Apple defends decision to remove 3.5mm headphone jack, cites “courage”
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New wireless $159 AirPods available in October, won't be paired with new iPhones.
Sam Machkovech
SAN FRANCISCO—Apple Senior VP Phil
Schiller took the stage at Wednesday's iPhone event to announce the news
most tech geeks had been expecting: the iPhone will leave the 3.5mm
headphone jack behind. It was Schiller's job to justify why Apple was
doing so, and he defended the company's decision by citing three reasons
to move on—and one word: "courage."
Schiller explained to the San Francisco event
crowd that Apple would push the Lightning port standard for wired
headphones and push a new proprietary wireless standard, driven by the
new "W1 chip" in iOS devices, which Schiller called Apple's first
wireless chip.
The 3.5mm port, on the other hand, has to go,
Schiller said, because the company can't justify the continued use of
an "ancient" single-use port. He described the amount of technology
packed into the iPhone, saying each element in Apple's phones is
fighting for space, and it's at a premium. And while every iPhone 7 and 7
Plus will include a Lightning-to-3.5mm adapter, Schiller was a lot more
bullish about the company's wireless-audio standard.
Schiller explained that no company had tried
to deliver a wireless experience between your devices and your
headphones that fixes the things that are currently difficult to do—and
since there's only one major industry-wide wireless-audio standard, it's
easy to assume that he's talking about Bluetooth there (though he
didn't say the B-word out loud).
To promote Apple's wireless-audio push,
Schiller announced the new AirPods earbuds, which look mostly identical
to the last official Apple earbud model, only with a small piece of
plastic replacing the full cord. Schiller says that AirPod users can
expect five hours of playtime, along with 24 hours of recharge supplied
by a portable charging case (which can be refilled at home and then
thrown into a bag for on-the-go recharging). The AirPods will recognize
whether or not they're embedded in a user's ears, and they're advertised
as being able to automatically recognize compatible hardware nearby and
switch to a new device's audio feed based on proximity. Schiller didn't
confirm whether W1-compatible audio gear will work with older,
Bluetooth-only devices, however.
While Schiller and Apple designer Jonny Ive
talked a lot about wireless being "the future" of audio devices—and thus
being the reason for Apple's "courage" to move on from the 3.5mm
standard—Apple is curiously not packing those AirPods into new iPhone 7
and 7 Plus boxes. Instead, those devices will ship with the updated
Lightning EarPods by default.
AirPods will begin shipping in late October and will cost $159.
As expected, Apple's Beats division is also
getting in on the W1 bandwagon with a few new models, including the Solo
3 Wireless headset, which Schiller says will hold 40 hours of
listening-time charge.
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