I have just realised I haven’t posted anything to my blog in a very, very long time. I now have something to say, I’m someone of few words as you can probably see.
Upon getting my hands on my iPad I could start to see an annoying problem arising. With so many devices capable of playing audio and video, my iPhone headphones in their spaghetti fineness were taking the marvel away from my gadgets. I found myself digging around in my Crumpler bag and ripping out tangled string tied around my lanyard and keys along with anything else they could clutch to in their protest of being dislodged from their resting place. Swapping between as many devices as I have (by choice) to listen or watch media, I was grudgingly upset with my headphones making my geekyness world less geeky by consuming time trying to unravel the mess. Where’s there efficiency and the coolness in that? Everything my gadgets lived for had their glory quashed. My solution? Wireless bluetooth headphones.
Now in my perfect world where I have wads of cash my dollars would be spent on Sennheiser, the God of headphone products (my opinion) but in the real world, I had a meager budget of $140. After streaming through countless reviews of products available in Australia it came down to two candidates, the first a BlueAnt product http://www.blueant.com.au/ and the second Logitech http://www.logitech.com/. The BlueAnt headphones blew my socks off that much that I can’t even remember the model number of the pair I was contemplating! It may have been the X5′s however they are now discontinued. So the obvious winner were the Logitech pair, the FreePluse wireless headphones.
Being familiar with Logitech products, I couldn’t fathom the idea that the FreePulse set would be terrible quality. Now you think I’m lining you up to show you my shock when I discovered the quality was bad, right? Wrong! I was actually quite impressed with the sound quality, the bass is fantastic, the only criticism I have is that sometimes you can hear slight distortion. I might not have enough empirical data however….these are the first Bluetooth headphones I’ve ever used and purchased. The reviews I read were pretty much correct, after an hour or so of use they start to hurt your ears and there are very minor drop outs which shouldn’t deter you from purchasing these in my opinion. I wear them to the gym as well while on the treadmill walking (fast pace) and on the cross trainer, they do not slip or get in the way. It’s a bonus not to have an annoying cord attached to your body while working out. I find that when you turn the device on, sometimes connectivity is a pain on my iPhone especially, which I’ve started to leave Bluetooth permanently turned on so I have no issues when turning the headphones on – connectivity is then fine. If your device doesn’t detect the headphones, you end up having to pair them again. With the iPhone now supporting A2DP profiles as well you don’t need the stereo jack Bluetooth adapter which comes with the headphones; this can be used on any device with a 3.5mm headphone socket to provide your device with Bluetooth connectivity to the headphones.
Overall I am extremely happy with this purchase, you get what you pay for which was around AUD$89.


















