Saying “not only should you have to buy a peripheral, but you should plan to have to replace the port every once in a while, just so you can have basic functionality” is just clearly not an optimal solution. As someone who has seen how >80% of the dongles you buy just fail to function, constantly destroy the ports they’re plugged into, and sometimes just physically self-destruct when you stare at them from the wrong angle like some collapsing wave-function, I think I’ll keep arguing for the added flexibility, redundancy and ease of use without additional peripherals which a second port would provide, with virtually no downside.
but it’s not basic functionality if it’s only in 10% of devices on the market.
it seems like you’re hung up on a particular feature of a device no longer existing and you have an inability to accept change. I can appreciate that.
personally, I hate vehicles with “infotainment” systems in them but they are installed in 75-80% of cars these days. nothing was better than the old mechanical radios with the big buttons that would “ca-chunk” the dial for you. the warm glow of the neon bulb inside dimly lighting the cab. don’t even get me started on the entire removal of AM radios entirely.
if I were to let my preference for the radio stop me from buying newer vehicles I would be losing out on all of the important safety improvements made to cars over the last 40 years. things like air bags, seat belts, mathematically formulated crumple zones, auto-roll fuel pump sensors, etc. that’s not even mentioning some of the comforts like power steering, AC/heating, EFI, rear window defrosting.
my point is, you have an option to continue using a headphone jack with an adapter, there are even options to repair any damage should any occur. I can’t even look at my car radio like I want to replace it without a $4k dealer visit because it’s integrated into the ignition system.
seems like a really silly hill to kill yourself on.
fair point, but…just replace the USB port? it’s repairable for a reason…
Saying “not only should you have to buy a peripheral, but you should plan to have to replace the port every once in a while, just so you can have basic functionality” is just clearly not an optimal solution. As someone who has seen how >80% of the dongles you buy just fail to function, constantly destroy the ports they’re plugged into, and sometimes just physically self-destruct when you stare at them from the wrong angle like some collapsing wave-function, I think I’ll keep arguing for the added flexibility, redundancy and ease of use without additional peripherals which a second port would provide, with virtually no downside.
but it’s not basic functionality if it’s only in 10% of devices on the market.
it seems like you’re hung up on a particular feature of a device no longer existing and you have an inability to accept change. I can appreciate that.
personally, I hate vehicles with “infotainment” systems in them but they are installed in 75-80% of cars these days. nothing was better than the old mechanical radios with the big buttons that would “ca-chunk” the dial for you. the warm glow of the neon bulb inside dimly lighting the cab. don’t even get me started on the entire removal of AM radios entirely.
if I were to let my preference for the radio stop me from buying newer vehicles I would be losing out on all of the important safety improvements made to cars over the last 40 years. things like air bags, seat belts, mathematically formulated crumple zones, auto-roll fuel pump sensors, etc. that’s not even mentioning some of the comforts like power steering, AC/heating, EFI, rear window defrosting.
my point is, you have an option to continue using a headphone jack with an adapter, there are even options to repair any damage should any occur. I can’t even look at my car radio like I want to replace it without a $4k dealer visit because it’s integrated into the ignition system.
seems like a really silly hill to kill yourself on.
Just to clarify, the basic functionality of which I was speaking was “listen to music”
but the functionality is still there. it’s not like it’s been removed, access has just changed.