this post was submitted on 05 Jan 2024
372 points (99.2% liked)
Asklemmy
43746 readers
1565 users here now
A loosely moderated place to ask open-ended questions
Search asklemmy π
If your post meets the following criteria, it's welcome here!
- Open-ended question
- Not offensive: at this point, we do not have the bandwidth to moderate overtly political discussions. Assume best intent and be excellent to each other.
- Not regarding using or support for Lemmy: context, see the list of support communities and tools for finding communities below
- Not ad nauseam inducing: please make sure it is a question that would be new to most members
- An actual topic of discussion
Looking for support?
Looking for a community?
- Lemmyverse: community search
- sub.rehab: maps old subreddits to fediverse options, marks official as such
- [email protected]: a community for finding communities
~Icon~ ~by~ ~@Double_[email protected]~
founded 5 years ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
Headphones/ear buds. It really comes down to your use case. If you listen to podcasts and audiobooks 90% of the time then you only need good enough which is typically around $40.
I can't go back to cheap headphones, really. It makes a BIG difference.
If you listen in noisy environments, I'd bet active-noise cancellation is good for your hearing though
Ooof, I dunnoβ¦ You can probably get by with cheap headphones, but theyβre probably one of the objects youβll spend the most time with and a good set can really make a difference. Good noise cancelling is essentially a requirement for me to live.
Hard disagree. I mean yeah, if you're only listening to speech, garbage quality headphones are where it's at.
But if you listen to music, a decent pair makes an absolute world of difference. It's like night and day. Like comparing a tin can to a music concert.
You don't have to spend a zillion dollars, though. A good set can absolutely still be had for cheap, but you just have to do your research first.
Yeah, I went from 20$ ear bucks to 60$ ones and I can absolutely hear the difference in music as well as get nicer experience (e.g. longer battery drain). Worth it, since I often listen to music on walks.
Personally I had way too many quality issues at that price range. An earbud would be randomly quieter than the other, the battery of an earbud would die, the Bluetooth would suck, or they would be unusable for phone calls. I bought refurbished $100-something headphones for $70 and haven't needed to buy any more since.
No way. I got a pair of Phillips Fidelio open cans, and they are absolutely incredible.
For podcasts and audiobooks and even incidental music listening $10 panasonic buds go the distance for me.
When I'm sitting down to enjoy music at home, then it's the $80 sony studio monitors. Still excellent value.
Give me my headphone socket back, phone makers :(
I have multiple LG HB800 Bluetooth headsets that you wear around your neck. 50 backs a piece, great noise cancelling , great sound, and 5 years on and they're still running for a complete day.
Last year bought a set of Sony Bluetooth earbuds, we're reviewed everywhere as the best at 350 dollars. They have half the volume, half the time I can't hear people on calls, the noise cancellation was shit, and battery life new was about 4-5 hours, and now after a bit over a year, battery life is 5 minutes so I can throw them away.
Yup, really wanted ANC ones for on the train and very happy with my β¬50 Edifiers. Sound fine and the ANC is good. Watched tons of reviews on XM5s and Bose QCs which only seem to offer meaningless improvements.
I do also own good cans and DAC for when I'm at home, but paying over β¬300 euros for something you'll only use in noisy environments and fussing over audio quality you won't be able to optimally enjoy anyways is silly.
As an audiophile I agree. There are now a lot of quality cheap headphones and earbuds on the market and I still use a lot of my cheap ones despite have a pair of Sennheiser hd600s (300$).
For headphones use the Koss KSC75. For earbuds use moondrop chus, three are also some new cheap items and you should look at those too. Basically watch crinacle on YouTube. Also using an EQ to adjust the sound of your headphones can make them sound much better.
As a different audiophile I disagree. I lost my Fostex TH-X00PH and haven't found anything nearly so satisfying. I gotta have that wide open and unrestrained power coming from my cans and the difference is so so much!
Still though, if you're just into podcasts just shoot for convenience features. Any true wireless earbuds will be fine. I like the Soundpeats H1. $90 and they can thump better than my liberty pro 3.
Something I didn't elaborate on is that even though a lot of cheap audio gear is pretty good now, some expensive cans are still mindblowing. I also didn't mention that I still use my Sennheiser everyday and love them to death, as well as loving my koss pair.
I managed to get my hands on a second hand HD598! I missed them so much. Now I gotta find a Sansa clip+ second hand and put rockbox on it.
I'm admittedly not a huge audiophile, and these days I don't have many uses for earbuds or headphones in my daily life, but while $40 or so earbuds used to serve me just fine sound-wise, but I went through a lot of them. My earbuds lived a rough life, getting mangled up in my pockets, bags, the occasional trip through the washing machine, etc.
Then I got a pair of Shure earbuds after doing a bit of searching around for the most indestructible ones. I didn't get their highest -end model, I think they ran me about $100, but they've held up for like a decade at this point. Part of it is probably that I'm a bit more careful with them than I was with cheaper buds, but they've still seen plenty of abuse and neglect.
They don't get much use anymore since my phone doesn't have a headphone jack, but I'm pretty sure I can buy a Bluetooth adapter or USB cable and slap it on them if I felt the need because the cable is replaceable, which is nice.
I haven't gone earbud shopping in a decade so I can't really say if their quality has held up, or if there are better options today. I haven't quite gotten onboard with Bluetooth buds yet, so I can't really comment on them.
I never had expensive headphones, but I had gaming headsets, which are not cheap here, and they are mostly bad. Now I use IEMs because there's a lot of really cheap options that are great.