top | item 12452234

Courage

131 points| duck | 9 years ago |techcrunch.com | reply

169 comments

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[+] BatFastard|9 years ago|reply
The last sentence summed it up.

"It’s not a conspiracy theory, it’s a business plan."

Apple has a habit of killing tech they can't control.

Headphone jack is eliminated so they can license and control what talks to the phone.

Safari is intentionally the worst browser for HTML5 so that people don't go around the app store.

Flash is banned from browsers because then you have to go thru the app store and give them your 30%.

You have to have a Mac to write apps for iOS or Macs, why because it increases their sales.

So drink the cool aid if you must, but recognize it as great business plan that encourages you to buy only apple licensed products

[+] yoran|9 years ago|reply
Apple is like the Microsoft of the 90's with a good taste for design.
[+] mandelbulb|9 years ago|reply
It's just that they failed to mitigate the obvious risk factors in their marketing plan.

The justified ridicule about the removal of the audio jack started already months before the release so to many people selecting courage as the leading word portrays Apple's willful ignorance regarding the issues they cause. If they offered or emphasized their solutions for wired earphones their marketing wouldn't have had to take such a beating.

On the other hand, if they succeed in impressing their fans with the remaining features the audience will find a interpret the topic name in a positive light. For instance, it's the courage to move away towards the more comfortable wireless ear/headphones. Just scroll down and you'll see various people describing that they support the design since they themselves don't really need those old-style earphones. Psychologically predictable behavior.

[+] mrb|9 years ago|reply
"It's not courage, it's a business plan." would have been a better closing sentence :)
[+] Yhippa|9 years ago|reply
The only item that deviates from this is Apple Music. I wonder why they built that app for Android as opposed to continuing to wall it off within iOS.
[+] ghshephard|9 years ago|reply
They are bluetooth headphones. How can Apple control anything?
[+] spaceisballer|9 years ago|reply
I'll agree the courage statement was a bit silly and me laugh when I watched it go down. I for one am totally ok with the headphone jack going away. I have wireless headphones and I have wired headphones I'll make it work. More often than not the wired headphones become the hassle, whether it's tangled cords or just keeping them out of the way. I'm sure there are plenty of people who use wired headphones every day but there are also plenty of people who just have this unused hole in their phone. The earpods look great but are a bit steep for me. The way they pair looks great. It's definitely an Apple product, looks nice and is convenient (and perhaps a bit pricey but not ludicrously so). Also the battery life is great (when compared to similar independent wireless earbuds) and that case is an awesome way to charge/not lose them.

Apple it obviously trying to go to wireless everything and removing cables. Now they need to make wireless charging happen. If I could set my phone down on my desk and charge it and never again have to plug something in again, that would be great.

[+] pavel_lishin|9 years ago|reply
> there are also plenty of people who just have this unused hole in their phone.

Having a useless hole doesn't inconvenience them, but taking it away inconveniences a large swath of people who use it daily.

[+] ultramancool|9 years ago|reply
> More often than not the wired headphones become the hassle, whether it's tangled cords or just keeping them out of the way. I'm sure there are plenty of people who use wired headphones every day but there are also plenty of people who just have this unused hole in their phone

Nothing wrong with that - chances are you'll use it at one point or another. Most cars and stereo systems still use 3.5mm. Even for people who have Bluetooth in their cars they often prefer the stereo cable as it gives better quality, has no weird pairing issues and doesn't drain their battery.

I've ran both wireless and wired headphones and have settled on wired. It's just better, better audio quality, better headphones for a lower price, no waiting for the headphones to initialize, no forgetting to turn them off and finding your battery half dead, no having to charge them every few days. Just plug it in and go.

Hopefully this move will put pressure on manufacturers to get costs down on these wireless headphones and get the more off-brand audio manufacturers who often make the best products (quality/dollar wise) interested.

[+] blub|9 years ago|reply
Regular wireless headphones are fine, but cordless earphones are a braindead idea because they will get lost.

There are some general disadvantages to wireless: most bluetooth headphones, even high-end ones, have lag. It's imperceptible when listening to music, but obvious when playing an instrument in a music app like Garageband or better.

Attaching a keyboard or drum pads while listening on headphones is quite a typical use case for iOS musicians.

[+] cel1ne|9 years ago|reply
I think they should have started selling cables with a lightning adapter on one end and a small jack for pluggable buds on the other.

Good, sturdy cables with proper amp, microphone and remote control built-in. Headphone producers would provide the analog speaker-part only.

Pros for Apple:

. sell more hardware

. establish their lightning port

. better the good-speaker-but-crappy-cable-situation that plagues the headphone market

. stop wasting a cable on every new pair of iPhone buds

. extend their hardware eco-system centimeter by centimeter

[+] Shivetya|9 years ago|reply
well I can find more than a few seniors who would not mind seeing everyone wearing something akin to hearing aids. Yet to be honest, part of the appeal of the current corded headphones is that they simply don't fall out and if they do, well they are attached!

plus cordless head phones are no where in the same league as using the phone in the car without a head set. finally, why yet another thing I have to charge. I do have a SENA 20s setup for my motorcycle helmet, but even then mic and headphones cannot get lost or dropped.

I would love market pressure to force them to revert for the next iphone, I doubt it will, but I think I am keeping the 6 for a long time. worse than having to charge them is the pricing, obscene

[+] petra|9 years ago|reply
Something weird:The Apple marketers are among the best in the world.

So they surely know that this would be the response. And still they choose the word "courage". Why ?

[+] DCKing|9 years ago|reply
The thing is, had Apple announced the exact same thing but replaced the Lightning-connector with USB Type C, everything would have been sort-of-okay. Yeah, losing legacy support sucks but there's at least a decent argument to be made for the advantages of going digital audio only [1]. More importantly, USB is also an open, well-known standard that everyone can develop for, whilst the Type C connector covers all technical and functional requirements Apple has for the connection [2]. Would it have been "courageous" to take this step, cutting out legacy and receiving all the criticism for cutting out our favourite audio connection? I guess you could call it that, it's a big step to take.

But Apple didn't. They announced it with their own propietary standard that you have to pay them money for, and doesn't work on any other manufacturer. They are creating their own little bubble of peripherals because they have the market power to do so. It's pure douchebaggery, and them calling that courage is supreme arrogance.

[1]: That is in fact the Apple tried to make to distort the discussion. This post is not about this argument though. [2]: Or could even support Apple's additional requirements on the same connector with protocol extensions.

(I made this point in the other iPhone thread too, sorry for reiterating it.)

[+] jwr|9 years ago|reply
The problem with the disappearing 3.5mm jack is, as usual, a problem that only a few geeks like us care about.

Taking myself as an example: I can't use the Apple earbuds, they immediately fall out of my ears. Which is why I use either large over-ear headphones (MDR7506), large over-ear noise-cancelling headphones (BOSE) for work in noisy places, or in-ear headphones that stay put even when running (Sol Republic Relays). And I want to have the flexibility of using any of those.

Every wireless option I've ever tried sucked badly. Some really badly. In various interesting ways.

But "most people" (I love that phrase) won't care. It seems the included apple earbuds are good enough for almost everyone.

[+] TillE|9 years ago|reply
Headphones aren't a niche geek thing, though. Apple bought a company that sold millions of wired headphones and successfully marketed them as trendy fashion items.

When Apple sees kids walking around with Beats headphones, what device do they think it's plugged into? It's all smartphones.

[+] JonLim|9 years ago|reply
Currently using a pair of Bose QuietComfort 35, which are wireless and connect via bluetooth.

The only issue I have with it is that pairing can occasionally take a minute or two, because I have to pair with a different device sometimes and it remembers the last connection first.

However, other than that, they work fantastically. The noise cancellation is on point, the battery lasts for ~8 hours or so, and I have been a very happy camper since getting it.

Recently compared it to my girlfriend's QC25, and I really enjoy having the convenience of not having to pop in a battery and no wires.

[+] booleandilemma|9 years ago|reply
I'm sure BOSE (and other popular headphone-manufacturing companies) will be producing a line of bluetooth-enabled headphones in response to Apple's decision, if they aren't already.
[+] andrewvijay|9 years ago|reply
It was courageous to make a leap of faith and all that but not so courageous when it is at 160$. It's just ridiculous. Waiting for Xiaomi to show their courage at 20$
[+] ebbv|9 years ago|reply
That moment was absolutely the ultimate in Apple Reality Distortion Field in recent years, but this article is also over the top hyperbole.

The reality is the audio jack did take a significant amount of internal volume on the phone, and there are advantages to using wireless headphones. In a few years I won't be surprised if most Android phones also forego the audio jack.

If you really think it was a huge mistake for Apple to do this, short Apple stock. The market will reflect it. Otherwise, it may be annoying but it was probably the right thing to do in the long term and you're just repeating the same silliness of the people who cried about the lack of floppy drive on the iMac or the lack of ethernet port on the MacBook Air.

[+] iamthepieman|9 years ago|reply
I don't get this quote

"They’re able to do this because no one can do anything about it. "

You can not buy a phone without a headphone port. I don't see what a big deal this is. Is there another situation besides two that I'm missing?

1. Apple is right. There is a big advantage (or at least no/inconsequential downasides) to replacing the 3.5mm audio jack. In a year or two everyone has forgotten about this and people are wondering when 3.5mm is going to finally die.

2. Apple is wrong. The 3.5mm jack shows back up on iphone 8,9,10 or however long it takes them to realize they were wrong. In the meantime they lose market share over this and even after the hoopla has died down people are still speaking with the wallets by not buying an iphone.

[+] BatFastard|9 years ago|reply
I know a number of people in the music business who swear they will never buy another apple product because of the 3.5 jack business. Lets see if they stick to it.
[+] throwanem|9 years ago|reply
Where is the place, in such a reasonable analysis, for the kind of conspiracy theory and histrionics that make up such a delightful part of the tech community's response to every Apple product release?
[+] simonbarker87|9 years ago|reply
I'm amazed at the rage around this, a good friend of mine is about as anti Apple as the come and back in July he asked what I, a Mac and iPhone user, thought of them removing the headphone socket in the then rumoured 7. I said I was, and still am, largely indifferent.

He on the other hand was full of praise for Apple, he said he can't remember the last time he or his wife plugged head phones in to their phones and with bluetooth headphones being so cheap now (he as some of the MPow £20 ones) there is no reason to keep a piece of legacy equipment around for nostalgia purposes.

I was amazed given his usually anti Apple stance, but then I remembered that while he is anti Apple he is very pro progress, any kind of progress and technology change. Try something, see if it works and then move forward or try something else.

The phone market has become relatively stale, this is at least a company attempting (along with Motorola let's not forget) something radical. I didn't think it was radical but based on the online eruption it clearly is, people seem to have forgotten that there's a lot that's not great about 3.5 headphones that, I think, equally balances out the issues with wireless only.

If you don't like it that much then just don't buy the phone, if enough people do that then Apple will respond to market forces and backtrack. No one is forcing you to buy an iPhone.

[+] ookblah|9 years ago|reply
i think it was more like convenience. there was another article where schiller talks about having to remove the jack so that they could get the components to fit or something, specifically the haptic engine and also maintain water resistance.

i don't want to be making comparisons to steve jobs (okay, i actually am haha), but i feel like he would never let this fly and just tell them to figure out how to get all the components to fit or don't do it at all.

i feel like it was a lazy engineering decision to do it this way. one where the solution is based on convenience of design rather than what is best for the users.

[+] lucozade|9 years ago|reply
You may be right but I think it's very unlikely. Firstly, they already fit a jack into the same form factor and this wouldn't have been the first water resistant device with an audio jack i.e. these were solved problems. I don't believe they would go through all this effort because they couldn't be bothered to work out how to fit an audio jack back in.

If I were to guess it's either because they just like the idea of one connector that does everything (I get the impression that's what Thunderbolt was for). Either that or this a step towards a fully wireless strategy. As I quite like the idea of the latter, I'm going to assume it's that until evidence refutes it.

[+] weaksauce|9 years ago|reply
Absolutely. This is lazy work lead by a man that knows manufacturing logistics well but doesn't have the balls to stand up against jony. Besides... how thin of a phone do people really want? I think most people would be excited with more battery life and a 3.5mm jack to sacrifice a bit of thinness.
[+] paulrosenzweig|9 years ago|reply
Is Bluetooth less open to innovate on than the 3.5mm jack? I agree that it's important to be able to create hardware add-ons "without Apple's permission", but wouldn't most of those use cases just use Bluetooth today?
[+] pavel_lishin|9 years ago|reply
Is a headphone plug cheaper than a bluetooth chip?

It's certainly better form a usability perspective: plug it in, and you're done. Bluetooth has to be paired, and can be jammed.

[+] TeMPOraL|9 years ago|reply
There's orders of magnitude of difference in complexity between Bluetooth and 3.5mm jack. Also, last time I heard, you couldn't even use Bluetooth to transfer files from an iPhone to a non-Apple device, so there's that.

EDIT changed "data" to "files", because that's what I meant.

[+] Eridrus|9 years ago|reply
Now you also need to power the external device if you use Bluetooth.
[+] TeMPOraL|9 years ago|reply
Losing a 3.5mm jack is not just an audio issue - this port is also the simplest way to make phone talk to external hardware add-ons.
[+] ygra|9 years ago|reply
Which ... is kinda what the article also noted, yes.
[+] blockross|9 years ago|reply
Precisely. I wonder in which proportion this decision was made to prevent shop owners from using these small credit card readers connected to the audio port and push Apple Pay down their throat.

That's the first thing I thought about after the initial laugh and I'm surprised it's not talked about more. Not saying it's the main reason but I can't believe it was not mentioned during the decision-making process.

[+] kristofferR|9 years ago|reply
This jack-off move by Apple could perhaps be justified as courage by Apple if they were moving to a newer standard - like USB C.

Instead they moved to a proprietary port that they only partially support. It'll be great to be denied the option of using the same non-wireless headphones on my iPhone as on my Macbook (unless they also implement Lightning ports on the Macbooks, which would be horribly confusing).

Thanks Apple!

[+] andromeduck|9 years ago|reply
That's one way to look at it. Another would be that they moved to Bluetooth while also providing a means of backwards compatibility with the lighting to 3.5 adapter as well as a pair of lighting headphones for those who prefer that.
[+] ath0|9 years ago|reply
Can you spot the mistaken assumption?

It's right here: "Data doesn’t need to go to the headphones, nor do the headphones need to send data back. Digital-to-analog conversion has to be done eventually, because speakers don’t produce sound waves with 1s and 0s."

True for speakers, but headphones are often more than dumb speakers at this point. They're active noise cancelling devices. They're a component of immersive video (why do people buy 5.1 surround systems when they could just wear headphones?).

Or even if you have the standard earphones from the box: do you ever pause the sound, skip a track, or answer a call using the buttons on the cable? If so, you're sending data back to the phone. Surprise!

What other forms of interactivity could we open up if we broke the "one-way, stereo audio only" assumption explicitly?

Don't get me wrong - my preferred earphone vendor doesn't even have Bluetooth support yet and I don't really want to buy another pair of custom Etymotics. But despite that, I recognize there are real experience-driven reasons to do this.

[+] chaostheory|9 years ago|reply
Wasn't one reason for losing the headphone jack to help further waterproof the iPhone? That said, for even the best current bluetooth headphones, the sound quality isn't that great. Does the bluetooth standard need an update in that department, because there's a large difference in sound between bluetooth mode and being plugged in for these headphones?
[+] pixl97|9 years ago|reply
While I can say I'm an expert on headphone jacks... It seems like the input port for them is very simple and would not be difficult to waterproof.
[+] andromeduck|9 years ago|reply
That's mostly compression and bitrate at the low power levels required. It's probably also why they had to do their own chip.
[+] jwoldan|9 years ago|reply
I think there is some truth to the "we needed to make space for the other changes we wanted to make" argument, but I think that applies even more so to the next iPhone (8?). I think Apple made the 7 as good as they could, but in some sense it's the sacrificial lamb for what they want to do next.
[+] ChicagoBoy11|9 years ago|reply
I'm surprised at how in the minority I seem to be, but I felt that this was generally a step in the right direction. I couldn't help but think back about the hundreds of memes we've seen about "tangled earphone cords" over the past several years, or how many times I myself struggled with wires of my headphones. When it comes to using the "headphone jack" for what it was initially intended to do, I can't help but think it is pretty clear that the right way to go about this is wireless.

Some of the comments against it seem to mirror the comments about the removal of a physical keyboard when the initial iPhone came out -- undeniably true, but really missing what the future will inevitably look like.

Just think about the prototypical Apple-system user, with his Macbook, iPhone, and Apple Watch. With bluetooth earbuds, he could, at least in theory, seamlessly transition from listening to any of his devices, without having to "plug" anything in anywhere. That's an advantage. That's what you'd expect "the future" to be like. We're getting rid of cords everywhere, I just don't understand why the "headphone" is now somehow special!

There is the other argument, which I find a lot stronger but still ultimately not really compelling, and that is that by getting rid of the 3.5mm jack Apple removes the ability for people to plug into their phone without the licensing fee for their technology. But is there anything specific to the 3.5mm that makes some tech possible and others not? I don't think so. Is it pretty convenient? Undoubtedly. But, again, I can't think of how Bluetooth couldn't just as easily transfer that kind of data. And, with the added bonus that now you aren't limited to ONE such device. Will it be more inconvenient for 3rd party manufacturers at first? For sure. But I don't see how this move inherently PREVENTS equipment from being used on the phone. It certainly does so in its present iteration, but in the long term, why couldn't manufacturers adapt to using wireless communication?

Make no mistake, Apple is pushing the boat out on this. But they single-handedly have the market power to do this kind of thing. When they got rid of the keyboard, everyone also came out and said it'd be terrible for the enterprise. But, by being lights-out better than the competition and anticipating a trend, they set the tone for what smartphones would look like ever since. Haven't heard an argument cogently explaining why we shouldn't simply expect the exact same thing this time around.

[+] blackfede|9 years ago|reply
It was necessary to remove the jack to be sure to sell the new headset. I wonder if it will be available just one, as spare :-)

It's all about removing connection ports, on the iphone and on the mac to be sure that you will be using just something that they can control.

[+] rimantas|9 years ago|reply
It's a pity they made that terrible mistake of including adapter so the whole evil plan is now thwarted.
[+] afandian|9 years ago|reply
Does anyone know how Lightning headphones work? Is there an analogue line in there (I think I read somewhere that pins can switch modes?) so they're just traditional passive headphones with a different plug?

Or is there a DAC in the wired headphones?

[+] rvense|9 years ago|reply
I've seen some assert that they just use some of the extra pins to pass normal audio. The adaptor is entirely dumb. And that you might get some extra noise because now your headphone jack is also a high-speed digital connection..

Someone might make "active" headphones with their own DAC, but disregarding those noise-cancelling cans that so many people seem enamored with, that's going to venture into audiophile nonsense very quickly.

[+] rollinDyno|9 years ago|reply
I've been using bluetooth enabled hearing aids since the beginning of the year and it has been a great experience being able to play music straight into my ears without having to take earphones out my pocket and disentangle them.

The difference is normal people won't keep them on when they're not listening to music, but that's what Apple wants. This is an opportunity to place their hardware in the next step for computer interaction which is going to be conversational assistants (voice and audio). This would give them the opportunity to be always listening and collecting more information about what surrounds you.

[+] uptown|9 years ago|reply
I don't have a problem with them removing the headphone jack. I do think some aspects of Apple's messaging is tone deaf. Their "affordable" JBL bluetooth headphones they mentioned during the presentation? $200. That's real money for a huge portion of their customer base.

But I do think they removed it to allow the iPhone 8 to have space for dual cameras, and wireless charging (they said they see the future as wireless) and I'm fine with that.