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I’m going to do what I do in every thread mentioning a headphone jack: Say I don’t mind Bluetooth and get downvoted.
I know a lot of people that lost their headphones, I don't have that issue.
Also I'm a musician with pretty good custom IEMs. I have to use a very energy hungry external DAC (and while that I can't easily charge), if I wouldn't still have a jack (with a very good DAC)
"it works for my use case"
Good for you? I prefer having headphones I don't need to charge and that won't take my phone's only USB port, so while you personally might not find it useful, a use case for the 3.5mm jack clearly still exists.
I had two generations of phones with never-used headphone jacks before I happened to get one without it. I almost got a Moto Z though.
BT is good, but anything wired is (and always will be) better and more reliable while being a little less convenient (with some exceptions)
Unless I’m paying for $1600 audio cables my noise-damaged ears can’t tell the difference and I like that I don’t rip things out of them.
audio cables don't matter beyond the $5 range. what you're experiencing with expensive cables is placebo in that case. for me the annoyances with bluetooth are:
i understand there are people in this thread that don't miss headphone jacks, but to act like bluetooth is flat superior is to ignore that bluetooth has genuine downsides that just a wire doesn't
Don't forget audio quality drop when switching from audio only to audio + microphone. Shit drives me up the wall.
Does your fetish extend to pickles as well or in something vital lost in the pickling process?
oh god, it's so noticable
I'm an avid fanboy of Bluetooth on mobile. Its not "better in every way" but when I'm out and about, it is.
Anyways, i don't expect this to change your mind. It just seems like these "critiques" of Bluetooth earbuds have literally never changed even though the tech has gotten orders of magnitude better in the last decade or so.
Lag
So it essentially makes BT win vs wires by 2:1
More reliable until the port fails. It’s just too small for daily use. They always break before anything else. Been that way since the days of the OG iPod and it’s maddening.
I actually liked using lightning plug/USB-C adaptors. The flat but thick enough form factor heavily reduces the wear and tear IME.
I've never had a 3.5 fail, are you sure it's not just getting clogged with dirt or something?
The fiddling I have to do when trying to get the audio sounding right on my computer when I plug in my headphones is absolute torture, and if I barely graze the wire with my feet then all of a sudden the audio comes from just the left side, or is muffled, or something else ;w;
that's a broken headphone, treat yourself to a nice pair of IEMs, they're not that expensive
You’ve never bent the end of the cable in port?
like the metal bit?? how???
Are you joking?
How have you bent a 3.5mm connector? They are solid metal. I've broke 3.5mm jacks but never bent the connector.
More reliable until the port fails.
And so can BT
Tbh i didn't have any problems with 3.5mm. It always worked for me (even when used in odd ways and angles).
To be clear. I actually like BT and the ways it opens in terms of various accessories, but BT has its drawbacks while analog ports. That's why i would prefer to have both BT and physical port (in case of BT failing)
I have never had a port fail. Were iPods really that low quality? I use them just about every day
Part of it is use case. You don’t (typically) pull the iPod or any music player out over and over 100 times a day like a phone, so it often sat in your pocket for longer stretches. Big risk to cables because you’d progressively bend the end of the cord or gradually fuck up the port itself.
It’s not about build quality, it’s that small/thin things are generally more liable to bend/warp/snap. If it was a quarter inch plug (absurd but bear with me) this would be a non-issue due to the sheer size.
Every argument I have ever heard boils down to "in my specific use-case because of X Y Z and Purple, all the benefits of wired are irrelevant" and the people espousing such opinions don't at all take into consideration that other people exists and their specific use-case is not at all widely experienced.
"My tinnitus means I can't distinguish high tones well" okay buddy, but how many other people enjoy distinct highs?
"I move around too much so Bluetooth is the only practical solution" okay my friend, but many people either don't have that problem, or they've found a solution.
imagine a time where phones have Bluetooth and and go on the aux
The magical time of 2017, where devices could have Bluetooth 5 and a headphone jack.
I have a genuine issue that I'd love to get your ideas on.
When I am walking around with my bluetooth headphones in what I assume are places with lots of other signals, the audio goes to complete shit as if I'm on a bumpy road in a car listening to a super skippy CD.
How can I avoid that? It works perfectly when I'm on a bus or at home..
The only time I ever experience this with Bluetooth is when I'm a foot away or less from a running microwave. Or fifty feet away from the connection point. I've never had any other signals interfere, at least not that I notice.
It depends. Had that issue a while back, personally found it was only when I was connected to 2.4 ghz wifi, which is the same frequency as Bluetooth. I haven't really had the issue on my current phone (except in areas where it's really windy), but it does have Bluetooth 5.0 so that might be part of it because it's a massive upgrade from Bluetooth prior.
Be around fewer people.
downvot tiem
Thanks
I don't mind it either and do have both, but sometimes i get interference when i'm close to people (which is when i wanna to use the earphones) and i complain about the lack of the port not because bluetooth is shit, but because is importante to have the option
I'll do something similar.
What headphones do you use on your Switch? Or on an airplane? Or a regional bus?
How is the experience switching from your phone, to your laptop, to your tablet, to your Steam Deck?
I gave you an upvote. I'm extremely happy with my BT ear buds.
And my phone syncs up easily and quickly on anything I use. I literally just connected to a work truck that I haven't been in for months. Took 3 clicks of buttons to setup.