Personal computing discussed
Moderators: renee, Captain Ned
Vhalidictes wrote:True, they are not isolating. I wore mine for many levels of Warcraft. In game, you can hear the darnedest things in the background sounds and tell where they are. But you can still hear anything going on in the house.The Grados look really interesting, but the total lack of isolation sounds like they wouldn't be good if I took them to work.
d@mn'd wrote:Another vote for the Audio Technica ATH-M50x, the detachable cable (straight or coiled) is very cool, but mainly due to the Bluetooth adapter purchase separately (Bluetooth Adapter-Amplifier BAL-M50X) or all together.
d@mn'd wrote:Another vote for the Audio Technica ATH-M50x, the detachable cable (straight or coiled) is very cool, but mainly due to the Bluetooth adapter purchase separately (Bluetooth Adapter-Amplifier BAL-M50X) or all together.
tanker27 wrote:d@mn'd wrote:Another vote for the Audio Technica ATH-M50x, the detachable cable (straight or coiled) is very cool, but mainly due to the Bluetooth adapter purchase separately (Bluetooth Adapter-Amplifier BAL-M50X) or all together.
WHOA they make a BT attachment for these!? <3
Vhalidictes wrote:It really depends on a the protocols the source and receiver support. My Onkyo receiver at home sounds great with bluetooth audio from my phone. However, I also have a Samsung bluetooth adapter and with the same phone, it really muddles the bass and clips the highest treble. I am really interested in hearing that Audio Technica adapter though!That's awesome! I'm interested... but is there any truth to the rumor that BlueTooth data transfers are lossy and can sound bad with decent headphones?
Vhalidictes wrote:overly-accurate very-flat headphones aren't fun to listen with for long periods.