Smartphones

Apple Hopes iPhone 7 Extras Will Make Up for Missing Headphone Jack

Apple CEO Tim Cook on Wednesday officially unveiled the iPhone 7 and iPhone Plus, confirming a rumor that has evoked widespread dread: The company has ditched its traditional headphone jacks.

The new iPhones are sleeker than their predecessors, though, as well as water resistant. Their biggest plus might be the advanced camera lenses that create what Apple touts as the most sophisticated smartphone camera in the world.

Apple ConnectED Tim Cook

Cook — who prefaced his presentation with a carpool karaoke session with hip hop artist/producer Pharrell Williams and late night talk show host James Corden — also led his team in the introduction of the next-generation Apple Watch and a host of iOS upgrades, as well as educational offerings and new wireless headsets to replace traditional earpieces.

Perfect Pictures

The iPhone 7 has a 12-megapixel camera featuring optical image stabilization and a larger f/1.8 aperture and 6-element lens, for more detailed and brighter photos and video.

iPhone 7 camera

The iPhone 7 Plus adds a 12-megapixel telephoto camera to the 12-meg wide angle camera. Together, they allow 2x optical zoom and digital zoom at as much as 10 times greater capability.

The cameras have a 7-megapixel Facetime HD camera for sharper selfies.

iPhone 7 Facetime

Additional features are expected later this year. The dual 12-megapixel camera will feature a depth-of-field effect in the iPhone 7 Plus, and it will employ machine learning for sophisticated portrait-taking capabilities.

“What we are saying is this is the best camera we have ever made in iPhone,” Apple Senior Vice President Phil Schiller said during the presentation.

The new phones feature a sophisticated new A10 Fusion chip that promises more power and longer battery life. Comprised of two high-performance cores and two high-efficiency cores, it runs twice as fast as the iPhone 6 on one-fifth the power. The new chip allows graphics performance three times faster than in the iPhone 6 on half the power, supporting more demanding gaming and professional apps.

iPhone 7 A10 chip

The new processors are “revolutionary” in terms of the capabilities they give the new devices, remarked Ryan Reith, vice president, worldwide device trackers, at IDC.

Free the Headset

Clearly, the move to wireless headsets, with the new AirPods with the lightning connector, may prove to be the most controversial move of them all. The wireless pods are powered by a new W1 low-power chip, providing up to five hours of wireless listening.

Apple Airpods

The company’s custom charging case offers an additional 24-hours of listening time.

Apple congratulated itself for its “courage” in making the move, but the reception it got suggested the company may have made too great a compromise.

“Killing the headphone jack and pushing customers toward Apple-made AirPods seems like a fundamental mistake to me,” said Charles King, principal analyst at Pund-IT.

However, “doing so is likely the only way that the company could ever fully profit from its (US)$3 billion Beats acquisition,” he told TechNewsWorld.

The iPhone 7 and iPhone 7 Plus pricing starts at $649; however, customers can pay $32 a month through the company’s upgrade program.

The program will be available for the first time in the UK and China.

The Apple Watch Series 2, a nod to hard-core runners who might want a device that’s disentangled from the iPhone, could bolster its competitiveness in the wearable fitness game.

The new watches feature a more powerful dual-core processor and built-in GPS. After rigorous testing, they’ve been rated for swimming at a depth of 50 meters.

Apple Watch Series 2 swim

Apple Watch Series 2 comes in gold, rose gold, silver or space gray aluminum, or silver or space black stainless steel cases paired with a wide variety of bands. Pricing starts at $369.

A version of the watch cobranded with Nike — Apple Watch Nike Plus — features exclusive Nike sports bands, exclusive Siri commands, and integration with the Nike Plus Run Club app.

Apple Watch Nike Plus

The Nike watch also starts at $369 and will be available Friday.

David Jones is a freelance writer based in Essex County, New Jersey. He has written for Reuters, Bloomberg, Crain's New York Business and The New York Times.

2 Comments

  • Nothing Apple does takes courage. Dropping the 3.5mm jack was a very calculated move. It was implemented as most Apple changes to move product. The question always becomes like when the new Macbook came out with just a USB C port. Is how many people do you leave behind in order to push this new technology. Have you given those users good alternatives who still use USB 2 or USB 3 devices? The same would apply to the iPhone 7 dropping the 3.5mm jack. Have you alienated those who still use that jack enough to push them away or will they accept the change. Apple has tried this a lot from the one button mouse, to Firewire, to its own proprietary connectors for powering devices. If you see this as a company wide business model. You see how Apple can feed itself not only with product sales. But also accessory and third party licensing. Apple doesn’t just sell a iPhone but rather a ecosystem for that iPhone. For me the iPhone is not evolving for the sake of advancing the iPhone by itself, but rather the ideal of future Apple products that support that iPhone. Wireless Beats headphones, Apple AirPod’s, and whatever is in future products. Apple’s inability to realize that it’s thirst for profits falls on deaf ears for consumers who see the expense of not only a $700 iPhone but asking is it worth it when you are losing something as universal as a 3.5 mm jack. Because let’s all be honest here. How many will lose a AirPod when it falls out and you have no wire as a safety net to prevent it from being lost? For me, the loss of a audio jack which works on so many other devices I use is a negative for me. To know I would have to use an adapter for a iPhone 7 for something so universally used as a 3.5mm jack is a deal breaker.

    • iOS 10 was released to Apple app developers as a beta testing version after the American tech giant had announced and unveiled the iOS 10 at WWDC 2016 in June this year. And, this beta version quickly became available to non-developer testers as part of the public beta testing program. In the recent iPhone 7 launch event in San Francisco, Apple made the final announcement of launching the iOS update on 13th September 2016. So what can all the tech freaks, like us, expect from the newest version of Apple operating system? Will it come with some serious features to lure new customers? I found something while searching for it, take a look – " http://purbat.com/10-best-ios-10-features/

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