I am not sure how you find it practical. IN my view that is the most inconvenient thing. Did you see any professional Sound Recording is done on Bluetooth devices? Or any professional performance on BT? And even if you place them in Charger case and they are always charged, ultimately you need to keep charging them. That is inconvenient thing actually.
The last post was my shot across the bow. If you continue to not make any attempt to understand what I'm saying, I'll talk past you and you won't like it. This is the last time I answer your questions respectfully.
I am not sure how you find it practical.
I am happy to explain why it's practical.
When I leave the house, I have my iPhone and my AirPods Pros in my shirt pocket. The phone I am already carrying. The AirPods are smaller than a box of tictacs. If I want to listen to music, I just put the AirPods in my ear and they connect automatically. I have Apple Music and I can listen to just about any album I want. I say, "Siri, play Talking Heads" and the music starts. I don't need to fumble with plugging in a jack. I can even do this while I'm driving without my eyes leaving the road. In my car, I have a 3.5 mm jack to plug into the car stereo, but I don't use it. Not because I don't have the ability to plug my phone into the car, but because the damn jack shorted out from being plugged and unplugged so many times. If my phone's ports shorted out like that, I would be royally pissed. It also is much more convenient to have the phone sitting on the seat next to me without being tethered to it by my ears. If I want to stop listening, I just pull out the AirPods and the music stops playing and my phone goes to sleep. I toss the AirPods in the change well and they go to sleep too. When I reach my destination, I put the AirPods back in the case and they immediately start charging. If I had wired headphones, it would be much less convenient.
Bluetooth sound quality has no match of Wired headset.
That is not true. My iPhone uses AAC for Bluetooth which is completely transparent. You can do a line level matched, direct A/B switched, blind comparison for yourself between lossless and AAC Bluetooth and I defy you to discern any difference. Back in the early days of Bluetooth, codecs were not transparent. That isn't the case any more.
Did you see any professional Sound Recording is done on Bluetooth devices?
I am a professional in the TV business. I've supervised recording sessions and mixes. Professionals use calibrated speakers to monitor sound in the studio and listen critically. They don't use headphones for that. The only time headphones are used, it is for playback in recording where they need to isolate the performer from the playback. Bluetooth would be perfectly fine for that. So would cheap beater headphones. But we aren't talking about working in a recording studio. We are talking about listening to commercially recorded music in the home and on the go. Bluetooth is perfectly suited for that. Just as good as wired lossless.
even if you place them in Charger case and they are always charged, ultimately you need to keep charging them
On the table next to my bed I have a charging pad. I set my AirPod case on it and it charges while I sleep. I have a mag safe charger for my phone, which just sticks to the back of the phone and charges it wirelessly. I don't even think about it. When I go to bed, I toss my wallet and keys on the table drop the AirPods on the pad and stick the magnet to the back of my phone. No plugging in lightning cables. No chance of wearing out the lightning port. When I wake up, everything is trickle charged and ready to go. I don't even think about charging it.
Since I got my iPhone, it's never been below 75% charged, even with heavy use. My AirPods go 4 1/2 hours before running out of juice. I don't know about you, but I can't listen to headphones longer than 4 hours without my ears getting itchy. But if I happen to run them down, which has only happened a couple of times, I put them in the case for 15 minutes and boom! I've got three more hours. Charging is not an issue.
The reason you think Bluetooth is poor quality and inconvenient is because you don't use Bluetooth. You're basing your opinion on obsolete information and not actual personal experience. I use Bluetooth every day. It is high quality and extremely convenient to use... More convenient than hauling around wired headphones. At home, I usually listen with my speaker system because it is the ultimate in sound quality. I use headphones when I'm out and about. I've never had any portable rig that was more convenient than my iPhone and AirPods Pro. You can try to tell me that they don't sound great and they aren't convenient, but I'm going to just think you don't know what you're talking about. I know from experience.
By the way, you are wrong about the dongle too. Headphones don't pull out of it any different than out of a standard headphone jack, and it doesn't pull out of the lightning port unless you want it to either. The dongle costs $8 and sounds as good to human ears as an audiophile DAC. It is incredibly convenient and high quality. In case you don't know what it looks like, here is a picture of it.
Want to use Bluetooth headphones to listen to an older component that doesn't have built in Bluetooth? Amazon is packed with cheap tiny Bluetooth receivers/transmitters like this. One dongle does it all.
I have just explained to you how Bluetooth can be both high quality and convenient. You don't have to use it. Maybe you have some old school headphones that you have a sentimental attachment to. That is fine. Feel free to continue to use them. But when it comes to Bluetooth, get a clue.