• @absquatulate@lemmy.world
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    91 month ago

    Just wait until you find out some of us still want FM on our phones.

    The thing with SD cards is that there’s a crapton of phones with 64/128 internals and still don’t have one. I for one wouldn’t really need one if I had 512, but to get to 512 you usually hace to pay a huge premium, because all major manufacturers have adopted the apple model of upcharging for storage. And frankly in the age of affordable 1tb SD cards I should’t have to pay hundreds to get a measly 256 or 512 gb of storage.

    The jack is also a manufactured problem ( also pioneered by apple, iirc ). Why would I give up my existing wired headphones to replace them with expensive sub-standard battery operated ones. Its especially ironic for manufacturers who do a lot of greenwashing. The usb-c adapter is an ok compromise though, and I for one am coming around to that l because you can only find jacks on niche or crap phones these days.

    I’m not sure why you brought the “tech is old” argument because frankly it doesn’t make sense for these two.

    • @CucumberFetish@lemm.ee
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      1 month ago

      FM on a phone is a banger. I used to have an old Nokia with a FM transmitter as well.

      To be honest, the FM transmitter was more reliable and easier to set up on a random car with no aux than Bluetooth was.

    • @gamermanh@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      -51 month ago

      Why would I give up my existing wired headphones to replace them with expensive sub-standard battery operated ones

      You don’t, you use an adapter and move on with life.

      I seriously do not understand people who die on this hill. The 3.5 Jack is dead in electronics and the only people making the transition painful are the HEADPHONE manufacturers who refuse to wire a USB-C instead of a now-outded plug.

      This happens every time an obsolete connector gets phased out: cheap manufacturers keep using it well beyond the reasonable time to swap out, leaving the end users who fear change to cling on even longer for no good reason