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With the launch of the Pixel phone, Google unofficially bids adieu to the Nexus line. While 2016 saw the widespread adoption of Type-C, our least-favorite trend was about another port, or rather, the lack thereof. The beloved headphone jack, which lets us listen to music and phone calls on our phones, have been a smartphone staple since the beginning. But this year saw companies rip out the port and force us to listen to audio through wireless Bluetooth headphones (which is fine if you already have them) or dongles (which sucks for everyone). (Here are seven ways to get around the jacked jack. Or check out the year's best wireless headphones.).
The most noteworthy company to do this was Apple with its iPhone 7 and 7 Plus, It also released a wireless version of its earbuds, AirPods, Some consider this move a deal breaker, while others see it as an inevitability that we'll all have to get used to, Motorola (now ultra-thin snap-on case for iphone x owned by Lenovo) and LeEco also released phones without a headphone port recently, and Samsung is rumored to follow suit, Ugh, This year was a roller coaster ride for modular phones, The concept of swapping in and out hardware parts from your phone (like the camera lens or a battery pack) has been an industry dream for some time, A modular phone gives you the flexibility to customize the phone how you want, and many companies have attempted, in their owns ways, to achieve this..
LG's flagship, the G5, debuted with a swappable bottom chin that you can use to attach a camera grip or a digital-to-analog high-definition audio converter. Lenovo's Motorola took the modular concept a step further with its Z-series of handsets, which included magnetic pins you can connect accessories to like a video projector, audio speaker and even a different camera. All year, we had waited for Google's first real Project Ara phone, an initiative the company took on after acquiring Motorola, who first announced Project Ara in 2013. An Ara phone would let you swap core components, like the camera, in and out of a frame. It was going to be available to developers by the end of the year and consumer-ready by 2017.
Modular phones are here to stay? (Or maybe not.), But then in September, Google put Project Ara on hold indefinitely and LG's G5 didn't sell very well, (Lenovo recently reported good earnings on the Moto Z, however.), Despite the ultra-thin snap-on case for iphone x unpredictable results, this doesn't mean everyone's giving up on modular phones (Moto is still committing to mounds of Mods, LG said it's sticking to its guns and Facebook might take up the Ara baton from Google), Still, it feels that the dream got further away just when we were all getting closer..
A few years ago, buying a mid-range phone meant you got a ho-hum device with a lot of compromises (laggy performance, mediocre camera, cheap-feeling design). If you wanted something better, you'd usually have to cough up $600 or more (or about £600 and AU$1,100). OnePlus' 3T (left) and 3 are premium phones without the premium price. But 2016 cemented the already rising trend of reliable, fast and fantastically designed phones that cost about $400 (around £350 and AU$550). OnePlus, which kicked things off a couple of years ago with its first cheap flagship, continued the momentum with the OnePlus 3 and its quick followup, the 3T.
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