A 3.5
mm port sits at the bottom of each earcup, letting you connect either of the included cables (one with an in - line remote and microphone, one without) to your side of choice.
Not exact matches
I've got a bunch of these
sitting around my house, ranging in quality, but all usable if I have access to a 3.5
mm port.
There's the now - default 3.5
mm headset jack and microUSB
port sitting above the left convenience key.
The 3.5
mm headset jack and the Micro-USB
port sit at the top.
A 3.5
mm headphone jack rests up top (someone please move these to the bottom) and the microUSB
port sits at the bottom of the device.
A microSD card slot, micro HDMI and volume rockers
sit on the right; a microUSB
port, 3.5
mm audio jack and speakers line the bottom; and the power button is on top.
The top edge of the Galaxy Player 5.0 contains a microSD slot, the bottom houses a microUSB
port and a 3.5
mm headphone jack, and the volume rocker
sits on the left, right below the power button.
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.
When it comes to buttons and
port placements, you have the micro-USB
port and the 3.5
mm audio jack
sitting on the top, whereas the power / sleep button and the volume rocker are placed on the right.
The micro-USB
port for charging and data transfers
sits in the bottom, while the 3.5
mm audio jack
sits on the top.
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.
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.
All three models come with a DisplayPort uh,
port, that
sits alongside two HDMI inputs and a 3.5
mm headphone jack.
Headphones can be attached via a 3.5
mm port on the side of the inline «remote» that
sits along the headset's cord.
The nanoSIM and microSD card slot
sits atop of the device, while the micro USB
port and 3.5
mm jack occupy its bottom.
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.
On the bottom, a 3.5
mm female jack along with a USB - C charging
port sit rather unobtrusively next to the indicator LED.
On the top
sits a 3.5
mm audio jack and an IR blaster and a secondary microphone, while at the bottom there is a microUSB
port and a primary microphone.
A Type - C USB
port sits on the bottom of this concept phone, along with a 3.5
mm headphone jack, and a loudspeaker.
The bottom side houses the microUSB
port, and up top
sits the 3.5
mm headphone jack in the center, with the Nano SIM card tray — which doubles as a microSD card slot —
sitting slightly to the left.
A high frequency 25
mm C - CAM Gold Dome tweeter and 6.5 - inch C - CAM dished cone bass driver,
sit above a front - firing HiVe II
port.
A Type - C USB 3.1 charging
port sits on the bottom of the Galaxy S9, along with a 3.5
mm headphone jack.
A 3.5
mm audio jack and
port sit on the bottom.
The 3.5
mm audio
port and pin - hole mic
sit on the top, between two antenna stripes, while the USB Type - C connector and another pin - hole mic
sit on the bottom, also between two antenna stripes.
Three buttons are found on the right side (volume, power, shutter), the USB
port sits at the bottom edge, while the nano SIM slot is positioned on the top left corner just next to the 3.5
mm audio jack.
On the bottom
sits a centered USB Type - C
port, flanked by a 3.5
mm audio jack and a single speaker.
There's only one speaker driver, and that
sits at the bottom of the phone, next to the USB - C
port and 3.5
mm headphone jack... yes, despite all the rumors OnePlus has decided to retain the legacy headphone technology for the OnePlus 5.
If Google did launch the Pixel 2 and Pixel 2 XL with no 3.5
mm audio
port, then it would be jumping on this bandwagon after having
sat back and watched how the transition has aged.
On the left edge is a volume rocker and a SIM card slot, and a 3.5
mm headphone jack and micro-USB
port sit on the top and bottom, respectively.
The right side has a volume rocker and power button, while a 3.5 -
mm headphone jack and USB Type - C
port sit on the top and bottom, respectively.
Most of the I / O, like the 3.5
mm headphone jack, USB Type - C
port, and single speaker all
sit on the bottom.
As for the new Sony Xperia phones coming this 2017, you can
sit back rest assured that the 3.5
mm headphone
port still lives on.
A single speaker
sits next to the right of microUSB
port at the bottom, and a 3.5
mm audio jack is placed at the top, located in the same right - hand position as the speaker.
On top of the phone
sits a 3.5
mm headset jack, and there's a microUSB
port on the bottom nestled between two speaker grilles.
The system features dual three - inch custom woven glass fiber drivers
sitting atop minimalist stands with elongated rear - firing bass
ports and a 3.5
mm input.
LG has kindly added a 3.5
mm headset slot in the top edge of the phone, where it
sits surprisingly comfortably in the curvature of the chassis, and the bottom edge is clear of any
ports or connectors.
Credit: Jeremy Lips / Tom's GuideA micro-USB
port and iPhone - like speakers line the bottom, while a 3.5
mm audio jack
sits on top.
Elsewhere, there is a 3.5
mm headphone jack, and it
sits alongside a MicroUSB
port for charging.
On the top
sits the 3.5
mm headphone jack as usual, with the micro USB
port on the bottom.
A 3.5
mm jack appears to be part of the package, situated on the top of the alleged ASUS ZenFone 5, whereas a USB Type - C
port sits on the opposite side, flanked by stereo speakers.
A 3.5
mm headphone socket is right in the middle of the top edge, while a Micro-USB
port sits at the bottom edge.
You'll find a single speaker, 3.5
mm audio jack and centered USB Type - C
port along the bottom, while the dual nano - SIM card tray
sits on the left side.