Philips Tips Battery-Free Noise-Canceling Headphones
Welcome to a Biomedical Battery specialist of the Philips Battery
One of the bigger annoyances with a typical pair of noise-canceling headphones—active ones, that is—is that you have to lug around an extra set of batteries. If your headphone batteries die, the headphones themselves will still work (of course). You'll just lose out on the lovely, somewhat-silence that their active noise-canceling technology provides.
At least, that how it's typically been. Philips is launching a brand-new pair of noise-canceling headphones that will only work with Apple devices—newer Apple devices, that is—but for good reason. Like the older Fidelio MDL headphones, Philips' new headphones connect to the Lightning port on whichever iOS device it is that you happen to be lugging around. Only instead of just throwing sound out to your ears, the Lightning port will actually power the headphones' noise-canceling features themselves.
In essence, your iPhone will become the headphones' giant battery with likr Philips A3 Battery, Philips M3516A Battery, Philips M4735A Battery, Philips ME202C Battery, Philips Pagewriter 100 Battery, Philips Pagewriter 200 Battery, Philips Pagewriter 300 Battery, Philips Suresign VS2 Battery, Philips Suresign VS3 Battery, Philips Suresign VM4 Battery, Philips Suresign VM6 Battery, Philips Suresign VM8 Batterypack. Before you start worrying about that little iOS battery life percentage indicator plummeting while you burn through Taylor Swift's latest hits on a six-hour flight, there's a little hope. A Philips spokesperson, talking to The Verge, indicated that the headphones' power requirements shouldn't "significantly downgrade your battery life." Of course, your significant is different from someone else's significant, but Apple reportedly seems to limit the ability of devices to suck a ton of power from an available Lightning port.
So, perhaps you'll be able to get through quite a few albums in blissful, white-noise-generated silence.
"The Philips Fidelio NC1L headphones combine advanced Active Noise Canceling technology with all the advantages of a direct digital connection to your iOS device," said Wiebo Vaartjes, CEO of WOOX Innovations, in a statement. "Following the launch of our first Lightning-enabled headphones, the Philips Fidelio M2L, we're proud to announce another world first. Now you can immerse yourself in authentic sound without distraction, no matter how long your journey."
The Philips NC1L headphones, as they're known, should go on sale in April. The on-ear headphones will set you back $300 and, no, we don't know if Philips plans to make this kind of a headphone in any other styles (over-the-ear, anyone?).
For more, check out PCMag's roundup of The Best Noise-Canceling Headphones.
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