3 features we never thought could go extinct on Smartphones

Looking at the types of smartphones being released by OEMs these days, it’s not hard to realize how well the smartphone industry has improved. Phones from 5 years ago are in no way comparable — spec-wise — to the present generation smartphones as some features we never thought would go extinct have been axed for better (and worse) innovations. Predictably, the next generation (5-10 years) smartphones would also look entirely different from what we have now; new features would definitely come to life.

While, of course, we are excited about the future, we talk about some features that are fast becoming a thing of the past; features we never thought would (soon) go extinct.

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1. 3.5 mm Headphone jack

Although man mid-range smartphones still come with 3.5mm audio jacks, you’d barely see a flagship device sport one — not when OEMs are now going totally “port-less”. The death of the headphone jack was initiated (and popularized) by Apple, the behemoth of the smartphone industry, when it launched the iPhone X two years ago in a bid to market its wireless earbuds — the AirPods. Almost immediately, many smartphone manufacturers began to copy Apple and did away with the 3.5mm on their flagships.

According to several manufacturers, the reason behind the elimination of the headphone jack on their devices include achievement a slimmer body form, improve water-resistance, and space saving for other key components. However, looking at from another angle, many OEMs (like Apple) killed the headphone jack to sell their in-house wireless earbuds.

Headphone jack or not, one thing’s for sure: audio devices and accessories with 3.5mm plugs would still exist. This is because manufacturers of audio accessories almost always make headphones with 3.5mm plugs. Besides, unlike wired headphones, wireless Bluetooth headphones reduce sound quality.

2. Removable Batteries

Unless the device is feature phone or a low-end smartphone, I really don’t think you’d find a mid-range or flagship smartphone with a removable battery. Devices with removable batteries were popular through the 90s and early 2000s. Now, however, we no longer have the luxury of keeping and swapping multiple spare batteries in and out of our phones. But have you ever wondered why removable batteries quickly faded out?

While we miss removable batteries, it’s pretty much understandable that non-removable designs allowed for waterproofing and water-resistance, improved premium aesthetic, reduced thickness, support for different battery shapes and also gave room for other features. However, about five years ago, we never thought removable/replaceable batteries would go “old-school.”

3. Physical Home buttons

Physical home buttons were also a BIG thing on major smartphones a couple of years ago, particularly when OEMs began incorporating fingerprint sensors in them. Almost all flagships from top brands like Apple’s iPhone, Samsung, Xiaomi, OnePlus, LG, etc had physical home buttons — incorporated with fingerprint readers.

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As the “bezel-less” craze started gaining momentum, however, the end of physical home buttons began. Smartphone displays got bigger, fingerprint sensors moved to the rear & under the display, and there were no real-estate available for physical home buttons.

Are there any other worthy addition to this list? What feature(s) do you miss the most on a smartphone and wish you could have back? What features do you think would go extinct in the coming years?

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