I have several IEMs and none of them stay in great.
I have several IEMs and none of them stay in great.
You may want to try Comply foam tips, which you roll up before inserting into the ear canal, and they’ll then expand to fill it.
The manufacturers make what people want, and people like to follow fads.
You can judge by the size of the flange, which likely is a standard Klipsch medium sized one. The part with the flange part goes into the ear canal, so judging by the pic, the outside lump is bigger than an airpod, but also won’t fall out like an airpod.
These actually look nice and I’d think about buying them if I thought there was more than a 3% chance of them staying in my ears longer than 10 seconds at a time.
Klipsch buds tend to be more comfortable than most in-ear-monitors, because they use a flattened/oval flange, reflecting how most ear canals aren’t perfectly circular. Thus a better fit with less pressure.
Klipsch has an advantage over the competition for fitting - they have a patent on flattened/oval flanges, and as most people don’t have circular ear canals, that can make a really big difference.
Yes, but many of the 80% who live in cities at least sometimes leave the city and major highway corridors, and feel the problem too, just not as often.
Here’s an idea, kill everything that isn’t LTE and repurpose THAT spectrum first.
5G phones will likely see a drop in battery size
A list of 100 is just too darn long. Cut it down to 10:
While space may be cold, depending on how you measure it, the near vacuum is also a near perfect insulator. Nothing gets cooled by convection in space; radiating is the only way to cool. So once something gets hot, it stays hot for a long time, no matter how cold space itself is.
The only thing I found slightly difficult in the demo was fit. My wrists are on the smaller side, so it was hard to get a proper fit with a medium-sized unit. Omron says the medium should fit about 75 percent of users
SimCity (2013)
Daikatana
E.T.
Because we don’t generally classify a self defense as a homicide.
only if it causes physical injury.
Package theft is common,
while 14,542 people were killed in a homicide (the remaining deaths were categorized as accidents, undetermined, or deaths caused by law enforcement officials while on duty).
It’s amazing to me that we still need to rely on “the username and password” for so many things, when we have technology like fingerprint readers and facial recognition now built into many consumer devices.
Most companies have requirements that would make all of these invalid. For instance, one capital, one lowercase, one number, and at least 8 characters. That’s pretty standard right there. Throw in a special character and it’s a wrap.