There is
no headphone jack on the bottom side so either it is on the top or there is no headphone jack on the phone.
The images further show the SIM card tray on the left side of the handset, the power button and volume rocker on the right side, and a speaker grille, a micro-USB port, and a 3.5 mm
headphone jack on the bottom side.
Not exact matches
On the ZenPad's supersleek edges are a microSD card slot (left
side), volume rocker and power button (right), USB Type - C port (
bottom), and 3.5 mm
headphone jack (top).
Meizu did opt to keep the
headphone jack, which is at the
bottom, to the left of the USB - C connector and the speaker
on the right
side.
On the left side of the device there is a USB 2.0 and power jack, on the bottom there is a docking connector and mini-HDMI and on the right side there is an auto - rotate button, volume controls, and a mic / headphone jac
On the left
side of the device there is a USB 2.0 and power
jack,
on the bottom there is a docking connector and mini-HDMI and on the right side there is an auto - rotate button, volume controls, and a mic / headphone jac
on the
bottom there is a docking connector and mini-HDMI and
on the right side there is an auto - rotate button, volume controls, and a mic / headphone jac
on the right
side there is an auto - rotate button, volume controls, and a mic /
headphone jack.
The four speakers sit next to each corner and there's a
headphone jack on the top and a Lightning connector
on the
bottom, along with the three - pin Smart Connector
on the
side.
Buttons and ports-wise you get a volume rocker
on the upper right hand
side, the device's power button below it, and a USC - C port alongside a
headphone jack on the
bottom.
Ports include a
headphone jack and USB (for charging and connecting to a computer)
on the left
side of the device, and a microphone
jack and microSD slot
on the
bottom edge.
The curved
sides are bounded by a metal strip, with volume buttons
on the
side, micro USB power / sync port and stereo speakers
on the
bottom, and power button, 3.5 mm
headphone jack and covered HDMI port
on top.
Both the top and
bottom edges are flat; the top is made of black plastic, where there is a power switch
on one
side, and a rotation - lock and 3.5 mm
headphone jack on the other.
The lightning port hasn't moved from the
bottom, the
headphone jack and sleep / wake button are still
on the top, and the volume rocker remains
on the right
side.
As far as port, sensor, and button placement is concerned:
on the back, we have our main camera sensor and a LED flash, there's no heart - rate sensor
on the A series;
on the front, we have our proximity and ambient light sensors, a front - facing camera, earpiece, display, back and recent app capacitive keys, and a home button with an integrated touch - based fingerprint sensor (A5 and A7 only);
on the
bottom, there's a microphone, 3.5 mm
headphone jack, MicroUSB port, and the speaker grille;
on the top, we have nothing other than the secondary microphone, and, just like the new GS7, there's no IR blaster
on board; and the volume buttons are located
on the left
side of the aluminium frame, while the power button is located
on the right
side — all three buttons are very tactile with excellent reachability and positioning.
Other features are sparse: just a volume rocker
on one
side, a 3.5 mm
headphone jack and a power / lock button
on top, and a micro USB charge / sync slot
on the
bottom.
The top edge of the Galaxy S II has a 3.5 mm
headphone jack, the
bottom has a microUSB port, a slim volume rocker sits
on the left, and a tiny power lies
on the right
side.
There is a good amount of material
on the top, right
side, and
bottom of the device, with cutouts as necessary for the charge / sync port and
headphone jack.
Physical connections are
on the minimal
side, however, with a Micro-USB and 3.5 mm
headphone jack on the
bottom of the device.
There are loud dual speakers
on the left
side (or the
bottom if you're holding it in landscape orientation), along with a standard
headphone jack, a USB port, and a microSD card slot to supplement the 32 GB of internal storage; it worked fine with a 256 GB card.
Moving around the device, the power button and volume rocker are found
on the right
side, the microSD card slot is placed
on the left, and the microUSB port and
headphone jack are both at the
bottom.
The
headphone jack is
on the top right
side, and the microUSB charge / sync port is
on the
bottom edge.
Up top is the
headphone jack and a microphone, and at the
bottom is the microUSB port, flanked by two grills, giving the appearance of a dual speaker setup, even though it is actually only a single speaker
on the right
side.
The power / standby key sits
on the right
side of the device, the volume keys
on the left, and the
bottom sports the 3.5 mm
headphone jack, USB Type - C port, speaker grills and S Pen slot.
There's a USB - C
jack on bottom with a
headphone jack beside it — allowed by those thicker proportions — and the volume and power buttons
on the phone's right
side feel just as nice and clicky here as
on the other Zs.
For ports, there's a
headphone jack at the top of the phone, a SIM card slot
on the left
side, and a USB Type - C port at the
bottom along with the speakers.
Headphone jack and Type C ports are still
on the
bottom with volume rockers and Bixby
on the left while Power utilizes the right
side.
The volume rockers along with the power button are present
on the right
side, and USB Type - C port, 3.5 mm
headphone jack, and speaker grill are
on the
bottom.
The 3.5 mm
headphone jack is present
on top along with the secondary mic whereas the micro USB port (no USB Type - C) and speaker grill are
on the
bottom side.
The
headphone jack is up top, the microUSB port and single speaker unit is placed at the
bottom, and the SIM card slot is found
on the left
side.
Unlike Motorola's Z series of smartphones, the X4 does come with a
headphone jack located
on the
bottom side of the phone, so no adapter is needed in order to use your favorite
headphones.
Other superficial changes between the Porsche and regular Mate 9's are a redesigned
bottom edge, with one following the familiar Mate pattern while the Porsche assumes an iPhone 6 layout with a
headphone jack on one
side and speaker
on the other.
The rest of the design is standard fare for Samsung — a home button flanked by back and recent apps keys
on the front, a microUSB port at the
bottom, a
headphone jack at the top, and volume and power buttons
on the left and right
sides.
The dual SIM card slot is found
on the left
side, with the
headphone jack and microUSB port at the top and
bottom respectively.
The 3.5 mm
headphone jack & speaker grill are
on the
bottom side.
You'll also find two top - and
bottom - firing speakers
on both
sides of the Tab S3, similar to the iPad Pro, along with a USB Type - C port and
headphone jack on the
bottom.
The volume rocker and power button are
on the right
side, and at the
bottom is the
headphone jack, USB Type C charging port, and single speaker unit, in a design that will be extremely familiar.
The
bottom of the phone is home to a micro USB port and a 3.5 mm
headphone jack, along with the single speaker, while the power and volume rocker buttons are
on the right - hand
side.
There's a volume rocker
on the right
side, and a
headphone jack and Micro USB port (this doubles as Micro HDMI via MHL)
on the
bottom.
It also has the familiar USB Type - C port at the
bottom, a
headphone jack at the top, camera launcher button
on the right - hand
side and a microSD and SIM slot covered by a flap
on the left.
Like the XZ and new XZ Premium, the XZs has USB Type - C at the
bottom of the device, a 3.5 mm
headphone jack at the top and the
side - mounted power button with its built - in fingerprint sensor
on the right of the device, along with the volume rocker and the camera launcher button.
Credit: Jeremy Lips / Tom's GuideA volume rocker and power button sit
on the right
side, a micro-USB port is
on the
bottom, a
headphone jack lies
on top and a microSD card slot is
on the left.
There are few interruptions around the
side of the device, too: the microSIM slot is removed with a pin (included in the box) and the microUSB port,
on the
bottom, faces the «wrong» way to its LG and Samsung counterparts; the 3.5 mm
headphone jack on top is placed, in a subtle nod to off - centre symmetry, identically
on top of the phone as the USB port is below it.
The
headphone jack and USB Type - C port are at the top and
bottom respectively, and the power button, volume rocker, and a dedicated shutter camera shutter button are all found
on the right
side.
A 3.5 mm
headphone jack on top, volume rocker and micro SIM tray
on the left, micro USB port plus a few dubious screws
on the
bottom, and a perfectly placed lock / unlock / power button
on the upper right hand
side.
The lightning port hasn't moved from the
bottom, the
headphone jack and sleep / wake button are still
on the top, and the volume rocker remains
on the right
side.
Taking a look around the device, the
headphone jack and USB Type C port are at the top and
bottom respectively,
on the left
side is the slot for the SIM card and microSD card, and
on the right are the power button, volume rocker, and a dedicated camera button.
There's a
headphone jack and Dash Charge - powered USB - C port
on the
bottom, along with a mono speaker, plus a dual - SIM tray
on the right
side next to the volume rocker.
There are Apple design cues
on the phone itself as well, with the
bottom clearly resembling the one of older iPhone models, like the 6s Plus, with one big speaker grille, a charging port (micro USB
on the Huawei) in the middle, and
headphone jack on the
side.
There's an
on button to the top, sat next to a Bluetooth sync button; those plus / minus volume buttons to the
side on a rubberised panel section; while a metal loop for hanging sits to the
bottom, with Micro-USB charger and 3.5 mm
headphones jack hidden behind their own dust - and waterproof flaps.
Thankfully, it also still has the 3.5 mm
headphone jack on the
bottom edge of the device and an alert slider
on the left
side.
Across the top of the phone you'll find the
headphone jack off to the left, and
on the
bottom of the phone you'll find what looks like stereo speaker grilles
on either
side of a Micro-USB port.
Other design elements worth mentioning are the volume rocker and power button
on the right
side, the
headphone jack on the top, and the USB Type - C port and speaker at the
bottom.