The 3.5mm port, on the other hand, has to go, Schiller said, because the company can't justify the continued use of an "ancient" single-use port. He described the amount of technology packed into the iPhone, saying each element in Apple's phones is fighting for space, and it's at a premium. And while every iPhone 7 and 7 Plus will include a Lightning-to-3.5mm adapter, Schiller was a lot more bullish about the company's wireless-audio standard.
Schiller explained that no company had tried to deliver a wireless experience between your devices and your headphones that fixes the things that are currently difficult to do—and since there's only one major industry-wide wireless-audio standard, it's easy to assume that he's talking about Bluetooth there (though he didn't say the B-word out loud).
http://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2016/09/app...-cites-courage/The bottom photo I took this morning in an older A/V system we had in our conference room; I'm not sure what problem they were trying to solve but it sure looks odd!