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Apple's iPhone 7 Ditches the Headphone Jack

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Apple is ditching the traditional headphone jack in order to create a skinnier iPhone 7.

The design change, which had been the biggest point of speculation about the new iPhone, was revealed Wednesday during the company’s annual iPhone event at the Bill Graham Civic Auditorium in San Francisco.

Phil Schiller discusses the Apple AirPods during a media event in San Francisco


Phil Schiller discusses the Apple AirPods during a media event in San Francisco

Phil Schiller, Senior Vice President of Worldwide Marketing at Apple Inc, discusses the Apple AirPods during a media event in San Francisco, California, U.S. September 7, 2016. REUTERS/Beck Diefenbach REUTERS

“When you have a vision for how the audio experience can be … you want to make it as great as can be,” Apple’s senior vice president of marketing, Phil Schiller, said at the event.

The lack of a traditional 3.5 mm headphone jack will require wireless headphones, an adapter to plug in to the phone’s lightning port, or compatible earbuds. Schiller said the new iPhone 7 and iPhone 7 Plus will come with ear buds and an adapter so that older headphones can still be used.

Patrick Moorhead, an analyst at Moor Insights & Strategy told NBC News he thinks including a set of lightning connector compatible earbuds and a dongle, which can be used with older headphones, will only appease some of the people who are hesitant about the change.

“Some people are die-hard. There are people who got really angry when the floppy drive was removed and I think there will be people who just won’t be happy with this,” Moorhead said.

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Ben Wood, director of research at CCS Insight, a UK-based firm covering the mobile world, told NBC News that he believes the change “could trigger an intense period of innovation on headsets.”

“With a more intelligent connection to headsets either via Apple’s Lightning connector, USB-C or Bluetooth, there is tremendous scope to add sensors that could monitor activity, heart rate and more,” he said. “It also could see a shift towards high-resolution music.”

Not everyone, however, is convinced.

Company co-founder Steve Wozniak, who left Apple in 1985, said last month he believed the change, which was a rumor at the time, would “tick off a lot of people.”

“I would not use Bluetooth … I don’t like wireless. I have cars where you can plug in the music, or go through Bluetooth, and Bluetooth just sounds so flat for the same music,” Wozniak was quoted as saying.

The new iPhone 7s will be available for preorder starting this Friday and will begin shipping on September 16.

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