IR Blaster
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IR blaster removal refers to the elimination of infrared transmitters from smartphones that allowed them to function as universal remote controls.
Overview[edit | edit source]
IR blasters allowed phones to control TVs, air conditioners, stereos, and other devices. Despite minimal cost and space requirements, manufacturers removed them claiming "lack of use" while simultaneously investing in expensive smart home ecosystems.
Technical Specifications[edit | edit source]
Hardware Requirements[edit | edit source]
- IR LED: $0.15
- Driver circuit: $0.10
- Protective lens: $0.05
- Board space: 4mm²
- Power draw: 50-100mW when active
- Total cost: $0.30-0.50
Capabilities[edit | edit source]
- Range: 5-10 meters
- Frequency: 30-60kHz carrier
- Protocols: RC5, RC6, NEC, Sony SIRC
- Devices controlled: Thousands of models
- Learning function: Copy any remote
Timeline of Elimination[edit | edit source]
Rise (2012-2015)[edit | edit source]
- 2012: HTC One includes IR blaster
- 2013: Samsung Galaxy S4 adds "WatchON"
- 2014: LG G3, Note 4 standard feature
- 2015: Peak adoption - most flagships include
Fall (2016-2020)[edit | edit source]
- 2016: iPhone 7 never had it, Samsung keeps
- 2017: Galaxy S6 removes, S7 retains
- 2018: Samsung removes from S series permanently
- 2019: LG removes from all models
- 2020: Only Xiaomi, Huawei retain (some models)
Real Reasons for Removal[edit | edit source]
Smart Home Ecosystem Lock-in[edit | edit source]
- Samsung SmartThings: $50-300 per device
- Apple HomeKit: Premium-priced accessories
- Google Home: Subscription services
- IR blaster: Controls everything for free
Planned Obsolescence of Remotes[edit | edit source]
- Smart TV remote: $30-80 replacement
- Cable box remote: $20-40
- Universal remote: $50-200
- Phone with IR: $0 additional cost
Data Collection Prevention[edit | edit source]
- IR control: Completely offline
- Smart home: Tracks usage patterns
- Voice assistants: Record commands
- Apps: Collect behavioral data
Manufacturer Excuses Debunked[edit | edit source]
"Nobody used it"[edit | edit source]
- Reality: Peel Smart Remote - 100 million downloads
- AnyMote: 50 million users
- Mi Remote: 75 million active users
- Sure Universal: 30 million downloads
"Takes up space"[edit | edit source]
- Reality: Smaller than front camera
- Thickness impact: 0.5mm maximum
- Location: Top edge unused space
- Modern phones thicker anyway
"Confusing for consumers"[edit | edit source]
- Reality: One-button setup in most apps
- Easier than pairing Bluetooth
- Grandparents could use it
- Point and click interface
"Old technology"[edit | edit source]
- Reality: Every TV still uses IR (2024)
- Air conditioners: 95% IR controlled
- Set-top boxes: All use IR
- Will remain standard for decades
Use Cases Eliminated[edit | edit source]
Home Entertainment[edit | edit source]
- Control TV without finding remote
- Adjust soundbar from couch
- Navigate cable box menus
- Control DVD/Blu-ray players
- Manage projector presentations
Public Spaces[edit | edit source]
- Mute loud TVs in waiting rooms
- Adjust gym TV channels
- Control hotel room AC
- Change restaurant TV channels
- Conference room presentations
Accessibility[edit | edit source]
- Elderly: One device for everything
- Disabled: Always within reach
- Visually impaired: Familiar phone interface
- Lost remote replacement
Travel[edit | edit source]
- Hotel room control
- No learning curve for new devices
- International compatibility
- No need to pack remotes
Financial Impact on Consumers[edit | edit source]
Replacement Costs[edit | edit source]
- Lost TV remote: $30-80
- Universal remote: $50-200
- Smart home hub: $100-300
- Smart bulbs: $15-50 each
- Smart plugs: $20-40 each
- Total ecosystem: $500-2000
What IR Blaster Replaced[edit | edit source]
- All remotes: $0
- Setup time: Minutes
- Compatibility: Universal
- Maintenance: None
- Subscription: None
Market Manipulation[edit | edit source]
Coordinated Removal[edit | edit source]
- 2016-2018: All major brands remove
- No technical reason cited
- Smart home push simultaneous
- Consumer choice eliminated
Upselling Strategy[edit | edit source]
"Your phone can't control your TV anymore, but for $299 you can buy our smart home hub, plus $30 per smart plug, plus $50 per smart bulb..."
Environmental Impact[edit | edit source]
E-Waste from Remotes[edit | edit source]
- 5 remotes per household average
- 500 million remotes disposed annually
- Batteries: 2-4 AA per remote
- Plastic waste: Non-recyclable
- All preventable with IR phone
Resource Consumption[edit | edit source]
- Rare earth elements in remotes
- Shipping individual remotes
- Packaging waste
- Manufacturing energy
- Redundant production
Current Alternatives[edit | edit source]
Phones with IR (2024)[edit | edit source]
- Xiaomi Redmi series (some)
- POCO phones (some)
- Select Chinese brands
- No flagship phones
- No US carrier phones
Workarounds[edit | edit source]
- USB-C IR dongles ($10-20)
- Bluetooth-to-IR bridges ($30-50)
- WiFi universal remotes ($60-100)
- Smart home ecosystem ($500+)
- All inferior to built-in
Consumer Resistance[edit | edit source]
Petition Campaigns[edit | edit source]
- Change.org: "Bring back IR blasters" - 250,000 signatures
- Reddit r/Android: Regular request threads
- Samsung Members: Top requested feature
- OnePlus forums: Consistent demands
Market Response[edit | edit source]
- Chinese brands keeping IR = increased sales
- Xiaomi marketing IR as premium feature
- Consumer loyalty to IR-equipped brands
- Second-hand market for IR phones
Technical Innovation Stifled[edit | edit source]
Potential developments killed[edit | edit source]
- IR learning improvements
- Macro programming
- Gesture controls
- AI-powered setup
- Cross-device synchronization
Instead we got: Expensive proprietary ecosystems
See Also[edit | edit source]
- Universal Remote History
- Smart Home Lock-in
- Feature Removal Timeline
- Planned Obsolescence
- Consumer Choice Elimination
References[edit | edit source]
[1] Samsung Galaxy S4 WatchON marketing materials [2] Peel