Opinion: Apple just took its biggest risks in a long time

It came as no surprise Apple killed the headphone jack in the iPhone 7 and iPhone 7 Plus. Months of leaks told us it would happen, and sure enough Apple sealed up the port to make more room for the phone’s internals (oh, and something about courage).

It also wasn’t shocking for the company to come up with its own wireless solution to get around this self-inflicted problem, though I don’t think anyone was truly prepared for AirPods. Whether for their design or price or clear desire to wind up missing, Apple’s wireless headphones are drawing strong opinions.

But like the loss of the headphone jack and AirPods or not, Apple gave us its vision for a wireless audio future this week, and in doing so, it took its biggest risks in recent memory.

It’s not the first phone maker to get rid of the headphone jack – just look at the Moto Z – nor the first to offer wireless headphones (see this list). But for Apple to be on the ground of the lose-the-jack movement this early is uncharacteristic of the company we’ve come to know in the past few years.

Apple AirPods

As of late, Apple has been content to bide its time, letting others scramble to be first to a new service or technology before swooping in with its own take, one that’s developed thanks in part by observing the efforts of others. It’s often derided for being second or later to something, but it’s a strategy that’s worked for Apple.

That changed on Wednesday. Getting rid of the headphone jack on its flagship device and introducing wireless headphones that, on the surface, are user unfriendly are risky moves we’re not used to seeing from today’s Apple.

Risky business

Apple’s first big bet stems from the fact you have to buy AirPods separately. Apple made the decision to get rid of the headphone jack on the iPhone 7 and iPhone 7 Plus, now it’s up to us to purchase the headphones that are truly meant to go with the phones. Hm.

Of course, you can use the Lightning EarPods that come with the new iPhone, which may smooth over many users’ transition woes. One hiccup with this is that you can’t listen and charge your phone at the same time (though Belkin just announced a $40/£35/AU$60 solution).

And if you want to use your own tethered headphones, you’ll need a separate adapter. Apple is including one in the box, but if you lose it, you’ll have to purchase a replacement.

There’s inherent inconvenience – a word not usually associated with Apple – for customers in all of this, from having to buy new headphones to using an adapter to changing the very way we can interact with our phones. Maybe it’s a new reality we’re ready for, but Apple is taking a chance in forcing us into it now.

Apple iPhone 7

Granted, there’s evidence we are ready and willing to embrace a headphone jack-less future. One major retailer has seen its wireless headphone sales skyrocket after the iPhone 7 announcement, as reported by TechRadar UK’s Editor-in-Chief Patrick Goss.

All the risk may pay off for Apple if more major hardware makers follow suit, eventually driving the price of AirPods down, or turning them into a free accessory that comes with every iPhone.

And Apple isn’t throwing a half-baked pair of headphones into the wild. We found in our hands on AirPods review that the headphones have a magic to them, especially when they activate by being near an iPhone or automatically pause music when you take one out. They are, from our early look, a great answer to the missing headphone jack.

Still, there are a number of potential problems when you get rid of that 3.5mm analog port and make it so that only headphones you approve work with your devices. The Verge‘s Nilay Pitel has a great piece exploring possible DRM repercussions, for one.

But the big questions coming straight out of the iPhone 7 launch are how will customers respond with their wallets, and whether more electronic giants will follow the lead set by Apple – and a few others – in jettisoning the jack.

Apple at least, for the first time in a while, is leading the charge, not sitting in the back seat.

Source: techradar.com

#Amazon #Android #Apple #Asus #camera #Galaxy #Google #Games #iPad #iPhone #Lenovo #Lumia #Laptop #Microsoft #Moto #Motorola #news #Nexus #Note #OnePlus #phone #Plus #Releases #review #Samsung #smartphone #Sony #Watch #Windows #Xiaomi #Xperia



Top Brands

4 Comments
  1. Reply Prof. Kaylee Leffler September 8, 2016 at 10:49 pm

    Idiots. They will embrace BB's faith with theyr cockiness.

  2. Reply Janae Armstrong September 9, 2016 at 3:42 am

    'All the risk may pay off for Apple if more major hardware makers follow suit, eventually driving the price of AirPods down, or turning them into a free accessory that comes with every iPhone.'

    Is that a joke?

    'And Apple isn't throwing a half-baked pair of headphones into the wild. We found in our hands on AirPods review that the headphones have a magic to them, especially when they activate by being near an iPhone or automatically pause music when you take one out. They are, from our early look, a great answer to the missing headphone jack.'

    You don't NEED an answer. You can't applaud the solving of a problem that was caused by the person 'solving' it. Crappy £20 earbuds that cost £200? THat's only an answer if you get free gear because you're a tech journalist.

  3. Reply Winona Jast I September 9, 2016 at 3:49 am

    Not really leading the charge as such. Motorola did it already with the Z.

  4. Reply Rosella Marks Sr. September 9, 2016 at 4:20 am

    "There's inherent inconvenience – a word not usually associated with Apple"

    Seriously? A laptop with only one USB-C port wants to have a word with you.

    And. Trying to migrate away from Apple and iMessenger isn't a hassle at all.

    Or. Trying to migrate away from Apple full stop.

    Their aim basically to make it as easy to go to Apple and make is as hard as possible to leave Apple.

    It's not a risk, it's another in a long long long line of attempts to keep people in their ecosystem and make it hard to leave.

Leave a reply