- May 19, 2011
- 20,501
- 15,298
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I did a bit of searching on gsmarena to confirm what I've long suspected, and here are the results:
Sure, 2025 isn't over yet, but I somewhat doubt we're going to see ~150 more phones released this year with one or both features
The thing is, I can survive with a phone without either feature, but for example:
1 - I have a set of earphones for running that I took ages to find which fit and are a reasonable sound quality compromise (I bought a second set just in case they stop being produced too). While I'm sure I can find another cordless set that fits the bill, with non-replaceable batteries the earphones will likely need replacing let's say every 6 years (I don't like landfill fodder), and while USB to headphone adapters are available they detract from portability.
2 - My car stereo has an aux headphone connector and that's it. I do also have a USB-C to dual USB-C + headphone socket adapter if need be.
3 - A phone with more internal storage than I could ever conceivably need is going to be prohibitively expensive for the foreseeable future, and a phone is a handy device to dump a load of data on instead of carrying something extra around with me.
The other problem with the decreasing selection is that if one classes say a headphone socket as a deal-breaker, then one has to accept the lower end of the market.
I'm not quite in the market for an immediate replacement phone; my Nokia 8.3 5G has burped a couple of times in the last 6 months and I would prefer to only replace it when I deem it necessary (ie. I don't trust it any more), but on the other hand I feel like maybe I have to get on with getting a new phone if I want either feature, rather like me buying a grey-licence version of standalone Microsoft Office "just in case" because at some point MS will pull the plug on it. On the other hand, I've had my eye on a couple of Motorola phones but their Android lifespan support is nowhere near Google's or Samsung's, which is another potential landfill fodder argument.
I considered the possibility of getting a new dumb / feature phone and have other gadgets (e.g. a digital camera) to fill in the blanks with, so I made a list of things I need my phone for (my desktop pc gets used wherever possible, my phone mostly fits in a few 'away from home' scenarios):
calls
texts
threema
note-taking
picture taking (very casual, though it's handy to make a quick note of something I've seen)
email
Internet access
Banking apps / authentication
ebooks
I'd love to have a phone the size of say a Nokia 8210, something that can actually go in my pocket without doing me a mischief if I sit or squat down! This absolute surfboard of a phone I have is annoyingly large. Overall though I think I still need a smartphone (the banking authentication would be a pig without it) at least until phones are replaced with something better, but whenever I look at say the Samsung A56 I'm thinking, "why should I pay more for a phone that doesn't have the features that I want?"; paying £250 or more for a device that feels like a significant compromise just makes me not want to do it.
Thoughts?
Phone release date | headphone socket | MicroSD |
2025 | 39 | 174 |
2024 | 105 | 365 |
2023 | 157 | 333 |
2022 | 200 | 422 |
2021 | 209 | 416 |
2020 | 214 | 463 |
Sure, 2025 isn't over yet, but I somewhat doubt we're going to see ~150 more phones released this year with one or both features
The thing is, I can survive with a phone without either feature, but for example:
1 - I have a set of earphones for running that I took ages to find which fit and are a reasonable sound quality compromise (I bought a second set just in case they stop being produced too). While I'm sure I can find another cordless set that fits the bill, with non-replaceable batteries the earphones will likely need replacing let's say every 6 years (I don't like landfill fodder), and while USB to headphone adapters are available they detract from portability.
2 - My car stereo has an aux headphone connector and that's it. I do also have a USB-C to dual USB-C + headphone socket adapter if need be.
3 - A phone with more internal storage than I could ever conceivably need is going to be prohibitively expensive for the foreseeable future, and a phone is a handy device to dump a load of data on instead of carrying something extra around with me.
The other problem with the decreasing selection is that if one classes say a headphone socket as a deal-breaker, then one has to accept the lower end of the market.
I'm not quite in the market for an immediate replacement phone; my Nokia 8.3 5G has burped a couple of times in the last 6 months and I would prefer to only replace it when I deem it necessary (ie. I don't trust it any more), but on the other hand I feel like maybe I have to get on with getting a new phone if I want either feature, rather like me buying a grey-licence version of standalone Microsoft Office "just in case" because at some point MS will pull the plug on it. On the other hand, I've had my eye on a couple of Motorola phones but their Android lifespan support is nowhere near Google's or Samsung's, which is another potential landfill fodder argument.
I considered the possibility of getting a new dumb / feature phone and have other gadgets (e.g. a digital camera) to fill in the blanks with, so I made a list of things I need my phone for (my desktop pc gets used wherever possible, my phone mostly fits in a few 'away from home' scenarios):
calls
texts
threema
note-taking
picture taking (very casual, though it's handy to make a quick note of something I've seen)
Internet access
Banking apps / authentication
ebooks
I'd love to have a phone the size of say a Nokia 8210, something that can actually go in my pocket without doing me a mischief if I sit or squat down! This absolute surfboard of a phone I have is annoyingly large. Overall though I think I still need a smartphone (the banking authentication would be a pig without it) at least until phones are replaced with something better, but whenever I look at say the Samsung A56 I'm thinking, "why should I pay more for a phone that doesn't have the features that I want?"; paying £250 or more for a device that feels like a significant compromise just makes me not want to do it.
Thoughts?