On Wed, 18 Jun 2025 11:29:58 +0200, Carlos E.R. wrote :
this is your opinion, not a fact. It depends on what are the
priorities of the owner.
(my phone does have a jack)
Hi Carlos, (this is a kinder gentler me, but always logically sensible)
It explains a lot when you claim that facts are opinions, as I've heard
that a lot - but usually they're not confused on an Android newsgroup.
I completely understand _why_ you think facts are opinions, but nonetheless
I have to explain, logically and sensibly why facts are simply facts.
There's no emotion involved in facts.
It is a fact that a phone with an aux jack or SD card slot possesses the
hardware capability to perform specific functions (wired audio output,
expandable local storage) that a phone without those features lacks.
When I say 'functional,' I'm referring to the range of built-in hardware
capabilities a device possesses without needing external adapters or
workarounds.
A phone with an aux jack has the inherent capability to output audio
directly to wired headphones, which a phone without one does not. This is a
direct hardware capability.
Similarly, a phone with an SD card slot has the inherent capability to
expand its local storage beyond its internal memory, which a phone without
one cannot do.
I understand that for some people, these features might not be a priority,
and they might even prefer a phone without them for design reasons.
However, from a purely hardware-capability standpoint, the presence of
these features means the phone can do things that the other phone simply
cannot do without external accessories or cloud services."
This isn't about whether someone wants to use these features, or whether
they're important to a specific user. It's about the objective fact of what
the physical hardware allows the device to do.
Think of it like a car. A car with a tow hitch has the capability to tow a
trailer. A car without one doesn't. Even if someone never tows a trailer,
the car with the hitch still possesses that extra capability that the other
one lacks. It's not about whether they use it, but whether the inherent
functionality is present.