Apple launched AirPods eight years ago, and changed the world again

Posted:
in iPhone edited September 6

Apple was criticized for its September 7, 2016 unveiling of the AirPods, because it was the end of the headphone jack -- but the wireless earbuds went on to become a hit and spawn an entire industry.

Apple's original AirPods
Apple's original AirPods



Watch the 2016 announcement of AirPods now and what strikes you is how old everything seems -- except the AirPods. They were announced alongside the iPhone 7, for example, which seemed so good then, yet it is so ancient that it even has a home button.

The same launch presentation also unveiled the Apple Watch Series 2, which at best seems a little quaint next to the Apple Watch Series 4 and later, or especially the Apple Watch Ultra.

To be fair, there have been new versions of the AirPods too, including the addition of the much redesigned AirPods Pro and rather larger AirPods Max. Yet watching Phil Schiller talk through the then-new earbuds, you would buy that seven-year-old model today.

Looking forward and backwards



It was on September 7, 2016, that the AirPods were first announced, but it would be a long wait before anyone could buy them. Originally promised for October, Apple only just managed to get them out before the end of the year.

Officially, AirPods went on sale on December 20, 2016 -- for $159 -- but in practice you would have been lucky to get them until early 2017.

Only, that gap of a few months seemed long at the time, but it was nothing compared to how many years Apple spent working on AirPods in secret.

Or mostly secret. The first public mention of what would later be known as AirPods came in a patent document filed on March 29, 2011, although it wasn't published until October 3, 2012.

That patent, five years before the AirPods came out, included an illustration of a woman wearing what we would now unquestionably recognize as AirPods. She's got them with a Beats-like cord running between the two earbuds, but, significantly, with a break between that loop and a possible cord beneath it.

"[When] the listening device is detached from the corded portion," said the patent application, "a wireless signal that includes the audio signal is transmitted from the second part of the corded portion for reception at the first part of the listening device."

Detail from a patent illustration showing a cord between the AirPods -- but a break between that and the then-familiar lead
Detail from a patent illustration showing a cord between the AirPods -- but a break between that and the then-familiar lead



Consequently, we can surmise that Steve Jobs was fully aware of the AirPods project before his death in 2011, yet before that he had rather dismissed the whole idea. In 2005, he said that Bluetooth was just not good enough for earbuds.

"There are quality issues," he said, "the bandwidth isn't high enough, and even if it does get there some day, people don't want to recharge their headphones."

Apple's largest acquisition



Still, Jobs was always willing to decry anything until Apple had something to offer. Such as in 2008 when he proclaimed that "the fact is that people don't read anymore," and then launched Apple Books (then called iBooks) in 2010.

Whatever Jobs came to think about Bluetooth earbuds before his death, Apple thought enough of them to make its largest single acquisition in 2014. Apple spent $500 million on buying the technology of Beats Electronics -- and $2.5 billion on streaming service Beats Music.

Strictly speaking, Beats Electronics continued as an autonomous company, as compared to Beats Music which became Apple Music. Nonetheless, even at that September 2016 announcement, Apple unveiled a series of Beats wireless headphones right alongside the AirPods.

Apple hides its plans



Officially, 2016 was the first time we were supposed to hear the word "AirPods," but the rumor mill was as strong then as it is now, so news broke early. But the news was that a firm called Entertainment in Flight LLC, of Wilmington, Delaware, had filed for a trademark on the name AirPods."

No one was fooled in the slightest. Everyone suspected this firm was a shell owned by Apple, and much later on Apple just gave up on the subterfuge.

Create a problem, solve a problem



AirPods are so commonplace now, and an entire industry of similar devices has been spawned because of them, that it's easy to forget that their launch was so tied to the demise of the headphone jack.

Nobody even remembers the Lighting to headphone adapter
Nobody even remembers the Lighting to headphone adapter



It was in the same 2016 announcement when Apple revealed that its iPhone 7 would be the first without a headphone jack. A year later, Samsung was still mocking that move -- although after two more years it followed suit.

So regardless of any technical benefit to the iPhone -- Phil Schiller talked up how much space was saved by removing the jack -- it still helped the AirPods. Apple wasn't crude enough to make AirPods the sole option, though.

At the launch of the iPhone 7, it announced a new version of the wired earbuds that ended in a Lightning connector. And it launched a Lightning to 3.5mm jack adapter that it included with the iPhone.

Nonetheless, this all made AirPods seem the more attractive option.

Not everyone was impressed



It's hard to believe now, but AirPods are yet another Apple device that got criticism at the start, before becoming an astounding, transformative worldwide hit.

The New York Times did describe them as "some of the coolest audio accessories you can buy today." But it also summarized them as "difficult and expensive to maintain."

Apple's original AirPods were
Apple's original AirPods were "like tampons without a string"



Then The Guardian wittily described them as being "like a tampon without a string," and mocked how easy they were to lose. "They will disappear before your very eyes," said the publication.

Both of those pieces and most of the negative reviews were written after the September 2016 announcement. AppleInsider obviously covered that launch, but it waited until it could actually use the device on December 21 before making a conclusion.

"Apple's new wireless AirPods elegantly perform in a way that promises to put a smile on your face no matter how terrible of a day you're having," wrote Daniel Eran Dilger, "a beautiful thing given how many ugly days 2016 has thrown at us so far."

Changing the world, not the product



The Lightning to 3.5mm jack adapter is forgotten now, and so is the Lightning version of the old wired earbuds. But the AirPod lives on, to the extent that it became unusual to see a TV reporter using anything else during the COVID pandemic and afterwards.

Those distinctive white earbuds replaced the once equally distinctive but now rather old-fashioned white earbuds of the wired device.

And as rivals launched competing wireless earbuds into this space, so Apple kept pressing on with new and improved models.

A second generation AirPod launched on March 20, 2019, for instance. A third generation followed on October 26, 2021, too.

But it was perhaps that second generation that was key. For even though the original model was really delayed until 2017, that meant two years had gone by since people first bought them.

And that meant there had been time for those users to spot a problem Apple has still not resolved.

As new, the original AirPods promised five hours of continuous use (and more when occasionally returned to their charging case). But after two years, no one is getting five hours, or even all that close to it.

AirPod batteries decline after a couple of years
AirPod batteries decline after a couple of years



All AirPod batteries decline over time and there is nothing you can do about it.

So the question then, in 2019, was whether people would put up with shortening battery life. It was a question, too, of whether they would buy replacement AirPods when that happened.

There was another option, which was to take advantage of Apple's battery replacement service -- but it isn't cheap. Today you can still buy a replacement battery for any AirPods, including the first generation, but it costs $50.

Per AirPod.

That means $100 to replace both batteries. You can no longer buy the first generation AirPods from Apple, but the improved second generation is currently just $129.

Note that if you do have first-generation AirPods, you should probably buy that replacement battery now. For outside the US, Apple no longer offers a replacement battery for a first-generation AirPod.

We will never know how many people went for new AirPods or battery replacements, but we do know that enough people are buying new that Apple keeps releasing new models.

Pro and beyond



On October 30, 2019 -- three years and one month after the original AirPods were unveiled -- Apple launched AirPods Pro for $249. They had a redesigned body, quite possibly only so that people would know you'd sprung for the costlier edition.

AirPods Pro
AirPods Pro



But they also had active noise cancellation and while not as good as that in traditional over-the-ear headphones, it was startlingly good. Doubtlessly, it brought noise cancellation away from being just for audiophiles and to an audience who'd possibly never even heard of it.

It only got better, too, with AirPods Pro on September 7, 2022. On the sixth anniversary of what was now an entire product category, Apple unveiled a second generation of the AirPods Pro.

They brought twice the capability of active noise cancellation, they brought a new Adaptive Transparency feature. And they also increased the battery life.

AirPods Pro was now surely a match for over-the-ear headphones, except Apple didn't need it to be. Because by then, Apple had the over-the-ear market covered.

AirPods Max



Or at least, they had covered the market that could and would spend $549 on a pair of headphones. On December 15, 2020, Apple unveiled the AirPods Max.

More than any of the other AirPods models, the AirPods Max have gone through a clear cycle of dismissal, acceptance, and dismissal again.

Initially, the $549 price was just too much of a barrier. Then as people began to use them, the longer-term view was that they were expensive, but very good.

AirPods Max
AirPods Max



Only, that was the conclusion of an AppleInsider long-term review in 2022 and one thing that had not changed was the price. There had been no updates and no changes to the AirPods Max since launch -- and there still haven't been.

Yet Apple continues to charge the same price. Most recently, that's become a more acute issue since Apple's own Beats division released the considerably lower-cost Beats Studio Pro.

AirPods Max continue to feel like the premium product, but for $200 less, Beats Studio Pro is mostly offering more. Plus as Apple moves to using USB-C for its devices, the AirPods Max sticking on Lightning makes them an outlier.

There is, naturally, now a rumor that the AirPods Max will be updated to USB-C. But it still isn't expected to be soon.

The same rumors point to an AirPods 4 gaining noise reduction. Certain models are said to come with a charging case that includes a speaker.

Where AirPods stand today



As yet, all of this is rumor, at least for the couple of days before the September 9, 2024, launch of the iPhone 16 range, potentially, more AirPods.

Consequently, you would be unwise to buy AirPods ahead of that launch. You just also wouldn't be wise to buy AirPods Max until whenever they are next updated.

Yet just these few years after they were first announced, AirPods as a whole appear more common than any other headphones. They definitely created an industry, and they are definitely here to stay.

Apple was mocked for its AirPods, like it is for nearly every product it has ever released. But, just as with the Mac, the iPhone, the iPad, and the Apple Watch, it kept on making AirPods and they kept on selling.



Read on AppleInsider

Bart Ynubus
«1

Comments

  • Reply 1 of 24
    AirPods didn’t change the world. Stop the hyperbole.
    williamlondonbaconstangslow n easy
  • Reply 2 of 24
    Bart YBart Y Posts: 68unconfirmed, member
    When the AirPods Pro came out, I forever ditched the stupid, tangled wire mess that were wired earbuds.  Always getting tangled, always catching on something, being ripped out of my ears, and caught on clothing or stuff.  Made carrying anything over the shoulder impossible. 

    Now I can use both hands, iPhone in pocket or on desk, dash, and have music, podcast, radio, anything I can stream, and NO WIRES, no hassles.  Plus fast recharges, fast case charging, easy to find with Find My, and simple service and replacement when my first pair developed a feedback problem which was subject to a recall by Apple - 10 minutes in, 10  min to diagnose, 10 min for pair replacement all at local Apple Store.  

    The audio quality is quite good plus the noise cancelling is phenomenal.  I was at a wedding last weekend where the young DJ over posted the treble / high frequencies AND volume, making it painful to listen to any dance music or speeches.  Couldn’t even have a conversation across the table so Loud.  I popped in my Air Pods Pro OG, turned on noise cancelling, and all the noise just stopped.  I could hear the person next to me and across from me enough to converse.  For my handicapped daughter, she could not hear her iPad streaming her favorite show videos.  I popped my wife’s AirPod Pro 2 into my daughter’s ears, connected them to the iPad and turned on the noise cancelling. Her smile lit up the table!, she was so pleased.  She’ll be getting her own pair soon now, and I’ll be updating mine when the newest pairs are released.
    Alex_Vwatto_cobrassfe11ForumPostdewme
  • Reply 3 of 24
    When Apple announced the removal of the headphone jack on the iPhone 7, they didn't just present a dongle to the world.
    Many pundits blasted them for this, calling it dumb move, no one will get on board, they will loose sales, Steve Jobs never would've, etc...

    What they actually did, is show the world a much better way to do things. No more wires, instant pairing across all your devices. To their credit, they stuck to that vision and hindsight being 20/20, we now know that it was the right move all along. 

    John Gruber sometimes has a short segment on his site called "Claim Chowder".
    Alex_Vwatto_cobraForumPost
  • Reply 4 of 24
    AirPods didn’t change the world. Stop the hyperbole.
    They changed my world.
    SleepySheepbaconstangwatto_cobrajony0stompyssfe11ForumPost
  • Reply 5 of 24
    Personally for me the AirPods and later AirPods Pro were a game changer. Untethering from the phone or Mac has moved the simple headphone to become a candidate to an evolving iCloud connected platform.

    By embedding battery and compute inside the headphone Apple has set the stage given themselves optionality on how they want to evolve this part of the ecosystem. 
    AirPods to include eHealth features? No problem, can be done. Ever improving spatial audio functionality and body positioning measurements? No problem.

    They can take this emerging platform in some many directions and people who were focused on the narrow historic use case of consuming audio kind of missed the cruise liner sized addressable market of customer needs possible to address.

    Battery + Compute inside more peripherals and dumb gadgets increases the value of your eco system.

    Now what if Apple manages to embed Siri offline processing in the Apple Watch and AirPods? I am sensing AirPods will be my future gateway into Apple Watch which will retire my iPhone from being in my pocket to being in my backpack beside my MacBook and iPad Pro.


    Alex_Vwatto_cobrassfe11ForumPost
  • Reply 6 of 24
    AirPods didn’t change the world. Stop the hyperbole.
    Good job on missing the point
    williamlondonSleepySheepwatto_cobrajony0macxpressstompycharlesnssfe11paisleydiscoForumPost
  • Reply 7 of 24
    mike1mike1 Posts: 3,387member
    "Nobody even remembers the Lighting to headphone adapter"

    Not true at all. My wife has yet to find a wireless, in-ear headphone that she finds comfortable and will stay in her ear while even simple walking, never mind a real workout.
    She has a Lightning and a USB C to headphone jack so she can use her wired headphones with her phone or iPad.

    And I do still see other people with them occasionally, for whatever reason.
    williamlondonbaconstangwatto_cobradewme
  • Reply 8 of 24
    They changed the world?
    williamlondonbaconstang
  • Reply 9 of 24
    omasouomasou Posts: 610member
    AirPods didn’t change the world. Stop the hyperbole.
    You must not go out in public much. Almost everyone has white AirPods in their ears.
    williamlondonwatto_cobrajony0macxpressssfe11
  • Reply 10 of 24
    iOS_Guy80 said:
    AirPods didn’t change the world. Stop the hyperbole.
    They changed my world.
    Mine too, having tinnitus from the service helped me loud and clear 
    watto_cobrassfe11
  • Reply 11 of 24
    jSnivelyjSnively Posts: 433administrator
    https://photos5.appleinsider.com/gallery/56179-114090-888-Detail-from-patent-xl.jpg

    Me out here trying to figure out why my sleep paralysis demon is in an Apple Patent 
    baconstangwatto_cobranubus
  • Reply 12 of 24
    JapheyJaphey Posts: 1,772member
    AirPods didn’t change the world. Stop the hyperbole.
    Good job on missing the point
    What other point was there? It was literally the title of the article. Everything in the body was in support of this argument. Seems pretty 101 to me. Did your Jedi senses pick up another hidden meaning? 
    muthuk_vanalingambaconstangslow n easynubus
  • Reply 13 of 24
    dewmedewme Posts: 5,649member
    mike1 said:
    "Nobody even remembers the Lighting to headphone adapter"

    Not true at all. My wife has yet to find a wireless, in-ear headphone that she finds comfortable and will stay in her ear while even simple walking, never mind a real workout.
    She has a Lightning and a USB C to headphone jack so she can use her wired headphones with her phone or iPad.

    And I do still see other people with them occasionally, for whatever reason.
    I use the Lightning to 3.5 mm dongle a lot. I even use USB-C to 3.5 mm with my iPad mini. I like the AirPods Pro a real lot, but I still prefer listening to the bulk of my music with an open back headphones, or even a good closed back headphone, over the AirPods Pro. The AirPods Pro are stellar for watching & listening to Apple TV when there’s someone else in the same room reading a book or otherwise engaged. 

    Lots of people who enjoy music have several pairs of headphones with analog inputs. The arrival of the AirPods/Pro in no way signaled the end of conventional headphones. You can probably count the number of wireless semi-audiophile headphones on less than one hand, if you look around real hard. This will undoubtedly change in the future, but we’re not there yet. 
    edited September 2023 baconstangwilliamlondonmuthuk_vanalingam
  • Reply 14 of 24
    thedba said:
    When Apple announced the removal of the headphone jack on the iPhone 7, they didn't just present a dongle to the world.
    Many pundits blasted them for this, calling it dumb move, no one will get on board, they will loose sales, Steve Jobs never would've, etc...

    What they actually did, is show the world a much better way to do things. No more wires, instant pairing across all your devices. To their credit, they stuck to that vision and hindsight being 20/20, we now know that it was the right move all along. 

    John Gruber sometimes has a short segment on his site called "Claim Chowder".

    I'll never forget the absolute hatchet job the Verge attempted on the AirPods when they first debuted. They ripped on them so bad but ultimately had to go back and re-review them because people LOVED them and didn’t care about audiophile/tech reviewer priorities like lossless sound quality. 

    I fell in love with them immediately. I could watch stuff in bed without pillows or blankets ripping the cord out of my ears constantly. Literal game changers from day one and the rare product that is a massive success right out of the gate. 
    danox
  • Reply 15 of 24
    DAalsethDAalseth Posts: 2,951member
    Good for many, perhaps even most, but not me. They don’t fit in my ears. They don’t want to stay in and are uncomfortable to the point of being painful after ten or so minutes. I tried them once and never went back. 
  • Reply 16 of 24
    macxpressmacxpress Posts: 5,903member
    omasou said:
    AirPods didn’t change the world. Stop the hyperbole.
    You must not go out in public much. Almost everyone has white AirPods in their ears.
    Or they have knock off ones...either way while they didn't invent the wireless earbud space, they certainly changed the way people listened to audio from their devices and are still to this day one of the most popular things Apple sells every single day. 
  • Reply 17 of 24
    xbitxbit Posts: 397member
    On my morning commute through London, I'd estimate that two-thirds of people using ear/headphones are using AirPods. Apple's earphone used to be - rightly - mocked. Now they utterly dominate their field. 
  • Reply 18 of 24
    Yup changed my world too. 
  • Reply 19 of 24
    chasmchasm Posts: 3,491member
    I don't know if the AirPods Pro (I've not owned regular AirPods) "changed the world," but they did allow me to hear much more detail in the music than I ever did without resorting to much heavier headphones, thanks to their noise cancelling. I've read that a future revision of the Pros will have more intelligent noise cancelling, and if that's true I'll be buying those. If you don't want the bulk of over-ear headphones, AirPods pro are delightfully light and sound better than they should for their size.

    PS. Since AirPods Pro include silicon tips, I never have an issue with fit or falling out. That is the thing regular AirPods are missing, IMO.
  • Reply 20 of 24
    It seems pretty crazy to me that they changed the world. For me, they're unwearable because they fall out of my ears which is unacceptable to me. I was hoping that AirPods Pro would be better, but they also fall out of my ears. The battery life is also horrible. It's not just Apple, though. The only earbuds that stay in my ears are the ones with hooks, or ones that wrap around the outside of the ear, or ones that insert into the ear canal itself. I currently own Shure earbuds which insert into the ear canal which isolates noise passively. This greatly increases battery life. My next purchase will also be Shure earbuds.
    Edit: The AirPods Pro do stay in my ears just walking around. It's when I'm doing activity where there is a lot of vibration or head movement that they fall out. Like trail riding or when I'm on a riding lawn mower over bumpy terrain. My Shure earphones don't fall out no matter what.
    edited September 7 DAalseth
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