For me it’s the notification light you used to find on older phones, was particularly good to know if your phone was charged without picking it up

      • sushibowl@feddit.nl
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        1 year ago

        There are several advantages to not having them: without all the extra parts needed to support these features you can make the phone thinner (thickness is traditionally a key marketing point for smartphones) and cheaper to make.

        Additionally, it seems that a lot of people no longer need these features, making them prime candidates for exclusion: Bluetooth headphones have become very common, internal storages have become large enough, and people buy a new phone often enough nowadays that battery wear is not as much of an issue.

        Of course, if you are one of the people who still do want these features you’re pretty much out of luck. Which sucks.

        • r_se_random@sh.itjust.works
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          1 year ago

          The idea that people don’t need headphone jack seems pretty weird. Phones removed the 3.5mm jack, so people had to buy Bluetooth headphones, because now there is just 1 port on the phone.

          And now, because of this change, you’re looking back and saying that that’s a not needed feature.

          Does that sound right?

        • tigeruppercut@lemmy.zip
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          1 year ago

          without all the extra parts needed to support these features you can make the phone thinner

          I don’t think the 3.5mm jack is the limiting spec on how thick phones are. The latest iphone (15) without the jack is 7.8mm thick, while my phone that has one is 7.9mm. The 15 pro is 8.3mm. Thickness may have been a selling point in the past but I don’t think people care anymore bc essentially everything’s pretty thin these days–size concerns are way more focused on length/width.

        • antrosapien@lemmy.ml
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          1 year ago

          I guess people don’t use sd cards to increase storage but to keep their data handy when device dies or somehow renderes inaccessible.