That's not much of a surprise in a budget phone, but you will definitely want to use the 3.5
mm headphone port for listening to music or enjoying movies.
Not exact matches
«The 3.5
mm headphone jack is ancient, and Apple could reasonably claim that using the Lightning
port improves audio fidelity,» said Avi Greengart, research director
for consumer platforms and devices at Current Analysis.
7.8 ″ 1404 × 1872 16 greyscale primary eink display as «digital paper» Frontlight array with 24 levels amber / blue / white 1404 × 420 LED touchscreen
for app interaction Cortex A9 quad - core 1.5 Ghz CPU 2 GB RAM, 32 GB internal with MicroSDXC slot
for expansion 802.11 n / g / b WiFi plus Bluetooth 4.1 GPS, accelerometer and microphone 3.5
mm headphone jack (no speakers) Rear 13MPixel camera with flash optimized
for OCR 3.5
mm headphone jack (no speakers) microUSB 3.0 & USB - C
ports with OTG support 4000mAh battery with solar charger in flipcase Android 8.0 or Elementary OS 0.4.1 Loki Okular 1.3 or Bookworm based e-reader software enhanced with «shelves» concept
On the top of the G2x are a 3.5
mm headphone jack, power button, and flap - covered microHDMI
port for video output to HDTVs.
The Samsung Galaxy Note 8 have a 3.5
mm headphone socket at the bottom, a USB Type - C
port, speaker grille and a silo
for the S Pen.
Other features the SpringBoard boasts of include a micro USB
port for syncing, a micro HDMI slot, 3.5
mm headphone jack along with integrated stereo speaker.
Other common aspects
for the two tablet devices include a mini USB
port, HDMI 1.4 output, Wi - Fi and Bluetooth 2.0 functionality, along with a 3.5
mm headphone jack.
Powered by a Qualcomm Snapdragon 427 quad - core processor and an Adreno 308 graphics chip, the Moto G6 Play includes 2 GB or 3 GB of memory, 16 GB or 32 GB of internal storage, a microSD slot
for cards up to 128 GB, a 4,000 mAh battery, a 5.7 - inch HD + display, a micro-USB
port and a 3.5
mm headphone jack.
There are holes cut out of the case
for the rear camera, the stereo speakers along the bottom, the volume rocker and 3.5
mm headphone socket, as well as the power button and Micro USB charging
port.
In addition to the microUSB charging
port, the Nexus 7 has a 3.5
mm headphone jack and a mysterious 4 - pin connector that could potentially be used
for docking.
There are various
ports spread around the device such as MicroUSB and HDMI on the bottom edge, as well as contact points
for the optional docking station, and a 3.5
mm headphone jack on the left edge.
As with most other BlackBerry handsets of the newer generation, the right spine of the Tour houses a 3.5
mm headphone jack, a volume rocker, a dedicated camera key (which can be customized to serve as another shortcut) and a mini-USB
port (
for data transfers and power).
As
for other hardware features, you're getting a microSD card slot, a micro HDMI
port and a 3.5
mm headphone jack on the chassis
for all your multimedia needs.
The tablet uses USB Type - C
port for charging and supports 3.5
mm headphone jack and dual speakers
for audio playback.
It has holes cut out of it
for the 2 - megapixel rear camera, the single mono speaker along the bottom, the volume rocker and 3.5
mm headphone socket, as well as the power button and Micro USB charging
port.
Along the bottom edge are, from left to right, a Mini-USB
port (
for charging the Libre Touch and connecting it to a PC), a MicroSD card slot (if you want more than the internal 4 GB of memory), a volume rocker control, and a standard 3.5
mm headphone port.
The device features a 3.0 inch 480Ã — 360 HVGA resolution display, tri-mode CDMA 1xEVDO Rev.. A, quadband GSM / EDGE, and 2100 MHz HSDPA radio with support
for international roaming via Vodafone networks around the world, Bluetooth with stereo audio support, 3.5
mm headphone jack, 1 GB of internal memory with additional expansion possible through a microSDHC expansion slot, media player with iTunes sync capability, GPS transceiver, microUSB
port, and a 3.2 megapixel camera with autofocus and video recorder.
Connectivity Wi - Fi (802.11 a / b / g / n), Wi - Fi Direct, DNLA Built - in mobile hotspot functionality Next - generation Bluetooth 4.0 backward compatible with older Bluetooth - enabled peripherals and includes stereo audio streaming Near Field Communication (NFC)
for sharing contacts, web pages, directions, and more to compatible phones as well as payments GPS
for navigation and location services Integrated Google Maps with turn - by - turn navigation, street and satellite views Communications & Internet Full messaging capabilities including SMS text, MMS picture / video and IM instant messaging Full HTML browser with Adobe Flash Support Personal and corporate e-mail access with support
for Exchange ActiveSync as well as mobile e-mail accounts (Google push, Yahoo!, POP3, IMAP) Hardware Dual - core 1.5 GHz processor capable of opening web pages twice as fast as most other smartphones 4.8 - inch HD Super AMOLED multi-touch screen (1280 x 720 pixels) MicroUSB
port 3.5
mm headphone jack Memory 16 GB internal memory (non-expandable) microSD card slot with support
for optional cards up to 64 GB 2 GB RAM
for improved multitasking Camera 8 - megapixel camera with continuous auto focus, zero shutter lag, face detection, high dynamic range mode, burst mode, and more Full HD 1080p video capture (30 fps) Front - facing 1.9 - megapixel camera
for HD video chats and self portraits Multimedia Music player compatible with MP3, WMA, AAC / AAC +, eAAC +, MIDI amd WAV Video player compatible with MPEG4, H. 264, H. 263and DivX
The device features a 3.3 inch 480Ã — 360 HVGA resolution display, tri-mode CDMA 1xEVDO Rev.. A, quadband GSM / EDGE, and 2100 MHz HSDPA radio with support
for international roaming via Vodafone networks around the world, Bluetooth with stereo audio support, 3.5
mm headphone jack, 1 GB of internal memory with additional expansion possible through a microSDHC expansion slot, HTML browser, media player with iTunes sync capability and Windows Media DRM support, active noise cancellation, GPS transceiver, microUSB
port, and a 3.2 megapixel camera with autofocus and video recorder.
Other features include Wi - Fi 802.11 b / g / n, Bluetooth 2.1, 3.5
mm jack
for headphones, Mini HDMI and USB
ports.
The device's USB
port (
for charging and transferring content over an included cable) is on the bottom right edge, next to a
headphone jack
port that, annoyingly, doesn't accept standard mobile 3.5
mm jacks; you'll need to get a 2.5
mm adapter to use it with most types of
headphones or headsets (the Cool - ER doesn't include earphones).
The micro USB power / sync
port has slid from the bottom to the side, while the 3.5
mm headphone jack - with an additional slot attached, designed
for future accessories like an external speaker, apparently - has helpfully moved to the top to nestle next to the power button.
The right edges of the 7s» soft touch back are littered with small aqua labels
for its host of
ports: microUSB, microHDMI, a microSD Card slot and a 3.5
mm headphone jack.
Additional specs
for the MeMO Pad include 802.11 b / g / n Wi - Fi, microSD card slot (up to 32 GB), 5 GB free Asus Web Storage, 3.5
mm headphone jack, and Micro-USB
port for charging / synching.
There are a few sensible cutouts in the rubber
for essentials such as the rear camera, mono speaker, microphone, micro-USB charging
port and 3.5
mm headphones socket.
Both smartphones feature a USB Type - C
port for charging and data transfer and they come with a 3.5
mm headphone jack too.
The bottom panel is equipped with a mini USB
port, a mini-HDMI socket, a 3.5
mm headphone jack, a microSD slot, a power button and a DC input
for charging.
A silver power button and volume rocker sit on the top edge of the device, along with a 3.5
mm headphone jack, a mic and a micro USB
port for charging.
The device features a 3.0 inch 480 × 360 HVGA resolution display, tri-mode CDMA 1xEVDO Rev.. A, quadband GSM / EDGE, and 2100 MHz HSDPA radio with support
for international roaming via Vodafone networks around the world, Bluetooth with stereo audio support, 3.5
mm headphone jack, 1 GB of internal memory with additional expansion possible through a microSDHC expansion slot, media player with iTunes sync capability, GPS transceiver, microUSB
port, and a 3.2 megapixel camera with autofocus and video recorder.
On the top is the power button, a Micro USB charging
port, a 3.5
mm headphone socket and the tiny hole
for the microphone.
On the left edge, you have the tray
for a microSD card, the 3.5
mm headphone jack on the top and the USB Type - C
port is placed at the bottom, just besides the speaker grille.
The manual also confirms the Galaxy Tab S3 will retain a 3.5
mm headphone port alongside a USB Type - C
for charging and front - mounted home button with fingerprint scanner, something that was teased in the official MWC invite.
The rest of features are speakers, 3.5
mm headphone as well as microphone jacks serve
for audio in and out purposes, micro USB 2.0
port, bluetooth to communicate wirelessly with other device, WLAN
for wireless connections and optional 4G connectivity to fast internet connections.
Like Kindle Fire tablet, the IdeaPad A1107 also lacks micro HDMI output, but this models also has 3.5
mm headphone jack, a micro USB 2.0
port, microSD reader, an accelerometer and an ambient light sensor
for automatic screen rotation.
For connectivity and data, the 10 inch tablet is packs with Wi - Fi 802.11 a / b / g / n, bluetooth 2.1 with A2DP + EDR, micro USB 2.0
port, 3.5
mm headphone jack and support HSPA + 21/5.76 Mbps 850 / 900/1900 / 2100 with EDGE / GPRS 850 / 900/1800 / 1900 network.
For physical connections, it has an HDMI
port, a MicroUSB 2.0 slot, and a 3.5
mm headphone jack.
The rest of features are 3.5 -
mm stereo
headphone, Digital compass, Gyroscope, Accelerometer, Voice commands, GPS, bluetooth 4.0, 30 - pin dock connector
port, Wi - Fi 802.11 a / b / g / n and Micro-SIM card tray
for 4G LTE models.
That means on top the volume rocker, 3.5
mm headphone jack, micro USB
port and power button all jostle
for position, in what is a particularly confusing design choice.
Finally, there is a micro-USB
port on the left side (which can be used
for both syncing and charging) and located directly above it is a full - sized, 3.5
mm headphone jack.
The ATIV S also includes a 3.5
mm port for headphones and a stereo FM radio with connectivity features such as Wi - Fi, 3G and DLNA.
The A1 also has a mini-HDMI out
port to its right side should you want to output to another device; a mini-USB in to the base side
for file transfer and charging from powered devices or the mains; a 3.5
mm headphones jack also to the base side to prevent obscuring wires getting in the way of the screen when in use; finished up with a volume up / down control to the right side and an on / off switch to the top.
This
port is situated next to the 3.5
mm audio jack socket, used
for the
headphones of choice or
for a hands - free communication headset.
4.5 - inch True HD IPS display (720 x 1280 pixels; 16.7 million colors; 329 pixels per inch screen density; Gorilla Glass) Onscreen QWERTY keyboard (with Swype keyboard enhancement) MicroUSB
port 3.5
mm headphone jack Communications & Internet Full messaging capabilities including SMS text, MMS picture / video and IM instant messaging Full HTML browser with Flash 10.1 Support Personal and corporate e-mail access with support
for Exchange ActiveSync as well as mobile e-mail accounts (Google push, Yahoo!, POP3, IMAP).
Along the top right edge of the device is a standard 3.5
mm audio
port for plugging in
headphones.
The Commando also has a volume rocker, programmable tactile key that can be set to launch a specific app, a lanyard loop, covered charging
port, contact points
for docking, 3.5
mm headphone jack and a power switch.
The ZenPad uses a USB Type - C
port for charging, a 3.5
mm headphone jack and a microSD card slot capable of holding up to 128 GB of additional storage.
For interface port and connectivity, the W30 equipped with a 3.5 mm headphone jack, Micro USB 2.0 port, Bluetooth and 802.11 b / g / n for ultra-fast connectivity on your wireless networ
For interface
port and connectivity, the W30 equipped with a 3.5
mm headphone jack, Micro USB 2.0
port, Bluetooth and 802.11 b / g / n
for ultra-fast connectivity on your wireless networ
for ultra-fast connectivity on your wireless networks.
That question can be answered in part with the same explanation
for Apple's decision to remove the standard 3.5
mm headphone jack (that's right, the new iPhones won't have a regular audio
port): waterproofing.
What it doesn't hide is the connectors required
for operation, and this means confirmation of a Type - C
port and a 3.5
mm headphone jack.
The device ships with a pair of
headphones, has a built - in 3.5
mm jack and a microUSB
port for charging.