(Posting this here rather than !askandroid@lemdro.id as it’s a quite general question)

I had a look at the GSM Arena phone finder, and it the choice is getting smaller and smaller every year (only 43 phones from 2023, reviewed by the site, had a jack)

The remaining ones are mostly

  • Xiaomi Redmi
  • Zenfones
  • Sony
  • Samsung entry range

So, has everyone switched to Bluetooth / USB-C dongles, or are there still a few people holding to the jack until the very end?

  • MimicJar@lemmy.world
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    11 months ago

    I’ll die alone on this headphone jack hill if I need to, I only buy phones with headphone jacks.

    Currently using a Motorola of some sort, replacement for another Motorola.

  • judooochp@lemmy.world
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    11 months ago

    Only With the 3.5 mm audio jack. Bluetooth devices always have some delay, never are immune from connection problems or intermittent readback (especially if you have other devices you switch between), and don’t last as long as they advertise. The delay thing is particularly irksome on the phone and watching videos. Much less important for music, but I’m not the kinda guy who plays music a lot. The battery thing is probably less of an issue these days, and could maybe be discarded, but I also forget to charge important devices, so that’s a me thing and party of the reason.

    • ColeSloth@discuss.tchncs.de
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      11 months ago

      My hill is the microsd card slot. I might have to figure out how to make my note 20 ultra last another 40 years, though. :-(

      On another note; if compatible, APTX Bluetooth codec is pretty lag free when watching streaming videos. For local videos, there is a bit of noticeable lag on a lot of players, but I use VLC and it has an audio/video sync setting you can manually adjust so it matches up correctly and it will forever save that setup for you.

  • catloaf@lemm.ee
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    11 months ago

    I used to hate Bluetooth, but that’s because the early versions were terrible. Painful to connect, frequent drops and disconnects, and very short range and easy to block the signal.

    Since Bluetooth 4 it’s been great, and rock solid with Bluetooth 5. The only time I’ve had a problem is when I went into the other room and stood directly in front of a running microwave. I lost about half the signal until I took a step back.

    Wireless headphones are far more convenient. Phone in my pocket, and I can walk around, clean the house, or work out at the gym, completely untethered.

    • Khrux@ttrpg.network
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      11 months ago

      Yeah I absolutely do not miss snagging my headphone cable on every door or drawer handle in a 1 mine radius. Also I think I used to go through 3-4 sets of headphones a year by wearing out the cable, spending the last few weeks precariously holding the cable 24/7 to enjoy the music.

      Wireless does have it’s issues but I’m on my 2nd wireless pair, both bought in the £30 region and it’s probably been 5+ years since I used wired now. Battery hasn’t been an issue really, and although I lost one headphone on my previous wireless set, I can live with it.

      I absolutely support the want for a headphone jack so people can choose wired, but I’d still choose wireless.

      • southsamurai@sh.itjust.works
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        11 months ago

        One of the one plus that tmobile gave when they required 5g capability. It’s partially degoogled, but otherwise pretty standard. Headphone jack + sd slot, and it gets the job done. I can’t recall what the general name is, something like a nord 200 or whatever, but the model is de2118.

        Decent phone overall tbh. I thought I would hate it, but the battery life is solid, the audio is “good enough” for road trips, and the size is just right for my hands.

  • dcooksta26@lemmy.world
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    11 months ago

    I seek out phones with audio jacks. My current Moto G Power 2020 has one and I use it all the time. No dongles or adapters in the car or on various headphones. Plus I actually use the FM Radio built into the phone and that uses the wire for the headphones as an antenna. I just cut off some old earbuds and plug that in, then direct the audio to either the phone speaker itself or BT.

  • danielfgom@lemmy.world
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    11 months ago

    I bought a Sony Xperia 10iii back in December 2022 for the headphone jack, SD card slot and IP rating. Plus it’s Sony and one of my all time best phones was my Xperia Z2.

    When it comes time to replace it I will first look to see which phone offers a jack. I use it several times a week.

    However the downside is that the only premium phones with it are Sony but very expensive. I can’t afford a 5v when though I’d love it.

    If you get a midrange phone you always lose out on a great camera. Which is crappy. So you have to choose between headphone jack with poor cameras Vs no headphone jack with good cameras.

    Or somehow get enough money together to buy an Xperia 5v.

    Ps don’t bother with ZenFone. Asus is known for poor quality and very, very bad support

    • Blaze@lemmy.zipOP
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      11 months ago

      Or somehow get enough money together to buy an Xperia 5v.

      Ps don’t bother with ZenFone. Asus is known for poor quality and very, very bad support

      Thank you for your message.

      Xperia 5 V looks indeed a very nice option on paper, but definitely pricey.

      Thanks for the heads up on Zenfones

  • DSTGU@sopuli.xyz
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    11 months ago

    I wouldnt buy a phone without it. Currently on Pocophone M5, happy user

  • sp6@lemmy.world
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    11 months ago

    I specifically bought a Pixel 5a because it was the last Pixel with a headphone jack. Then after a year, it died on me, and they sent me a 6a as a replacement.

    I miss the jack. A lot. But it’s hard to justify buying a whole new phone for one. Once this one dies, I don’t know what I’ll do.

  • Skua@kbin.social
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    11 months ago

    I’m still using it. I’ve got nice headphones and speakers that run off of a cable and no interest in top-end phones, so it makes sense to get a phone that fits the more expensive audio stuff rather than a bunch of adapters. Nokia’s cheaper smartphones have served me quite nicely

  • Sʏʟᴇɴᴄᴇ@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    11 months ago

    I exclusively use phones with a 3.5mm jack. Currently on a Sony Xperia 1 IV. That said, I also use bluetooth IEMs sometimes and I like having the option of switching between wired/wireless when convenient.

  • Canuck@sh.itjust.works
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    11 months ago

    I exclusively use phones with headphone jacks. Using GNU/Linux mobile more to get longer software security updates where needed/possible. All GNU/Linux native phones have headphone jacks.

      • Canuck@sh.itjust.works
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        11 months ago

        I have a Note9 I just did a battery & screen replacement on, a Key2 that had not been used until a year ago (so still has great battery life), and a newish Librem5. Most other phones, e.g. those mid-range Samsung’s, or phones without headphone jacks feel like sidegrades rather than upgrades.

        They’re all 4G though; both Android model variants are unrootable, and of course behind on their security updates. Next phone would need to be 5G, and ideally allow longer security updates, or allow Mobian + Waydroid install. Maybe one of the Asus ones. Honestly wish Fairphone had kept it or brings it back; they’re missing out on a big segment of customers that would be a good match.

        To afford an out of carrier phone, just dipped down to a cheaper plan that still meets my needs.

  • HorreC@kbin.social
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    11 months ago

    I just add a usbc to audio/charging dongle to them. Getting a phone with a audio jack I feel like is when I wanted to keep the hardware keyboard, I was just walking the boulder up the hill I just was like there was an easy off that mountain.

    • Kelo@lemmy.world
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      11 months ago

      For me the usb c to audio Jack adapters were a letdown. From the three I bought - all of them had a constant static noise. Especially hearable on lower noises. Don’t know if it was just the adapters I got, or if it was just a quirk my phone had, but I’ll stick with the dedicated usb jack for now.

      • dingus@lemmy.world
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        11 months ago

        I bought one off the shelf at like Target or something before I got my first pair of Bluetooth headphones. The adapter is trash. Static noise like you said and when slightly kinked it just stops working. It’s not like I used it forever just fine before it started doing all this…it was trash to begin with. Apparently a lot of these adapters are just known to suck.

      • HorreC@kbin.social
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        11 months ago

        To be honest I would have thought I would have got the same, I got some random one and its worked good for over two years now. I only use it for audio books so maybe I am missing out on some fucked up things in the connection.