Headphone Jack Removal
Appearance
The headphone jack removal refers to the systematic elimination of the 3.5mm audio port from smartphones and other portable devices, beginning with the iPhone 7 in 2016.
Overview
The 3.5mm audio jack (also known as TRS connector) was a universal standard for over 100 years, present in virtually all audio devices. Despite taking minimal space (approximately 8mm × 3.5mm), manufacturers began removing it claiming "courage" and "innovation."
Timeline
- 1878: Quarter-inch jack invented for telephone switchboards
- 1950s: 3.5mm miniaturized version becomes standard
- 2016 September: Apple removes jack from iPhone 7, CEO Tim Cook calls it "courage"
- 2017: Google mocks Apple, keeps jack in Pixel 2
- 2018 October: Google removes jack from Pixel 3
- 2018-2019: Samsung mocks both, maintains jack
- 2020: Samsung removes jack from Galaxy S20
- 2021: Only budget and specialty phones retain jack
Manufacturer Claims vs Reality
Claim: "No space"
- Reality: Teardowns show empty space where jack was located
- Jerry Rig Everything demonstrated jack could fit in iPhone 7
- Some phones added fake speaker grilles in jack location
Claim: "Better water resistance"
- Reality: Galaxy S5 (2014) had IP67 rating WITH removable battery AND headphone jack
- Sony Xperia phones maintained IP68 with jack until 2018
- Jack can be waterproofed with simple gasket ($0.10 part)
Claim: "Improved audio quality"
- Reality: Bluetooth audio uses lossy compression (SBC, AAC)
- Wired connection provides lossless, zero-latency audio
- USB-C DACs add bulk, easy to lose, drain battery
Financial Impact
Direct Costs
- Wireless earbuds: $150-300 (vs $20-50 wired)
- USB-C to 3.5mm adapter: $10-30
- Replacement cycle: 2-3 years (battery degradation) vs 5-10 years for wired
Hidden Costs
- Cannot charge and listen simultaneously without $40+ splitter
- Bluetooth earbuds require charging case
- Environmental: Lithium batteries in millions of earbuds
- E-waste: Non-repairable earbuds become landfill
Consumer Impact
- Airline travelers: Cannot use airline-provided headphones
- Students: Cannot use school computer lab headphones
- Musicians: Added latency makes recording/monitoring impossible
- Incompatible with other audio equipment. AUX ports on car or stereo.
- Emergency situations: Dead earbud battery = no audio
- Security: Wireless connections make it easier to track/identify the user, also makes listening to conversations easier.
- Device interference: Wireless signals more likely to interfere with implanted/wearable medical devices.
Market Manipulation
Apple owns Beats (acquired 2014 for $3 billion), launched AirPods in 2016 alongside jack removal. AirPods revenue alone exceeds entire companies:
- 2019: $12 billion (more than Spotify, Twitter, Snap combined)
- 2020: $23 billion
- 2021: $38 billion
Environmental Impact
- Estimated 5 billion wireless earbuds sold 2016-2023
- Each contains non-replaceable lithium battery
- Average lifespan: 2-3 years
- Result: 15 billion batteries in landfills by 2026
Resistance
- Right to Repair advocates highlight this as planned obsolescence
- Some manufacturers (Asus, Sony) returned jack after backlash
- EU considering mandate for universal audio standard
See Also
References
[1] iFixit iPhone 7 Teardown [2] Apple September 2016 Keynote [3] Environmental Impact Study - IEEE 2021 [4] Market Analysis - Counterpoint Research