I know everybody wants thin these days. Thin as a matchbox is great, thin as a credit card is better.
So on laptops, netbooks and tablets, the trend is to mount connectors in notches, so that the center line of the connector lines up with the plane of the PCB. OK, it cuts height, I get that.
But more and more, I see these jacks placed right on the corner of the board! I can't believe this gets through any design review. When someone trips over a cord it often bends up the board or busts the dog ear of the PCB notch right off. (See attached photo).
So you might say "the customer broke it, it isn't our fault".
Well people keep coming into the shop complaining the manufacturer won't fix their problem under the warranty, they want more than they paid for the device to replace the mainboard, and they usually are swearing they will never buy brand "X" again. The board pictured is an ASUS model, but a lot of manufacturers do this.
Over the years I have noticed that the jack is the "Achilles heal" of most designs. PCB mounted jacks are prone to break on anything that does not sit on a desk all the time. The notch in the corner only makes this worse, a small dog could trip over the cord and break that!
In my opinion, the best solution I have seen is to attach a cable to jack and not mount it on the PCB at all with portable devices. That at least gives it a little flex. I don't know how much that adds to the BOM.
As designers, I thought you guys would like to see this. I wonder what is considered the best design strategy for connecting power to portable devices?