. No one really cares if their phone is 0.2mm thinner. People want longer battery life, ease of use, and a phone that doesn't bend to the curve of their hipster asses in their back pockets. People do NOT want to carry overpriced USB Type-C dongles with third party manufacturer lock-out (and potential future DRM lockdown inconveniences a la HDCP) everywhere, nor do they want to carry a different set of headphones for phone and non-phone use. I also seriously doubt that Sennheiser is going to produce USB Type-C professional headphones anytime soon.

    Plus, it'll be really hard to use my TRRS-plugged card reader for my credit card processor if I don't have such a jack on my phone.

  5. Re:Pride? by PopeRatzo · · Score: 5, Insightful

    But this is on a phone. Sure, by all means have a smashing system at home where space requirements are lax, but on a phone, where the vast majority of people are streaming music from Spotify (or similar) into their noisy car, bluetooth fidelity is perfectly acceptable.

    So, you don't see any problem with manufacturers deciding to replace perfectly good audio quality with lower quality?

    People listen to a LOT of music on their phones, and not just in their car. The fact that a 2019 flagship phone cannot deliver audio fidelity as good as a 2014 (or 2009) model is absurd.

    --
    You are welcome on my lawn.