Is the review worth it?


The Sonos Ace: A High Performance Noise-Canceling Bluetooth Headset for the ANC / Airpods Max / XMM-Newton

If you want the headphones to answer calls or to be paused when you remove them, you can choose to change the settings in the app.

The Ace is very well-made. Pop open the included hard case—something the Airpods Max notably, and very oddly, lack—and you’ll see a sleek pair of over-ears with shiny metal bands and supple leather around the headband. They are round headphones that do not grab anyone’s attention and look a lot like Sony’s WH-1000XM5.

The Sonos Ace will arrive to early customers as a pair of noise-canceling headphones that belong in the same conversation as the best from Apple, Bose, Sennheiser, and Sony. The company got more correct than wrong, and nailed the basics. The Ace are wonderfully comfortable, they sound good, and they hold their own in regard to ANC.

I like the physical controls of the headphones over the gesture controls. The Content Key is on the right ear cup. You can press it once to play, twice to skip forward a track, and three times to go back. Holding down the Content Key engages TV Audio Swap. Below the slider is a round button that toggles between active noise cancellation and the “aware” transparency mode. The left ear cup has a power button and ausb-c port on it. They can pair the Ace with two different devices at the same time. They have an on-head detection and pause the music if you remove them. A 30 hours battery life is what it’s capable of.

The osmo ace headphones: What have they done in the last few years? How is Sonos taking over the homes of the kids?

The simple design is professional and timeless, which makes it seem like it hasn’t changed at all. It’s a design language borrowed from the style of its speakers and a welcome one in the world of flashy modern cans. They’re either black or white, just like the speakers.

A tumultuous period has taken place at osmo. There is a widespread perception that the new app was released poorly because the company was too focused on shipping its first-ever headphones on time. The June 5th launch date for the osmo ace headphones is approaching. Was it worth it?

It’s easy to understand why people love the music service, as soon as you want to hear it in multiple rooms. The company makes the hardware and software experience easier than anyone else. From speakers to soundbars (and even turntables and networked amps), Sonos has taken over the homes of everyone who doesn’t want to drop oodles of cash on a “real” custom-installed system with wires running through walls. This is a way of making the Sonos system feel cheap.

TV Audio Swap: Using Head Tracking and Spatial Audio to Enhance Audio Immersion in the Living Room of a Sonos-Ace Headset

Every smart device now requires you to agree to a series of terms and conditions before you can use it — contracts that no one actually reads. It’s impossible for us to read and analyze every single one of these agreements. We began counting how many times you need to agree to use devices when we review them since most people don’t read these kinds of agreements.

The TV Audio Swap is the signature trick of these headphones. When it works, you can instantly transfer any sound coming from a Sonos Arc soundbar to the headphones with the press of a button. This private listening mode supports spatial audio and head tracking to ramp up the immersion when watching movies, and it works with any input device running through your TV — be it an Apple TV, Roku, or gaming console.

Right now, I can take or leave the dynamic head tracking. When TrueCinema is added, it will help you trick your brain into thinking there are many speakers around you by giving you a surround effect based on your viewing environment. But like so much about TV Audio Swap — Android support, wider soundbar compatibility, etc. — TrueCinema is also in the “coming later” column.

Source: Sonos Ace review: was it worth it?

The Ace Headphones: What Should You Expect to Play if You Wanna Play The Game on PS5 or X-rays?

The headphones can play any audio that would normally come through your soundbar — and that includes games. The crack of the bat seemed to be right on target when I was playing a few games of MLB The Show on PS5 and it was imperceptible to me. The gunplayAudio in Ratchet and Clank is not for a shooter. Rift Apart, and GTA V kept up with what I was seeing on-screen. Competitive gamers might feel differently, but for casual pass-the-time gaming, the Ace are more than up for the job.

Still, the hardware makes a great first impression. The Ace headphones come in a felt-covered case that’s made from recycled plastics. I like the fact that the case of the Ace is flat so that I can take it with me on the go. Inside is a pouch that attaches to the case magnetically: this is where you’ll store the included USB-C and USB-C-to-3.5mm cables. It is possible to listen to music with either cable.

For everyday music listening, these headphones don’t introduce any groundbreaking Wi-Fi capabilities; everything happens over Bluetooth. iPhone owners get the standard AAC codec, while some Android phones can take advantage of Qualcomm’s AptX Adaptive to wirelessly stream music at up to lossless quality. (My Galaxy S24 Ultra isn’t capable of this, so your mileage may vary.) I wish Sony’s more universal LDAC Bluetooth codec had been included for those who really care. It’s easy to get hung up on this stuff, and a headphone’s tuning is ultimately more important. But it’s fair to want all the things when you’re paying $450.