Beats by dre how does it work




















They are lightweight wired headphones reinforced with stainless steel, which helps with durability, according to Beats. You can also adjust these headphones with vertical sliders for a custom fit, use RemoteTalk for hands-free phone calls, and listen to music. The urBeats3 are the entry-level Beats wired earbuds and feature dual-chamber acoustics, which the brand claims will "synchronize sound" and "provide natural tonality" when listening to music.

Beats says their magnetic earbuds are ergonomic and feature a flat cable, which is tangle-proof. Additionally, these earbuds come with a few ear tip options so you can help customize your fit and RemoteTalk for hands-free use — from playing music to activating Siri and taking phone calls.

You can use the speaker while watching movies on your outdoor projector screen , toss it in your beach bag for music on-the-go or take phone calls. IE 11 is not supported. For an optimal experience visit our site on another browser. Follow Select. By Nicole Saunders. Beats by Dre brand guide To help inform your next potential tech purchase, we put together a brief overview of Beats headphones, earphones and that speaker with an eye toward how each may work best with your budget, needs and lifestyle.

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To learn more or opt-out, read our Cookie Policy. Beats tried to do a lot at once — probably too much — with its new earbuds. If you buy something from a Verge link, Vox Media may earn a commission. See our ethics statement. With its latest pair, Beats is hoping to attract a much wider audience.

For the first time in Beats earbuds, they include active noise cancellation. Beats says it has put an incredible amount of work into how the Studio Buds sound. The Studio Buds have a small, light stem-less design that loses the ear hooks of the Powerbeats Pro. They look downright miniature in comparison. And the weight difference is also substantial: each of the Studio Buds is 5.

Fit is a big plus; the Studio Buds feel extremely comfortable and never fatigued my ears at any point. Beats leaned on learnings from its prior earbuds and those from Apple as it worked on this design; it also went through some prototyping with consumers to land on the final form factor. The oval charging case is mercifully way smaller than the giant one that holds the Powerbeats Pro, and the red color of my review unit is quite eye-catching.

Despite the lack of Apple silicon, Beats has managed to replicate some of those conveniences through software. The Studio Buds even have special integration in Control Center: you can switch between noise-canceling and transparency modes from here just as you can with the AirPods Pro.

But the illusion only stretches so far. Beats Electronics LLC et al ]. We do know that Dre and Iovine reportedly spent two years trying different headset prototypes with their own finely-tuned ears until they found a design that, in their judgment, offered the best sound.

They also had various music stars -- Jay Z. Blige, and Bono and The Edge from U2, among others -- try out the headphones to confirm their verdict. Dre comes in. We probably ran about prototypes before we got it just right" [source: Jones ]. The Beats Audio technology in computers and phones is a bit less of a mystery. HP, which uses it in laptops, was kind enough to post a YouTube video that details its distinctive performance-related design features.

The latter includes a redesigned headphone jack that's been grounded to reduce distortion, and a more powerful amplifier with better stereo separation.

Also, the audio components on the computer's system board are isolated, away from other parts that might mess with the signals. But the key feature seems to be something called the "Beats Audio profile," which audiophile critics say is a fancy name for the equalizer setting, or EQ, on the computer's software operating system [sources: YouTube , Tunelab]. What that means, basically, is that when the computer plays a song -- specifically, the sort of a bass-heavy hip-hop music that Dre produces -- its software automatically jumps in and tweaks the frequencies a little more, for your benefit.

If you thought we had a tough time explaining how Beats Audio works, it's even tougher for us to say whether or not Beats Audio really produces superior sound. Part of the problem is that people have different opinions about what sounds good.

Some people hate distortion for example, while others actually like it -- evidenced by the popularity of the Kinks' hit "You Really Got Me," for which guitarist Dave Davies mutilated the speaker cone on his amp with knitting needles [source: Buskin ]. The tech Web site Endgadget, which in hired an independent lab to subject an HTC phone equipped with Beats Audio to extensive tests, came up with some intriguing findings.

Contrary to its advertising, reviewer Sharif Sakr wrote, Beats Audio doesn't actually make music that's more faithful to what the musicians played in the studio.

Instead, what the technology does is reproduce music the way that Dr. Dre likes it to sound. Now, that's not necessarily a bad thing. It tweaks music to emphasize the bass and vocals, while depressing the "less interesting" middle frequencies.

If you like hip-hop , reviewer Sharif Sakr concluded, Beats Audio makes it sound great. For orchestral music, in contrast, "activating Beats Audio does nothing good," he added [source: Sakr ]. But since most people who buy equipment with Beats Audio are more concerned about Wiz Khalifa than Yo-Yo Ma, that probably doesn't matter. The Monster Beats by Dr. Dre headphones, released in , garnered a positive review from the techie Web site CNET, which praised the sleek look of the headphones and also was impressed from a listening standpoint.

The headphones had "an exceptionally -- one might say shockingly -- crisp" sound that was "balanced in the mids and truly impressive in their delivery of high-end detail" without the muddiness sometimes found in the bass-heavy microphones favored by hip-hop fans, it reported [source: CNET ]. I have to admit to being amused by audio consumers' obsession with hearing a song that sounds exactly as the artist intended it.



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