Connect with us

3 Tips For Buying Wireless Earbuds #shorts

With so many brands and styles of wireless earbuds on the market, picking the right one can be a challenge. CNET’s Lexy Savvides has 3 tips to help you make the best decision. Subscribe to CNET: Never miss a deal again! See CNET’s browser extension ???? Check out CNET’s Amazon Storefront: Follow us on TikTok:…

Published

on

With so many brands and styles of wireless earbuds on the market, picking the right one can be a challenge. CNET’s Lexy Savvides has 3 tips to help you make the best decision.

Subscribe to CNET:
Never miss a deal again! See CNET’s browser extension ????
Check out CNET’s Amazon Storefront:
Follow us on TikTok:
Follow us on Instagram:
Follow us on Twitter:
Like us on Facebook:
#earbuds #airpods #buyingguide

Continue Reading
Advertisement
5 Comments

5 Comments

  1. @Prence

    January 23, 2024 at 8:17 am

    I have AirPods and I love the noise canceling function, but sometimes it’s need to have a pass through like if I’m doing something where I have to be able to also hear the sounds around me. I wish Apple made it easier to switch between the modes without having to go all the way into the settings just to switch. Maybe have it so that you can switch modes by tapping on the ear buds themselves.

    • @BK-pc3ei

      January 23, 2024 at 9:59 am

      They have an easier way to change it from noise cancelling to transparency mode assuming you have a Face ID compatible device swipe down on the top right corner and long press on the volume slider.

    • @Prence

      January 23, 2024 at 2:05 pm

      @@BK-pc3ei really. I had no idea. Thank you. I have a iPhone 14.

  2. @Drrck11

    January 23, 2024 at 2:48 pm

    Tips for buying earbuds: Buy Jabra 75T.

  3. @RealLifeTech187

    January 24, 2024 at 11:39 pm

    Are you telling me there are people who don’t already know this?

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Science & Technology

Is There an AI Bubble? Two Top VCs on Valuations and ARR Inflation | StrictlyVC LA 2026

Is AI venture capital in a bubble, or are we just in the steepest growth curve anyone’s ever seen? At StrictlyVC Los Angeles 2026, TechCrunch’s Editor-in-Chief Connie Loizos sat down with Chung Xu, Partner at Basis Set, and Carter Reum, co-founder of M13, to cut through the noise. They cover… – Why this cycle is…

Published

on

Is AI venture capital in a bubble, or are we just in the steepest growth curve anyone’s ever seen?

At StrictlyVC Los Angeles 2026, TechCrunch’s Editor-in-Chief Connie Loizos sat down with Chung Xu, Partner at Basis Set, and Carter Reum, co-founder of M13, to cut through the noise. They cover…

– Why this cycle is different from cloud and mobile, and why it isn’t
– The ARR inflation problem VCs helped create
– How to find defensible companies when OpenAI and Anthropic are coming for every vertical
– What the SpaceX liquidity wave means for LA’s tech ecosystem

Continue Reading

Science & Technology

He Dropped Out of MIT at 19 to Build America’s Drone Arsenal. It’s Working | StrictlyVC LA 2026

Ethan Thornton started Mach Industries at 16, dropped out of MIT, and is now running six simultaneous defense programs: jet engines, cruise missiles, a surface-to-air missile system, and a new 40-foot VTOL strike aircraft just contracted by the U.S. Navy. At StrictlyVC Los Angeles 2026, TechCrunch Editor in Chief Connie Loizos sat down with the…

Published

on

Ethan Thornton started Mach Industries at 16, dropped out of MIT, and is now running six simultaneous defense programs: jet engines, cruise missiles, a surface-to-air missile system, and a new 40-foot VTOL strike aircraft just contracted by the U.S. Navy.

At StrictlyVC Los Angeles 2026, TechCrunch Editor in Chief Connie Loizos sat down with the Mach Industries founder and CEO for a rare on-stage conversation about what it actually takes to build a serious defense hardware company from scratch — and why the U.S. has no choice but to move faster.

Continue Reading

Science & Technology

90% of “American” Fish Gets Processed in China. This Startup Is Changing That | StrictlyVC LA 2026

More than 90 percent of American-caught fish is processed overseas, and often in China, before it comes back to the U.S. Shin K wants to change that with robotics, computer vision, and a vertically integrated supply chain built from scratch. At StrictlyVC Los Angeles 2026, TechCrunch Editor in Chief Connie Loizos sat down with Saif…

Published

on

More than 90 percent of American-caught fish is processed overseas, and often in China, before it comes back to the U.S. Shin K wants to change that with robotics, computer vision, and a vertically integrated supply chain built from scratch.

At StrictlyVC Los Angeles 2026, TechCrunch Editor in Chief Connie Loizos sat down with Saif Khawaja, founder and CEO of Shin K, and Delian Asparouhov of Founders Fund to talk about one of the most unexpected bets in venture capital right now.

They cover everything from the Japanese fish-killing technique that became a startup thesis, why American fish is now being imported into Japanese fish markets for the first time ever, and how Founders Fund thinks about contrarian bets in food and agriculture.

Continue Reading

Trending