• @orangeboats
    link
    English
    -37 months ago

    I am not so sure about the waterproofability of headphone jacks, but does it benefit to make phones even “thinner and lighter”?

    • @T156
      link
      English
      157 months ago

      Completely fine. There are multiple phones that have been out with waterproofing and headphone jacks.

      It’s not that much more difficult to waterproof than the charge port.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      67 months ago

      I’ve got no idea of the legitimacy of the claim, it’s just what the manufacturers claim. Likewise, they assume people want “thinner and lighter”, presumably because that’s what Steve Jobs said. It’s all just trying to make the devices appeal to the mass market.

      • @Chee_Koala
        link
        English
        87 months ago

        They don’t even assume that anymore. If you look at the mean dimensions of sold phones in NL over the last 7 years, you’ll see that the ‘thinnest’ year is already behind us. Less then 6/7mm just becomes unwieldy for a lot of hands, and the sold phones dimensions reflect that.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      17 months ago

      Obviously. If you can free up thickness and weight in one area, you can increase things like battery size, either alone or to compensate for a higher-power processor or something.

      • @orangeboats
        link
        English
        27 months ago

        I don’t think the battery argument is convincing enough to me unfortunately, since it’s more likely that the recent increase in battery capacity is due to battery chemistry improvements rather than increased physical size.

        I mean, I have two similar sized phones from different eras. One had 3000mAh, another had 5000mAh. They both include a headphone jack.