Fine-Tune the World with 'Augmented Reality' Earbuds
The Here Active Listening system
consists of a pair of earbuds that use
Bluetooth to wirelessly connect to a smartphone app.
Imagine if you could make a garage band sound as if it
were playing in a concert hall, or if could turn down the
volume of a screaming baby on an airplane.
New earbuds from the Here Active Listening can now
instantly transform sounds from your surroundings. These
wearable devices seek to "augment reality" — in this
case, your soundscape.
In the future, these devices could enable translation of
live speech, much like the "universal translators" in "Star
Trek," said researchers at Doppler Labs, where the
Here system was invented. [10 Technologies That Will
Transform Your Life]
"We believe in a future where supercomputers can fit in
the ears," Noah Kraft, co-founder and CEO of Doppler Labs, told Live Science.
The Here system differs from both virtual reality and augmented reality headsets. Virtual reality headsets, such as the
Oculus Rift and Samsung Gear VR, block the user's view of the real world, while augmented reality headsets such as
Google Glass and the Microsoft HoloLens superimpose images onto the real world to create a mixed reality. In
contrast, Here seeks to modify what people hear instead of what they see.
"We think the future is in wearable technologies, in our case, hearables," Kraft said. "We want people to be more
engaged in their environments, to personalize their sonic experiences."
The Here system consists of a pair of earbuds that use Bluetooth to wirelessly connect to a smartphone app. A
microphone on each Here earbud captures incoming sound waves. Electronics in each bud can modify these sounds, and
then miniature speakers play the result, all in less than 30 millionths of a second, leading to no perceivable delay,
according to Doppler Labs. Users can use the smartphone app to adjust Here's settings.
The earbuds can boost or reduce the volume, bass, treble, reverb and other aspects of live sounds in a person's
environment. For example, you could dampen noise from chatter in a crowded room or crank up the bass of music
playing at a club.
Grammy Award-winning film composer Hans Zimmer said he is a fan of Here. "You can turn off your nagging mother
or the dog barking," Zimmer said in a promotional video . "It's about having control of your life beyond the ear that you
were born with."
To nullify sound, the earbuds possess not only complex internal air spaces, but also active noise-cancelling technology,
which generates sounds to counteract incoming noises. "We can remove the screeches that subways make," Kraft said.
Here can operate for 4 to 6 hours with the help of a rechargeable lithium-ion battery and low-power electronics that
optimize battery power. Moreover, the case that holds the earbuds houses two extra charges as well, Doppler Labs
said.
Through Kickstarter, Here raised more than $635,000 from more than 2,800 backers. Doppler Labs then raised $17
million from venture capitalists to help bring Here to market. The makers have created a limited run of 10,000 Here
units. The waitlist for these devices currently exceeds 25,000 people, but Doppler Labs said it will make Here available
to buy at the Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival in Indio, California, in April. The feedback from users on these
units will help Doppler Labs tweak Here for the mass market, and "we hope to be consumer-ready by the end of the
year," Kraft said.
Doppler Labs emphasized that Here is not meant for phone calls, nor does it play music that's been wirelessly
transmitted by smartphones. Here is not a hearing aid, either, nor is it meant to replace the kind of hearing-protection
systems used at firing ranges.
However, Kraft noted that Here could one day find use in real-time translation. "Who doesn't want to work on a 'moon
shot' idea like that?" he said. "We're only at the beginning of the journey right now to help give people full control of
their world."
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