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-   -   No longer in my ears (https://www.diybanter.com/home-repair/684806-no-longer-my-ears.html)

micky February 6th 21 04:38 AM

No longer in my ears
 
I have a pair of Bose Hearphones, cheaper than hearing aids.

I only use it at meetings (which I don't go to because of Corona) and to
watch Law & Order on TV (because all the other shows are loud enough but
it's not.)

The device consists of a yoke with the on/off button, two leds, a
charging jack, and the battery, and two earbuds.

Each earbud has 3 microphones, they say**, and when being put in my ears
they sometimes squeal, which the manual says is normal. Feedback, I
guess.

The question is, when both buds are no longer in my ears, the device
waits a while and turns off.

How does it know that the earbuds are no longer in my ears?



**And it can be set to amplify what's in front, what's in front and to
the sides, and sounds from all diretions, so it probably does have 3
mikes per ear.

As good as this might sound, there are one or two other competitors.
Before I bought this I googled but didn't find them. One will play the
last 10 seconds back again, and iirc will play the last 10 seconds at
reduced speed. I'd feel real bad that I didn't get that one, except I
probably wouldn't use those things, at least at a lecture. If I were in
the market, I'd look at the others before buying any of them.



Rod Speed February 6th 21 05:52 AM

No longer in my ears
 


"micky" wrote in message
...
I have a pair of Bose Hearphones, cheaper than hearing aids.

I only use it at meetings (which I don't go to because of Corona) and to
watch Law & Order on TV (because all the other shows are loud enough but
it's not.)

The device consists of a yoke with the on/off button, two leds, a
charging jack, and the battery, and two earbuds.

Each earbud has 3 microphones, they say**, and when being put in my ears
they sometimes squeal, which the manual says is normal. Feedback, I
guess.

The question is, when both buds are no longer in my ears, the device
waits a while and turns off.


How does it know that the earbuds are no longer in my ears?


I was going to say because it can no longer
shine a light from ear bud to the other...

One obvious approach would
be temperature or capacitance.

**And it can be set to amplify what's in front, what's in front and to
the sides, and sounds from all diretions, so it probably does have 3
mikes per ear.

As good as this might sound, there are one or two other competitors.
Before I bought this I googled but didn't find them. One will play the
last 10 seconds back again, and iirc will play the last 10 seconds at
reduced speed. I'd feel real bad that I didn't get that one, except I
probably wouldn't use those things, at least at a lecture. If I were in
the market, I'd look at the others before buying any of them.



Peeler[_4_] February 6th 21 09:18 AM

Lonely Obnoxious Cantankerous Auto-contradicting Senile Ozzie Troll Alert!
 
On Sat, 6 Feb 2021 16:52:10 +1100, cantankerous trolling geezer Rodent
Speed, the auto-contradicting senile sociopath, blabbered, again:


How does it know that the earbuds are no longer in my ears?


I was going to say because it can no longer
shine a light from ear bud to the other...

One obvious approach would
be temperature or capacitance.


IOW, you haven't the foggiest, but you will mouth off in your known
"all-knowing" manner anyway, you subnormal senile know-it-all!

--
"Who or What is Rod Speed?

Rod Speed is an entirely modern phenomenon. Essentially, Rod Speed
is an insecure and worthless individual who has discovered he can
enhance his own self-esteem in his own eyes by playing "the big, hard
man" on the InterNet."
https://www.pcreview.co.uk/threads/r...d-faq.2973853/

Paulo[_2_] February 6th 21 11:54 AM

No longer in my ears
 
On 2/5/21 11:38 PM, micky wrote:
I have a pair of Bose Hearphones, cheaper than hearing aids.

I only use it at meetings (which I don't go to because of Corona) and to
watch Law & Order on TV (because all the other shows are loud enough but
it's not.)

The device consists of a yoke with the on/off button, two leds, a
charging jack, and the battery, and two earbuds.

Each earbud has 3 microphones, they say**, and when being put in my ears
they sometimes squeal, which the manual says is normal. Feedback, I
guess.

The question is, when both buds are no longer in my ears, the device
waits a while and turns off.

How does it know that the earbuds are no longer in my ears?


Vacuum switch?


Bob F February 6th 21 03:16 PM

No longer in my ears
 
On 2/6/2021 3:54 AM, Paulo wrote:
On 2/5/21 11:38 PM, micky wrote:
I have a pair of Bose Hearphones, cheaper than hearing aids.

I only use it at meetings (which I don't go to because of Corona) and to
watch Law & Order on TV (because all the other shows are loud enough but
it's not.)

The device consists of a yoke with the on/off button, two leds, a
charging jack, and the battery, and two earbuds.

Each earbud has 3 microphones, they say**, and when being put in my ears
they sometimes squeal, which the manual says is normal.Â* Feedback, I
guess.

The question is, when both buds are no longer in my ears, the device
waits a while and turns off.

How does it know that the earbuds are no longer in my ears?


Vacuum switch?


Heat sensor, or capacitive sensor like your phone uses to turn off the
screen when you hold it to your ear?

micky February 6th 21 07:20 PM

No longer in my ears
 
In alt.home.repair, on Sat, 6 Feb 2021 07:16:40 -0800, Bob F
wrote:

On 2/6/2021 3:54 AM, Paulo wrote:
On 2/5/21 11:38 PM, micky wrote:
I have a pair of Bose Hearphones, cheaper than hearing aids.

I only use it at meetings (which I don't go to because of Corona) and to
watch Law & Order on TV (because all the other shows are loud enough but
it's not.)

The device consists of a yoke with the on/off button, two leds, a
charging jack, and the battery, and two earbuds.

Each earbud has 3 microphones, they say**, and when being put in my ears
they sometimes squeal, which the manual says is normal.* Feedback, I
guess.

The question is, when both buds are no longer in my ears, the device
waits a while and turns off.

How does it know that the earbuds are no longer in my ears?


Vacuum switch?


Heat sensor, or capacitive sensor like your phone uses to turn off the
screen when you hold it to your ear?


Maybe. If it's so high tech, I'm surprised the maker Bose doesn't brag
about it, about how they do it. But it does work right.

Rod Speed February 6th 21 11:04 PM

No longer in my ears
 


"micky" wrote in message
...
In alt.home.repair, on Sat, 6 Feb 2021 07:16:40 -0800, Bob F
wrote:

On 2/6/2021 3:54 AM, Paulo wrote:
On 2/5/21 11:38 PM, micky wrote:
I have a pair of Bose Hearphones, cheaper than hearing aids.

I only use it at meetings (which I don't go to because of Corona) and
to
watch Law & Order on TV (because all the other shows are loud enough
but
it's not.)

The device consists of a yoke with the on/off button, two leds, a
charging jack, and the battery, and two earbuds.

Each earbud has 3 microphones, they say**, and when being put in my
ears
they sometimes squeal, which the manual says is normal. Feedback, I
guess.

The question is, when both buds are no longer in my ears, the device
waits a while and turns off.

How does it know that the earbuds are no longer in my ears?


Vacuum switch?


Heat sensor, or capacitive sensor like your phone uses to turn off the
screen when you hold it to your ear?


Maybe. If it's so high tech, I'm surprised the maker
Bose doesn't brag about it, about how they do it.


Some don't do that to make it harder for their
competitors to produce as good a product.

But it does work right.



Peeler[_4_] February 6th 21 11:19 PM

More Heavy Trolling by Senile Nym-Shifting Rodent Speed!
 
On Sun, 7 Feb 2021 10:04:58 +1100, cantankerous trolling geezer Rodent
Speed, the auto-contradicting senile sociopath, blabbered, again:

FLUSH the trolling senile cretin's latest troll**** unread

--
Website (from 2007) dedicated to the 86-year-old trolling senile
cretin from Oz:
https://www.pcreview.co.uk/threads/r...d-faq.2973853/

micky February 7th 21 03:16 AM

No longer in my ears
 
In alt.home.repair, on Sun, 7 Feb 2021 10:04:58 +1100, "Rod Speed"
wrote:



"micky" wrote in message
.. .
In alt.home.repair, on Sat, 6 Feb 2021 07:16:40 -0800, Bob F
wrote:

On 2/6/2021 3:54 AM, Paulo wrote:
On 2/5/21 11:38 PM, micky wrote:
I have a pair of Bose Hearphones, cheaper than hearing aids.

I only use it at meetings (which I don't go to because of Corona) and
to
watch Law & Order on TV (because all the other shows are loud enough
but
it's not.)

The device consists of a yoke with the on/off button, two leds, a
charging jack, and the battery, and two earbuds.

Each earbud has 3 microphones, they say**, and when being put in my
ears
they sometimes squeal, which the manual says is normal. Feedback, I
guess.

The question is, when both buds are no longer in my ears, the device
waits a while and turns off.

How does it know that the earbuds are no longer in my ears?


Vacuum switch?


Heat sensor, or capacitive sensor like your phone uses to turn off the
screen when you hold it to your ear?


Maybe. If it's so high tech, I'm surprised the maker
Bose doesn't brag about it, about how they do it.


Some don't do that to make it harder for their
competitors to produce as good a product.


That certainly makes sense.

But it does work right.


I have Law & Order amplified and so when it comes to the commercials, it
can be uncomfortably loud and I have to fast forward through them. (or
turn down the tv and turn it baack up again.)

micky February 7th 21 08:27 AM

No longer in my ears
 
In sci.electronics.repair, on Sat, 6 Feb 2021 15:42:04 -0800 (PST),
bruce bowser wrote:

On Friday, February 5, 2021 at 11:38:27 PM UTC-5, micky wrote:
I have a pair of Bose Hearphones, cheaper than hearing aids.

I only use it at meetings (which I don't go to because of Corona) and to
watch Law & Order on TV (because all the other shows are loud enough but
it's not.)

The device consists of a yoke with the on/off button, two leds, a
charging jack, and the battery, and two earbuds.

Each earbud has 3 microphones, they say**, and when being put in my ears
they sometimes squeal, which the manual says is normal. Feedback, I
guess.

The question is, when both buds are no longer in my ears, the device
waits a while and turns off.

How does it know that the earbuds are no longer in my ears?

**And it can be set to amplify what's in front, what's in front and to
the sides, and sounds from all diretions, so it probably does have 3
mikes per ear.

As good as this might sound, there are one or two other competitors.
Before I bought this I googled but didn't find them. One will play the
last 10 seconds back again, and iirc will play the last 10 seconds at
reduced speed. I'd feel real bad that I didn't get that one, except I
probably wouldn't use those things, at least at a lecture. If I were in
the market, I'd look at the others before buying any of them.


This is about one of the other companies, the one that replays.
https://www.hearingtracker.com/news/...ose-hearphones

And it turns out they don't make mine anymore ;-( but they'er still
for sale reconditioned, and much cheaper than I paid. Although the
battery has been cycled many times maybe.

"News articles caution that there may be a link between Bluetooth wireless headphones like AirPods and cancer, but not all experts agree on the potential health health risks of wireless earbuds."


And I hadn't even thought about it, but this does have bluetooth, and
even though i never use it, there's no way to turn it off.

Infrared Headphones vs Bluetooth
Aspectcms.com
-- http://aspectcms.com/riverside-memor...uetooth-5873aa



micky February 7th 21 08:28 AM

No longer in my ears
 
In sci.electronics.repair, on Sat, 6 Feb 2021 22:07:06 -0600, Fox's
Mercantile wrote:

On 2/6/21 5:42 PM, bruce bowser wrote:
"News articles caution that there may be a link between Bluetooth wireless headphones like AirPods and cancer, but not all experts agree on the potential health health risks of wireless earbuds."


Which has been [baloney] since day one.


Well thank goodness for that.

Remember, it was "news articles" that posted pictures of Hillary Cliton
with an alien.


With a Martian or a Mexican?

micky February 11th 21 07:08 PM

No longer in my ears
 
In alt.home.repair, on Sat, 6 Feb 2021 07:16:40 -0800, Bob F
wrote:

On 2/6/2021 3:54 AM, Paulo wrote:
On 2/5/21 11:38 PM, micky wrote:
I have a pair of Bose Hearphones, cheaper than hearing aids.

I only use it at meetings (which I don't go to because of Corona) and to
watch Law & Order on TV (because all the other shows are loud enough but
it's not.)

The device consists of a yoke with the on/off button, two leds, a
charging jack, and the battery, and two earbuds.

Each earbud has 3 microphones, they say**, and when being put in my ears
they sometimes squeal, which the manual says is normal.* Feedback, I
guess.

The question is, when both buds are no longer in my ears, the device
waits a while and turns off.

How does it know that the earbuds are no longer in my ears?


Vacuum switch?


Heat sensor, or capacitive sensor like your phone uses to turn off the
screen when you hold it to your ear?


I almost never use the app that goes with it but I used it yesterday and
saw it has indicators that show which ears have the buds in them.

It only takes 2 or 3 seconds for it to know when I take one out or put
it back in!!

bruce bowser February 14th 21 01:49 PM

No longer in my ears
 
On Saturday, February 6, 2021 at 6:05:16 PM UTC-5, Rod Speed wrote:
"micky" wrote in message
...
In alt.home.repair, on Sat, 6 Feb 2021 07:16:40 -0800, Bob F
wrote:

On 2/6/2021 3:54 AM, Paulo wrote:
On 2/5/21 11:38 PM, micky wrote:
I have a pair of Bose Hearphones, cheaper than hearing aids.

I only use it at meetings (which I don't go to because of Corona) and
to
watch Law & Order on TV (because all the other shows are loud enough
but
it's not.)

The device consists of a yoke with the on/off button, two leds, a
charging jack, and the battery, and two earbuds.

Each earbud has 3 microphones, they say**, and when being put in my
ears
they sometimes squeal, which the manual says is normal. Feedback, I
guess.

The question is, when both buds are no longer in my ears, the device
waits a while and turns off.

How does it know that the earbuds are no longer in my ears?


Vacuum switch?


Heat sensor, or capacitive sensor like your phone uses to turn off the
screen when you hold it to your ear?


Maybe. If it's so high tech, I'm surprised the maker
Bose doesn't brag about it, about how they do it.


Some don't do that to make it harder for their
competitors to produce as good a product.


What is Bose supposed to say? Something about 'chermin engineering', like one or two car manufacturers do? Call them over in Austria at +43 (0)720 2050 430.

Rod Speed February 14th 21 04:30 PM

No longer in my ears
 


"bruce bowser" wrote in message
...
On Saturday, February 6, 2021 at 6:05:16 PM UTC-5, Rod Speed wrote:
"micky" wrote in message
...
In alt.home.repair, on Sat, 6 Feb 2021 07:16:40 -0800, Bob F
wrote:

On 2/6/2021 3:54 AM, Paulo wrote:
On 2/5/21 11:38 PM, micky wrote:
I have a pair of Bose Hearphones, cheaper than hearing aids.

I only use it at meetings (which I don't go to because of Corona)
and
to
watch Law & Order on TV (because all the other shows are loud enough
but
it's not.)

The device consists of a yoke with the on/off button, two leds, a
charging jack, and the battery, and two earbuds.

Each earbud has 3 microphones, they say**, and when being put in my
ears
they sometimes squeal, which the manual says is normal. Feedback, I
guess.

The question is, when both buds are no longer in my ears, the device
waits a while and turns off.

How does it know that the earbuds are no longer in my ears?


Vacuum switch?


Heat sensor, or capacitive sensor like your phone uses to turn off the
screen when you hold it to your ear?


Maybe. If it's so high tech, I'm surprised the maker
Bose doesn't brag about it, about how they do it.


Some don't do that to make it harder for their
competitors to produce as good a product.


What is Bose supposed to say? Something about 'chermin engineering',


Bose is a yankee operation.

like one or two car manufacturers do? Call
them over in Austria at +43 (0)720 2050 430.



Peeler[_4_] February 14th 21 05:19 PM

Lonely Obnoxious Cantankerous Auto-contradicting Senile Ozzie Troll Alert!
 
On Mon, 15 Feb 2021 03:30:52 +1100, cantankerous trolling geezer Rodent
Speed, the auto-contradicting senile sociopath, blabbered, again:



What is Bose supposed to say? Something about 'chermin engineering',


Bose is a yankee operation.


YOU are just an Australian troll, senile cretin!

--
The Natural Philosopher about senile Rodent:
"Rod speed is not a Brexiteer. He is an Australian troll and arsehole."
Message-ID:

bruce bowser February 16th 21 06:19 PM

No longer in my ears
 
On Sunday, February 14, 2021 at 11:31:06 AM UTC-5, Rod Speed wrote:
"bruce bowser" wrote in message
...
On Saturday, February 6, 2021 at 6:05:16 PM UTC-5, Rod Speed wrote:
"micky" wrote in message
...
In alt.home.repair, on Sat, 6 Feb 2021 07:16:40 -0800, Bob F
wrote:

On 2/6/2021 3:54 AM, Paulo wrote:
On 2/5/21 11:38 PM, micky wrote:
I have a pair of Bose Hearphones, cheaper than hearing aids.

I only use it at meetings (which I don't go to because of Corona)
and
to
watch Law & Order on TV (because all the other shows are loud enough
but
it's not.)

The device consists of a yoke with the on/off button, two leds, a
charging jack, and the battery, and two earbuds.

Each earbud has 3 microphones, they say**, and when being put in my
ears
they sometimes squeal, which the manual says is normal. Feedback, I
guess.

The question is, when both buds are no longer in my ears, the device
waits a while and turns off.

How does it know that the earbuds are no longer in my ears?


Vacuum switch?


Heat sensor, or capacitive sensor like your phone uses to turn off the
screen when you hold it to your ear?

Maybe. If it's so high tech, I'm surprised the maker
Bose doesn't brag about it, about how they do it.

Some don't do that to make it harder for their
competitors to produce as good a product.


What is Bose supposed to say? Something about 'chermin engineering',

Bose is a yankee operation.


Oh, I see:
Bose Corporation
The Mountain MS 236
Framingham, Massachusetts 01701


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