Thứ Ba, 27 tháng 9, 2016
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. 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. 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. Image: raymond wong/mashable 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. 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. 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. 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? Super comfy • Sound great • Insane battery life • W1 chip makes pairing painless • Comes in six colors Still kinda pricey • Doesn't include any adapters for Lightning or USB-C These are the wireless headphones you are looking for if you've got $300 to spend.Pairing magic
Battery champ
Solid sound
Beats Solo 3 wireless on-ear headphones
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Thứ Năm, 23 tháng 6, 2016
Millennials raised on Star Trek the Next Generation are convinced that all future space travelers communicate via little Federation badges on their chests. They are wrong. Decades before Captain Picard touched his pin and commanded Number One to "Make it so," Captain James Tiberius Kirk was using a handheld communicator to declare, "Scotty, beam me up." That device was iconic and awesome, and now I have one in my hands. To commemorate the 50th anniversary of the airing of the first-ever Star Trek TV episode, CBS Consumer Products commissioned the creation of a 21st century Star Trek The Original Series Bluetooth Communicator. The Star Trek communicator comes complete with a wireless charging stand. Image: lance ulanoff/mashable To deliver this perfect piece of Star Trek memorabilia, The Wand Company scanned props used in the original 1966-69 Star Trek series. At a glance, it's virtually identical to one of the communicators Shatner and company held on the old CBS show. It features a metal antenna grill, composite body and metal edging. It's more than just a model, though. The communicator opens with a flick of the wrist and makes the exact same noise that devotees of the original series know and love. Under that grill is the classic circular moiré screen, which turns slowly during calls, a trio of colored lights and two buttons. The right-hand button accepts presses and toggles in four directions. Each position plays back a different bit of audio from the original series, including sound effects like the hailing audio and emergency signal, as well as dialogue from Nichelle Nichols as Uhura, George Takei as Sulu and Leonard Nimoy as Spock. Shatner's Kirk is strangely absent. Underneath all that verisimilitude is a functioning Bluetooth device that connects to your iPhone. Once paired, you can take and make calls through the communicator. There's no keypad or screen — it is a novelty item, after all — so you have to use hands-free voice dialing. When I pressed the right-hand button once, the communicator's built in voice said "Voice Command." I then heard the familiar Siri double beep. After that, I was talking directly to Siri on my iPhone. To end the call, I just closed the grill after which the communicator said, "communication terminated." The Star Trek Bluetooth communicator with its wireless charging stand. Image: lance ulanoff/mashable I could also answer calls through the communicator, but, since there's no ear piece and I basically have to hold it in front of my face and talk at it, I tried to avoid using it in public places. It is, though, perfect for open use at a Star Trek Convention. The Star Trek Communicator can even stream music through its tiny speaker, which is loud enough for desk listening, but that's about it. You adjust volume by pressing up on the right button. Included with the communicator is a wireless charging base complete with the Federation logo. It's imprinted with the words "U.S.S. Enterprise Standard Issue Communicator." The communicator also ships in a very attractive case and does come with a pleather holder and a micro-USB charging cable. You will pay dearly for all this, though. The Star Trek The Original Series Bluetooth Communicator lists for $149. Scotty, beam me up some extra cash. Looks like the real thing • Solidly built • Fun to use • Wireless charging • More than just a prop Expensive If you love Star Trek the original series, why wouldn't you want this? Have something to add to this story? Share it in the comments.It's a phone
What's in the box
The Star Trek The Original Series Bluetooth Communicator
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