The Shokz OpenFit use the company's new 'air conduction technology' so you don't need to cram anything uncomfortable in your ear.
headphones that rely on bone conduction technologythe ear canal, bone conduction uses transducers, positioned on the user’s temples, to send vibrations through their cheekbones. Wearers’The bone conduction approach requires those transducers to be pressed against the temples, so all of Shokz’s wireless headphones use a flexible band that circles
the back of the head. It’s a design challenge that has so far prevented bone conduction technology to be implemented in wireless earbuds that individually attach to each ear, but the company has come up with an alternate solution.There are some compromises to the open-ear earbuds approach. For starters, the OpenFit aren’t going to sound as good as in-ear earbuds or over-ear headphones when listening to music, and bass performance is probably going to feel a little lacking even with features like OpenBass, which Shokz describes as a “proprietary low-frequency enhancement algorithm.
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