Motorola’s new wireless earbuds are cheaper, but they’re still not worth your money
I’ve been grading on a curve when it comes to truly
wireless earbuds. Or at least, I was. It’s such a technological
challenge — fitting respectable battery life, sound quality, and
wireless radios into such a small form factor — that I felt it worthy to
catalog what companies got right in the face of the things they got
wrong.
That’s why, despite the low score and headline, I was still a bit forgiving with the Motorola VerveOnes+
last year. (To be clear, they’re made by a company called Binatone,
Motorola just licenses its name.) These earbuds were uncomfortable,
didn’t offer incredible sound, and weren’t cheap. They also buried some
of the most useful features in the accompanying app, instead of offering
quick access via the earbuds’ built-in buttons. But they got the
phone-to-earbud connection mostly right, which was sadly still an
accomplishment at the time.
But now there are AirPods and the Bragi Headphone earbuds.
(God, that name.) We finally have a baseline for wireless earbuds that
work, and, from some perspectives, work well. I wouldn’t have bought the
VerveOnes before these other earbuds came out, and I wouldn’t buy them
now.
All that said, there’s a new set of Motorola-branded
wireless earbuds out. They’re called the “VerveOnes ME,” with “ME”
standing for “Music Edition.” The connection’s supposed to be better,
they’re cheaper, and with that name, you’d think they would sound
better, too.
Unfortunately, the only one of those claims that seems to
be true is that the earbuds are cheaper. You can buy the VerveOnes ME
for $149, which seems like it will be the sweet spot for wireless earbud
pricing for the next year or so. Even with that price cut, though, I
still wouldn’t buy these. Here are a few reasons why:
- The sound is not noticeably better. It’s flat, even muddy at times. The earbuds are also basically only good for music — there’s too much of a delay to use them to watch videos or games, and I had trouble getting them to work with the latter at all.
- The earbuds are uncomfortable to wear for longer than an hour.
- There’s a really annoying beep any time you pair the earbuds or even press one of the buttons, which are also frustratingly stiff.
- Binatone removed some of the useful (but buried) features like EQ and audio passthrough.
- There’s a hiss of white noise any time the earbuds start streaming music. I can’t tell what’s more annoying — the white noise itself, or the fact that you can hear it start and stop before and after you play a song.
- The Bluetooth connection, if anything, has gotten a bit worse. The syncing issue between earbuds has been fixed, but I experienced more overall connection hiccups than with the VerveOnes+ last year.
None of these problems are worth suffering through for
the perceived convenience of wireless earbuds. (And that’s if you
believe there’s a convenience — I do, though I understand there are
risks, like losing one.) There might have been more palatable problems
when the VerveOnes were one of the few pairs of wireless earbuds that
kind of worked, but there’s no more room for excuses now that the market
has moved out of that beta phase.
The problem with Motorola’s secondhand approach here is
reflected in the overall quality of the VerveOnes and the lack of
meaningful improvement from last year’s product. If Motorola wants to
sell wireless earbuds that actually impress, perhaps the people there
should make a pair themselves.
The article was published on : theverge
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