(Sorry if it’s a miss, this community looked the most fitting)

After mentioning them somewhere in comments, I actually bought Shokz after years of sitting curious. There are a few brands that do them, so it doesn’t matter what’s the brand is. I bought what I’ve heard of and the cheapest model I could find at that.

So, what’s the trick? As I’m cycling, walking and running a lot, I needed a headphone solution to be aware of my surroundings. They don’t cover ears and don’t actually emmit sound - they vibrate and make your bones serve as a membrane.

The obvious minus is that in a bus or other loud setting you can’t hear shit. That’s by design. And, logically but somehow absurdly, by shutting your ear with a finger, you can make yourself hear it okay. I did a full circle here, returning to the old headphones isolation problem, heh.

But what impressed me more, they do feel like some kind of a cyberpunk prosthetic. You can wear them all day and even the cheapest one that promises 6hr of activity lasts days on the idle. But as you call someone or watch a vid – here they are, with a little to no latency. Honestly, I feel like if there’d be implants, that’s one of the basic ones we can try first. It’s hands-free device with a bonus of being more stealthy and not isolating you from the world.

As a cheapskate audiophile who stayed with cords for a long time, I can say that the sound is okay. Keeping in mind that producers can’t control the skull of a wearer, they can’t nail the ideal sound, but I’m impressed with how nice IDM and metal plays on them - something akin to budget Senh, AKG and Audiotechnica. And unlike cheap Sony, they don’t put up low freqs, that’s a plus. BUT when I shared it with others, people in body reported less effectiveness due to thickness of skin and under-dermal stuff, so it’s better to test it if you aren’t skinny as a skeleton.

After being so open about plus sides, I’m to talk minuses. Since the software is proprietary, it doesn’t have many controls and is very weird sometimes. As I bought a model that was for internal chinese market originally, it talked to me in Chinese, and it can only be switched to another language before any pairing, so only after unpairing I could’ve chosen English – and the same combination of button presses when paired was reserved to calling the last called number, so I fucked up a lazy weekend morning for a friend of mine calling them 4-5 times, damn it. Ah, and it supports dual pairing with a PC and a smartphone, but as I tested it this function worked weird and I sometimes manually disconnected them. Walking&working distance from a source device is around the second or third room, that fits most office and home listening cases. I could’ve probably wished for it to have an option to pick lesser distance since I don’t usually have even a meter between my smartphones and them.

Ah, and going back to the bus problem - the obvious downside that you want to turn them to 100% volume that you don’t feel, but your ears do. After the first day when I needed to move a lot in loud contexts and thus put them on max, I had a headache, because although I didn’t register the volume, my head had a first row concert experience. So if you use these, keep that in mind too.

Have you tried them, is there a topic I haven’t covered? As you can tell, I’m happy with them, so I would be biased. It’s just with VR stuff, even from Apple, I feel like we underlook existing tech that already serves us as expander of our life experiences and powers.

  • CaptPretentious@lemmy.world
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    7 months ago

    I’m partial deaf… These let me hear music in a way I never could. I remember being in a quiet place and listened to an audio sample… Hearing an instrument on my bad side was like listening to it for the first time. Hearing in stereo is just wild when you have only heard in mono your whole life

    • Akasazh@feddit.nl
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      7 months ago

      Beethoven had the same condition. He had a special bracket mounted to his piano he could bite on, in order to make his skull resonate, hence him being able to hear the music again.

      • shrugs@lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        For real? Never heard of that. Super interesting if they did shit like that back then

  • Dr. Wesker@lemmy.sdf.org
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    7 months ago

    Nice writeup.

    I need to replace my aged pair.

    A solution to one of the bus problems, is to carry a pair of those mushy ear plugs. If you put them in, you regain isolation, without having to crank the volume and hurt your ears.

    One of my gripes is the behind-the-head design. You simply can’t wear them comfortably if you’re reclining or laying down.

    • mipadaitu@lemmy.world
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      7 months ago

      Tilt them up so the band is on the crown of your head instead across the top of your neck. That’s what I do when I’m laying down or wearing a stocking cap.

    • MentalEdge@sopuli.xyz
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      7 months ago

      I just tilt them up, wear them like normal headphones.

      Bone conduction doesn’t care what position or where exactly the transducer is. The sound won’t be exactly as intended but it works.

    • andrew_bidlaw@sh.itjust.worksOP
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      7 months ago

      Yep, you are right, also in autumn and winter both the high collar of a jacket and the hat touch it. In a place with a various weather it’s harder to forget they are on.

      With Shokz especially, it could’ve been undone if the cord was soft, like in many connected headphones. But for some reason they did it hard bending, although heaphones sit without problems by themselves, even when doing sports. For something like Miami or Krasnodar it’s no problem, but for my region of Russia with crazy overnight tilts of weather and states with the same instability, it can be a problem.

  • geography082@lemm.ee
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    7 months ago

    Have these Chinese devices been tested / approved by any reasonable governmental health organism?.

    • andrew_bidlaw@sh.itjust.worksOP
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      7 months ago

      In this very post I pointed out that you don’t register the volume if there’s a loud noise around you, that can cause headaches. As people buy them from official stores, I guess they are as safe as usual headphones. And this problem is usually dealt with on source device’s end – my chinese phone shows a notification if I exceed the recomended volume and if I use headphones for too long.

  • Resol van Lemmy@lemmy.world
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    7 months ago

    I’m sure DankPods made a video about bone conduction headphones on YouTube. He tested 3 different models from different manufacturers and… well, he had quite a lot to say about them, especially when comparing them to sunglasses that are also headphones.

    • andrew_bidlaw@sh.itjust.worksOP
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      7 months ago

      Can you post a link? There’s a lot of bad and good stories about them in this thread. It’d be great if persons considering these devices would read them first.

  • amzd@kbin.social
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    7 months ago

    Heard a colleague be very positive about his Shokz so I thought I’d get some bone conducting headphones too, got the Phillips ones and I just can’t imagine they are the same quality because I’m not impressed. UX is super bad; buttons are hard to press and cause the contact points to move (which need to be pretty precise for me to be able to hear decently) so ok I just use the Bluetooth volume change. Also the volume of the voice announcer that says “low battery” every 15 seconds when you go below 20% battery is not relative to the devices current volume, so it just absolutely SCREAMS at you while you’re just chilling…. Would not recommend anyone with heart problems.

    • andrew_bidlaw@sh.itjust.worksOP
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      7 months ago

      About the announcements’ volume - Shokz do that too, and it’s frustrating. It’s weird that it’s a thing that needs a small patch, but it’s still a problem for years and even with other brands.

      Buttons on Shokz feel nice tho. Weirdly placed on the bottom of the headphone instead of the side of it, but I had no troubles using them.

    • marcos@lemmy.world
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      7 months ago

      I guess it varies widely. The one in mine is a complete piece of shit, so I have it set to use only as headphones.

      • andrew_bidlaw@sh.itjust.worksOP
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        7 months ago

        Yeah, probably makes sense to have s standard check for each model. I had a nice pair, but something else can be a completely different story.

    • andrew_bidlaw@sh.itjust.worksOP
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      7 months ago

      I asked my friends a couple of times when we had calls and some Discord conversations. No problems reported even when I was on a windy street at that time. I’m yet to see the spectrogram of their input, but I listened to my voice messages and they were fine. Obviously, not an all-purpose mic that can record music, but with a range of freqs that covers our speech it works no worse than industry standard, with airpods, dots and others. I even used it, stealthly, to record some IRL talks, just in case, and the result was clear. Their not-very-noticeable nature helps it.

  • realitista@lemm.ee
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    7 months ago

    I’ve been giving these more and more of a thought lately. I like the idea that you can just leave them on and not worry about taking them out to hear things.

    Only question. Can people near you hear them at all? Like on a plane?

    • andrew_bidlaw@sh.itjust.worksOP
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      7 months ago

      From my experience it’s not louder on max volume than simple earbuds put out of ear. They have metal details, so they do serve as little membranes, but I don’t find them significant. I’m listening to a lot of problematic stuff on a daily basis and didn’t have any weird looks. Most people didn’t even recognize I’m listening to something in a calm office setting.

  • MystikIncarnate@lemmy.ca
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    7 months ago

    I’ve had several pairs of aftershokz, almost all of them Bluetooth. Most recently I was gifted a pair of openrun pro. Shokz has made significant improvement since the first generation. I would put their modern versions on par with fairly average earbuds, with a notable bass drop off as the most significant audio fidelity issue.

    They’re massively convenient. They sound rather good apart from the missing low end, and they’re easy to make into an all day wear.

    I’ve worn headsets on top of my trekz, glasses, even headphones (don’t ask). They’re not the most comfortable when you have stuff on top of them, pushing them into your skull, but that’s expected.

    Most people don’t notice I’m wearing them.

    Honestly, 10/10 for convenience.

    • andrew_bidlaw@sh.itjust.worksOP
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      7 months ago

      I also put headphones over them a couple of times. Two devices limit is not so convinient when you have a home PC, then office PC, your phone and sometimes even a tablet\handheld console. I feel like it’s the next thing they can improve to create an incentitive to buy a new pair of those.

  • 7heo@lemmy.ml
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    7 months ago

    Thank you very much for this post. I’m glad someone did the effort of getting some of those and presenting them from the PoV of a first time experience. I was curious.

    However, I’m not sure what you meant with:

    BUT when I shared it with others, people in body reported less effectiveness due to thickness of skin and under-dermal stuff, so it’s better to test it if you aren’t skinny as a skeleton.

    At first it sounds like you say that overweight people have trouble using them (which is logical, the device needs to touch the bones), but then you go on saying that it doesn’t work for underweight people? I’m confused. Could you please elaborate a little? Thanks 🙂

    • Hazmatastic@lemm.ee
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      7 months ago

      I think they were saying that if you’re not super skinny, you ought to test them to make sure they work for you before buying them. Super skinny people can safely assume they would have good enough conductivity and could buy without testing with more confidence.

      Not my opinion, never tested these.

      • andrew_bidlaw@sh.itjust.worksOP
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        7 months ago

        You are right on the money. My metabolism makes me super thin, so it’s ideal in my case as they sit right on the bones, but can be less effective for people of average or plus size proportions.

  • lazynooblet@lazysoci.al
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    7 months ago

    I bought the Shokz opencomm 2 recently and returned them. I wanted a loose fitting headset for home office that didn’t look like I was wearing winter ear muffs.

    They really look good. They sound okay. The mic is very good.

    My bosses voice made them tickle. Even at the lowest volume everything he said was uncomfortable. They tickle at high volume anyway but having a call with this guy multiple times a day started to get annoying.

    I have a jabra evolve2 55 now. Interior, but no tickle

  • donio@lemmy.world
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    7 months ago

    I’ve been using various Aftershokz/Shokz models for many years and well over a thousand hours. They are a great option for speech-focused contents like podcasts, audiobooks and that’s what I use them for. I almost never use them for music, the lack of bass (even with earplugs) just doesn’t do it for me. But I don’t find any earbuds satisfactory for music either so maybe I am more picky than most.

    I agree with OP about the controls. They are workable but could be much better even considering the limited inputs. I particularly hate the choice of triple-click for backwards-seek and I mess up the timing half the time. Another pet-peeve is the loud beep on play/pause that cannot be turned off. Using the phone/computer controls instead of the on-device ones avoid these issues.

    As far as models I originally got the Aeropex and later on “downgraded” to the OpenMove. The audio quality is comparable between the two, the only thing you are missing with the lower end model is comfort - but that is highly subjective! I actually prefer the way the OpenMove feels.

    I really wish that there was more competition in this space. The Shokz products are a bit overpriced and slow to evolve and the rest of the options I’ve seen seems lower quality and worse form factor. Would love to hear if anybody has found a different brand that they prefer over the Shokz models.

    • andrew_bidlaw@sh.itjust.worksOP
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      7 months ago

      I would subscribe to every paragraph of yours. Especially the loud notifications. For some reason they don’t adjust to the chosen volume.

      I don’t know, how are they popular, but I guess if they’d be a daily driver for many, there would be an interest for others to participate in a competition. But from what I see in Russia where I live, the topmost models are cheap airpods and beats replicas, and I’m probably in the dozen of those who use that tech at all, and I don’t see anyone also using them. It’d take decades and kilometers of my and others’ fanboying to change that.

  • EvilBit@lemmy.world
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    7 months ago

    My short take is the audio quality is mediocre for music or anything artistic, but using the Shokz OpenComm for work, I’ll never go back. Best work headset I’ve ever used. I can wear it all day and sometimes almost forget to take it off at the end of the day.

    • ABCDE@lemmy.world
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      7 months ago

      That… Looks good. How is the microphone quality? How long does it last?

      • andrew_bidlaw@sh.itjust.worksOP
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        7 months ago

        I answred before, but with my love for long form podcasts and rare calls, I charge it once for two days of work.

        • ABCDE@lemmy.world
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          7 months ago

          Thanks. I’m tempted as in and over ear headsets would be less preferable than something which rests outside. I still have another year and a half of teaching online so this would be a decent quality of life upgrade.

          • andrew_bidlaw@sh.itjust.worksOP
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            7 months ago

            A little personal, but what moved me to actually buy them is that my mic on a webcam died that troubled my own online teaching. So far, it worked fine, even on long days if I didn’t forget to charge it. Check that thread and the product page before the purchase and you’d be golden. Keep on going, fellow tutor, although we are treated like shit worldwide, we are the gears that make our society spin (:

  • jagoan@lemmy.world
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    7 months ago

    Can others hear whatever’s playing? Like if I’m wearing it on the bus or in library, can others hear my music?

    I’ve never used one, but I’ve read reviews on the cheaper ones, they said it’s just speakers in front of your ears.

    • andrew_bidlaw@sh.itjust.worksOP
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      7 months ago

      They use vibrations to drive your skull as a membrane to make a sound. If you turn them on 100% their own metal pieces would do the sound, but it’s still be silent as 10% volume on your smartphone.

      As you can tell by my nickname, I’m from Russia and I tested it through and through, for there were sanctions against those that just scrolled anti-russian memes in a public transport. I watch oppositional figures every time I commute to and from work, so I guess it’s okay.

      It’s safe privacy-wise. But as I said, you need to control the volume, because the max volume can exhaust your brain even if you don’t really hear it. But everything lesser than 70% isn’t heard by others even in silence.

    • andrew_bidlaw@sh.itjust.worksOP
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      7 months ago

      I’m a simple man, I put Shobaleader One Boiler Room live session on repeat and bathe in pure joy. It’s Squarepusher’s old hits but played with a band of his fellow musical maniacs who can make previously programmed polyrhitms look as easy as breathing. There’s a lot of bright flashes, so be aware. Also, he himself plays a bass guitar, the usually overlooked instrument he himself uses a lot, and do it passionately.

      https://youtube.com/watch?v=d-j_D-O1vwM

  • snooggums@midwest.social
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    7 months ago

    The sound is a bit weak compared to full headphones, and the lack of bass is accurate. In a quiet settting they are a nice way to hear sound similar to a boom box aince tou can atill hear the stuff around you.

    The one thing I don’t like, which also affects the sound, is that without an adjustable back it sits kind of weird and lays down on my neck. If I hold it up slightly in the back it sounds far better than resting after movement.

    • andrew_bidlaw@sh.itjust.worksOP
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      7 months ago

      I wouldn’t call it a lack, more like lack of boosting these freqs for easy sells. I dislike the lack of mids and highs in budget headphones.

      I did experience the latter as I wrote in another comment with high collars and caps. I wonder if they can make the wire softer. But I didn’t encounter the problem with positioning, at least with my model.

      • iopq@lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        There’s a curve called the Harman curve which is the most common listener preference. It is based originally on measuring how headphones can reproduce flat frequency response speakers.

        The bass boost in Samsung or JBL studio products is not “for easy sells”, it’s based on actual research on listeners.

        There are three different bass preferences, one is a bass shelf at like 200Hz with a small boost, which is the most common, where two thirds of people like it. Another is flat bass which is preferred by older or female listeners, and even more bass is preferred by young males.

        Not very many products have a huge bass for young male listeners since that’s the smallest group. I think Sony over ears are the most popular product with a big bass

        https://kuulokenurkka.squig.link/?share=Harman_2018_Target,WH-1000XM3_(ANC_ON)