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Posted to alt.home.repair,sci.electronics.repair
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On 2014-02-18, Judy Miller wrote:
It always seems I have the wrong diameter headphone jack when I need one. Since adapters exist, why do they make headphone jacks different diameters anyway? Cell phones used to have 2.5 mm plugs, because cell phones used to be tiny. Early AMPS (analog mobile phone service) cell phones in the 1980's were essentially suitcases, and were called "car phones". By the early 1990's, cell phones had shrunk to the point that they looked like household cordless phones. A race was on for phones to be smaller and smaller. The smaller the phone the more "status" it showed. Within about a decade, by the 2000's, phones became ridiculously tiny. These tiny phones used 2.5 mm headphone jacks to save space. Every cubic millimeter counts in a compact design. The trend now is for phones to be larger, because they are now essentially small tablet computers, and the screen size matters. Nobody wants to use a 1.5 by 2 inch screen. These modern smartphones tend to have the usual 3.5 mm (or 1/8") jacks that you also see on computers. I.e. long story short; your phone is probably outdated. |