Recent Articles
Hiển thị các bài đăng có nhãn Headphones. Hiển thị tất cả bài đăng
Hiển thị các bài đăng có nhãn Headphones. Hiển thị tất cả bài đăng

Thứ Ba, 27 tháng 9, 2016

Solo 3 review: Beats solves the 3 things that make most wireless headphones suck

Thứ Ba, 27 tháng 9, 2016 - 1 Comment

The Beats Solo 3 wireless on-ear headphones have up to 40 hours of battery life.
The Beats Solo 3 wireless on-ear headphones have up to 40 hours of battery life.
Image: lili sams/mashable

There are three reasons why wireless headphones mostly suck and I've steered clear of dropping serious dough on a pair: poor sound quality, frustrating pairing and weak battery life.

Beats' new Solo 3 wireless on-ear headphones solve all three. And they do so while looking stylish and recognizable on top of your head for hours.

Announced with the iPhone 7 and iPhone 7 Plus, the Solo 3 headphones improve on the Solo 2 in every possible way. 

They're still a little pricey at $300, but for the wireless pairing convenience and battery life alone, I think it's money well spent. Sure, you could get a pair of sleeker B&O BeoPlay H8 or noise-cancelling Bose QC35 for $100 and $50 more, respectively, but the Solo 3 hit the sweet spot.

Beats Solo 3 fold up.

Beats Solo 3 fold up.

Image: Raymond wong/mashable

From the outside, the Solo 3 look virtually indistinguishable from the wireless Solo 2. Beats could have went with some more upscale materials like metal, but that would have also made them heavier. Plastic will have to do.

As they are, the Solo 3 are super light, the ear pads soft and the adjustable headband comfortable to wear all day long. They also fold up and fit snuggly into an included case. 

They're available in six colors to match the newest iPhone palette: white, silver, gold, rose gold, matte black and gloss black.

A battery LED indicator on the bottom of the right ear cup shows you how much battery power is left and there are play/pause and volume buttons embedded into the left ear cup (these are real buttons, not touch-sensitive gesture controls).

Beats provided a gloss black pair that matches my jet black iPhone 7. I'm just a breathing mask, cape and boots short of being Darth Vader every single time I step out of my home. Do not buy this color if you hate seeing smudges and fingerprints. 

Pairing magic

Ask any person with a pair of Bluetooth headphones and they'll tell you pairing can be a real bitch. You never know how well the pairing process will go. There's always something that creates interference. Or your computer can't detect the headphones. Or the battery died and the next time you go to pair them, they don't.

The Solo 3 are one of four pairs of new headphones (the others are the BeatsX, Powerbeats 3 and AirPods) from Apple and Beats that contain a tiny chip called the W1. The headphones are still connecting to devices via Bluetooth, but the W1 chip essentially acts like an assistant, talking to Apple devices (iOS devices, Macs and Apple Watch) to make pairing dead simple. 

Pairing with Apple devices via the W1 chip.

Pairing with Apple devices via the W1 chip.

Image: raymond wong/mashable

Pairing through annoying Settings app.

Pairing through annoying Settings app.

Image: RAYMOND WONG/MASHABLE

And I really mean dead simple ... if you're pairing them to an iPhone running iOS 10, which I am. To connect, just press the power button for a second and place them near your iPhone. A screen slides up asking to connect, and that's it. No listening for beeps. No jumping into Bluetooth settings. No waiting for your headphones to appear on a list of nearby Bluetooth headphones. It even shows you the battery percentage.

Better, the headphones can pair with your Apple Watch, iPad or Mac easily using your iCloud login.

It feels good to finally be able to say, "It just works" — which is Apple's unofficial tagline of making complicated processes idiot-proof.

Unfortunately, if you're pairing the Solo 3 to iOS devices running iOS 9 or earlier, you won't get the pairing magic. Nor will you get it if you pair the headphones to an Android phone or other standard Bluetooth-supported devices; it's back to "pairing mode" and all that junk for you.

Battery champ

LED battery indicator.

LED battery indicator.

Image: RAYMOND WONG/MASHABLE

Aside from the W1's awesome pairing sauce, the chip also provides another major advantage: long battery life.

With the W1 chip, Beats was able to improve the Solo 2's 12 hours of battery life up to 40 hours, an increase of over 3x.

The best wireless headphones, some of which cost more than the Solo 3, only get up to half the battery life of Beats' new headphones. The only one that I could find that matches the Solo 3 on battery life is Sony's DRBTN20, which seems to have middling sound.

Beats was able to improve the Solo 2's 12 hours of battery life up to 40 hours.

On a weekday, I average about two hours of music listening during my commute to and from work, about four hours during the work day and another two hours when I'm at home. That's up to eight hours per day. I went five days before I ran the battery down from 100 percent. 

The BeoPlay H8s I tested last year needed to be charged every two days. The QC35s needed to be charged every three days for my listening habits.

If you don't listen to music as much as I do, you could easily go a few weeks without needing to charge the Solo 3 headphones again. Say you only listen to music on a two-hour roundtrip commute; that's up to 20 days of usage.

On top of that, the headphones have a "Fast Fuel" charging feature, which is basically like the quick charging features on many smartphones. With five minutes of charging, the headphones can give you up to three hours of listening time. That's more than enough to juice up in the morning and get you through your commute to work, where you'll be able to plug the Solo 3 in and charge them proper.

Also comes with a cable for listening without eating battery life.

Also comes with a cable for listening without eating battery life.

Image: lili sams/mashable

If you prefer, there's also a cable that plugs into the left ear cup for wired listening. The only downside is you'll need to supply your own 3.5mm headphone jack-to-Lightning or USB-C dongle if your phone doesn't have a headphone port.

Any way you slice it, the Solo 3 come out on top in terms of battery life. 

Solid sound

Image: RAYMOND WONG/MASHABLE

By now, you're probably thinking, "Ray, it's great they pair easily and battery life is awesome, but how do they sound? Do you they still sound like Beats?"

The answer is yes. But not like the old Monster-era Beats when they were tuned mainly for heavy bass and sounded terrible for everything else.

The Solo 2 reworked the sound for a wider range of music and the Solo 3 offer more or less the same audio experience. Mainly, they sound great on the low-end with dubstep and EDM and today's heavily audio-tuned vocals. 

That's intentional. Beats headphones are tuned for today's music, not Bob Marley or The Beatles. If you want a pure listening experience for the classics instead of Eric Prydz or Frank Ocean or Kanye, you'd be better served looking elsewhere. Beats headphones are made for modern digital music and your average millennial could care less.

So yeah, the Solo 3 sound like Beats and you know what? I have no issues with that. They're better than EarPods, but not as clean as more expensive wired headphones. For wireless headphones, they sound great to my "regular" ears in bed, on the subway and at work. 

They don't have noise-cancellation like the Bose QC35s, but the noise-isolation from the ear cups are quite good in blocking out ambient sound.

Image: lili sams/mashable

It's a mistake to dismiss the Solo 3 for a modest update because it doesn't look any different from the Solo 2. What Beats has achieved with the W1 chip in terms of convenience and power efficiency is game-changing. 

Years from now, when wireless headphones won't need to be charged for months, we'll be laughing at charging headphones every week (like I am now at existing wireless headphones that need to be charged every two to three days).

Audiophiles will never like Beats, but the company couldn't care less. Who needs to please audiophiles when the majority of people are streaming their music on Apple Music or Spotify, anyway?

Beats Solo 3 wireless on-ear headphones

The Good

Super comfy Sound great Insane battery life W1 chip makes pairing painless Comes in six colors

The Bad

Still kinda pricey Doesn't include any adapters for Lightning or USB-C

The Bottom Line

These are the wireless headphones you are looking for if you've got $300 to spend.

Thứ Tư, 21 tháng 9, 2016

Beats has a new pair of stylish wired headphones for you wireless haters

Thứ Tư, 21 tháng 9, 2016 - 0 Comments

Beats' new EP wired headphones.
Beats' new EP wired headphones.
Image: beats

The future of music listening will be wireless, but that doesn't mean good, old-fashioned wired headphones will disappear just yet.

Beats' newly announced EP on-ear headphones, priced at $129.95, are designed to get people to focus just on their music. They're available in four colors (white, black, blue and red) and offer a no-gimmick audio experience.

"The build quality on [the EP] is absolutely exceptional," Luke Wood, president of Beats Electronics, told Mashable. "The sound is beautiful and it's extremely simple. It's really the entry point into the brand."

Image: BEATS

Image: BEATS

I got to try a pair of EPs and briefly listened to some music and they're, well, they're Beats. They sound good with solid lows and good bass — better than the Solo 2s (with wire attached) in my opinion, but obviously nowhere near as good more expensive headphone geared at audiophiles. 

But again, they're not designed for audiophiles; the headphones have just enough kick to sound better than most average headphones and magnitudes better than the pack-in EarPods or earbuds that come with iPhones and other phones. 

The EPs fit comfortably on my head, the ear cups are cushiony, and the stainless steel-reinforced frame and friction adjustment sliders are solid. They definitely didn't feel cheap.

Like all Beats, the headphones have a built-in RemoteTalk control for mic, Siri and music playback controls.

One thing that Beats got right from the start was making its headphones fashionable. From offering tons of different colors to a clean design, Beats, whether you like them or not, look cool. All the cool kids wear them and everyone knows it.

And now they sound a lot better, too. So it might be good to clean your ears, maybe take a break from the 24/7 world and learn how to appreciate music. You might surprise yourself and hear things in your favorite songs that you never did before.

Image: BEATS

Image: BEATS

Thứ Hai, 4 tháng 7, 2016

Hands on with Nura headphones that adapt to your unique hearing profile

Thứ Hai, 4 tháng 7, 2016 - 0 Comments

Https%3a%2f%2fblueprint-api-production.s3.amazonaws.com%2fuploads%2fcard%2fimage%2f134658%2fnura_headphones_25may16266
Nura headphones will adapt to your unique hearing profile.
Image: nura

Just as with vision, no two people have the same hearing, so why should headphones be one size fits all?

Off the back of a successful Kickstarter that has so far earned A$1.2 million ($875,395), Melbourne-based startup Nura has created a unique pair of headphones that aim to adapt sound exactly for your ears. On Monday, Nura cofounders Luke Campbell and Kyle Slater dropped by the Mashable Australia office to give a demonstration of the product and talk us through the technology.

Starting in 2015, Campbell and Slater, along with cofounder Dragan Petrovic, decided to try and build a genuinely adaptive pair of headphones. "We all hear differently," Campbell pointed out. "If we both stand in front of a speaker, we both hear different versions of the same song."

Nura

Image: Nura

The science behind the technology is based on the fact your ears don't just listen to sound, they also produce it. The team have adapted an otoacoustic emissions test, which measures the sounds created by the inner ear when the cochlea responds to sound, and put it inside the headphones. 

A sensitive microphone is built-in to pick up and analyse which sounds you hear well and which you didn't, allowing the headset to automatically be retuned to fill in any musical black spots.

The headphones have an in-ear and over-ear design, much like having earbuds inside a pair of noise-cancelling headphones. The in-ear piece measures hearing and plays mostly mid and high tones, Campbell said, while the bass plays predominantly though the over-ear component.

According to Slater, adaptive headphones could also help protect our hearing. "One of the reasons people listen to music so loud at the moment is because the headphones don't match their hearing very well," Slater said. "People turn it up because they want their earbuds to play better bass, and of course, at the same time, play really loud high frequency sounds that damage your ears."

Nura

L-R: Wilson Shao, Luke Campbell (cofounder and CTO), Kyle Slater (cofounder and CEO), Dragan Petrovic (cofounder and COO)

Image: Nura

As a bonus, the team have tried to account for that fact that feeling a song's beat is often a tactile sensation. The headphones have a special "Kick It" mode that increases the bass to powerful levels in contact with your skin. "It will feel like you're right in front of the speaker, but you'll have crystal clear, safe sound," Campbell explained. 

The headphones, which will come with wired and wireless versions, should be ready for market in April 2017. A pair will cost $399 (A$533) direct from Nura's website.

Trying out personalised sound

To give Nura's prototype headphones a rigorous test, I called in our Watercooler reporter Johnny Lieu, who is a DJ after hours, to also give them a try. 

The prototype we trialled currently has the signal processing technology as a separate component, but it will eventually be built into the ear cup. 

Nura's hearing test, which measures your relative sensitivity to 11 different frequencies, takes 30 seconds to a minute through a smartphone app. It's a little uncomfortable to listen to higher and higher frequencies, but they don't last long, and once set up, you can listen to music on any app. 

According to Slater, the calibration process should be repeated every six months to account for hearing changes.

Trialling the headphones on two songs, Björk's "Venus as a Boy" and J. Cole's "G.O.M.D.," it was clear the Nura headphones offered a much richer sound. Compared to my basic Samsung earbuds, the J. Cole track, for example, had much more detail and was more balanced. The Nura product also gave Björk's song a much broader soundstage and let me hear more of the instrumentation.

For my taste, the earbuds felt a little claustrophobic because of how far they protruded into the ear. Slater suggested the final product would be less invasive, however, as the trial unit relies on commercially available ear tips that will be customised in the for-market version.

While Lieu was skeptical at first, he was left convinced. "Listening to Bjork's 'Venus As A Boy' the Nura's brought exceptionally bright but not harsh highs and pleasantly warm mids," he said.

Nura

Image: Nura

"Perhaps the proof the technology works is through listening to different sound profiles in the app. Ariel's profile had noticeably duller highs and mids, thanks to her ear's supposed sensitivity to higher frequencies. It fares much better compared to the similarly priced Bose's QuietComfort 25, which has noticeably dismal sound quality. 

"My MEElectronics M6 PRO in-ear headphones fared better with the mids and lows, but it's the highs where the Nura smokes the rest of the competition."

In his view, the "Kick It" function added a a significant amount of bass in the outer cups and a touch in the in-ear drivers. "Kick It was admittedly awesome in the few minutes I tried it, but it could be fatiguing after an extended period of time," he added.

Ultimately, this is a promising product that will leave you wondering why you used lacklustre earbuds for so long. Nevertheless, while the Nura headphones feel perfect for sitting in a dark room and getting lost in an album, they feel a little inappropriate for street wear. The sound is so immersive it could honestly be disorientating for newcomers to audiophilia.

Have something to add to this story? Share it in the comments.

Subscribe

Donec sed odio dui. Duis mollis, est non commodo luctus, nisi erat porttitor ligula, eget lacinia odio. Duis mollis

© 2013 Tech Trend 247. All rights reserved.
Designed by SpicyTricks