This is a real complaint, and for me personally, it’s a complete dealbreaker.
There have been converters, but I don’t want to choose whether I want to charge my phone or listen to music (¿por qué no los dos?, i.e. “why not both?”). I also don’t want to add up lines of dongles for something as primitive and actively used as a headphone jack.
3,5mm jack doesn’t take much space and is used by many people, so why remove it?
For regular companies, the answer is clear: to sell you wireless devices often produced by the same companies, costing more.
But for Fairphone, a “fair” company that always shipped their phones with it, this seems like a betrayal. Failing to mention this giant point of concern is not great for a review article, either.
This is a real complaint, and for me personally, it’s a complete dealbreaker.
There have been converters, but I don’t want to choose whether I want to charge my phone or listen to music (¿por qué no los dos?, i.e. “why not both?”). I also don’t want to add up lines of dongles for something as primitive and actively used as a headphone jack.
3,5mm jack doesn’t take much space and is used by many people, so why remove it?
For regular companies, the answer is clear: to sell you wireless devices often produced by the same companies, costing more.
But for Fairphone, a “fair” company that always shipped their phones with it, this seems like a betrayal. Failing to mention this giant point of concern is not great for a review article, either.