Tag: earbuds
V-moda Vibe
March 27th, 2007 by Jasmine FranceThe V-moda Vibe headphones are a great option for style-conscious bass-addicts looking for some worthy portable headphones.
How-to: Buy the right headphones (part 1)
November 12th, 2007 by StaffHeadphones come in all shapes and sizes, spanning the gamut from small and sporty to large and professional. Junking the set supplied with your MP3 player is also the easiest way to improve its sound quality. We step you through the ins and outs, as well as the technical mumbo jumbo.
Photos: Macworld 2008's weird and wonderful
January 23rd, 2008 by Jeremy RocheFrom toilet roll iPod docks to tents for your MacBook, check out our round-up of the interesting and downright odd things on display at Macworld 2008.
Cygnett GrooveZone headphones
January 23rd, 2008 by Ella MortonMmm, shiny: Cygnett's gleaming noise-isolating headphones are a little flimsy but deliver solid audio.
Shure E3c Headphones
July 11th, 2007 by Steve GuttenbergThe E3c is an audiophile's delight, just don't expect Earth-shattering bass.
Grado SR60
August 15th, 2007 by Steve GuttenbergGrado's cheapest headphones belt out big sound with pint-size portable audio devices.
Shure E2c Headphones
May 22nd, 2007 by Steve GuttenbergThese small, cone-shaped earbuds offer excellent isolation and pro sound quality.
How-to: Make your digital music sound better
March 18th, 2008 by Staff WritersLike most good things in life, the more you invest in improving your music-listening experience, the more satisfaction you'll get from it.
Apple iPod Shuffle (2nd generation, 1GB)
November 6th, 2006 by Jasmine FranceStill screenless, the second generation iPod Shuffle is, according to Steve Jobs, the smallest MP3 player in the world.
Why noise-cancelling headphones are good for you
July 11th, 2007 by Staff WritersStandard headphones that come with iPods and other digital music players are, by and large, ordinary. Every time you hear a really loud sound, your hearing acuity decreases. Thankfully, the effect usually isn't permanent -- audiologists refer to it as temporary threshold shift -- but repeated exposure to high volumes will likely reduce your hearing ability. If you occasionally experience ringing in your ears after listening to loud music or other sounds, take heed. Nature's telling you to turn it down. If you don't, you will suffer some hearing loss -- and you'll never get it back.
Oh this is a good one I have been looking into how to play flac