Bose QC25 Noise-cancelling Headphones Review

Lazada Philippines

Another Bose product is up for us to test out and this time it’s the QuietComfort 25 or simply the QC25. It is the successor to the well-received QC15 back in 2009. With it comes a more improved active noise cancellation (ANC) and is made of better function-targeted materials.

Physique

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The Bose QC25 is made entirely of plastic that makes it totally lightweight. Although you won’t see any metal arm of any kind as its support, it feels firm; and could withstand bends and a few stress on its headband.

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The headband is cushioned with foam and wrapped in cloth which gives ample support for the head once you pop it on. It also extends on both sides giving its users freedom to adjust the length of the arms depending on their needs for a secure fit.

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The company promises a comfortable listening experience on the QC25. Their earcups are outlined with soft padding made of protein leather that gently surrounds the ears. We had an amazing time wearing it but we’ll tell you more about it in a little while.

In addition, both earcups twist so they’re face-down flat on a table while the stem folds to make it more compact for portability. It’s got an included hard case for travelling that you can easily pack inside your bag.

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It requires a single AAA battery for its ANC to work, and the company claims could last for 35 hours before you need to replace it. We’ve used the QC25 for a week now and we’re still running on the stock battery that came with the package. When the battery runs out noise cancellation will no longer work, but you can still use it as is. The previous model QC15 didn’t work this way — once the battery’s dead, the entire headphone’s dead.

This is one update, although not new in the headphones scene, is good news for those who couldn’t be separated from their tunes.

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The cable is now easier to replace compared to the previous one which is proprietary. If, by any chance, a need for a new cable arises, you can simply look for a standard 3.5 – 2.5mm audio jack. The bundled cable has the same color scheme as the headphones and comes with an in-line microphone and volume control for both music and call functions.

Comfort Factor

As mentioned earlier, we had an enjoyable time wearing the QuietComfort 25. The combination of its cushioned headband and plush pads feel comfortable and light that you wouldn’t notice wearing it after some time. We’ve had it on for at least 4 hours straight and we could say it’s one of the most comfortable over-the-ears we’ve tried. There was, however, one thing that made us remove these ‘phones, and the reason is not in this aspect. Read on.

Active Noise Cancellation

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As a pair of headphones that belong to the QuietComfort series, one would pretty much expect that it should specialize in both Quiet and Comfort – and we’re already done with the latter.

True enough, this new model boasts a more improved way to neutralize external noise and leave you alone with your music. We’re already past recognizing its new ability to still play music even when ANC is off so let’s talk more about when it’s on. To do so, the switch is located on the right cup — you won’t miss it. Just flick it right and you’re good to go.

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Today’s active noise cancellation works in a way that sound from outside is picked up and used to cancel out the noise inside the ear cups — making you enjoy your music more. As you can see on the photo above, the shell has tiny holes where exterior sound enters. Using the QC25 and switching the ANC on and off, one can totally notice the difference between the two modes.

Partner this with music playing and what you have is an intimate time with your jam and nothing else. Plus, the soft earpads not only cushions but also seals the sound inside as to avoid sound leaks.

QC25’s ANC is effective. Hands down. It’s just that it could be too effective in a way that the absence of sound the ANC makes (during the silence in-between songs) sometimes gets tiring to the ears. It basically prompted us to either turn it off or just remove the headphones completely and give it a rest once in a while. This could just be a personal thing and not really a problem for all. It’s just an observation that we’d like to share.

Sound Quality

As excited as we were to judge its sound quality, we first let its drivers breathe out of the box by using it to play continuous music for hours. After which, we queued up our usual track list for testing and hit the play button.

After nitpicking its noise cancellation we’d like to give credit where credit is due. Sound quality for the QC25 is just how we liked it — balanced all-around. No matter what genre of music we played, the lows, mids, and highs all worked and blended together into one sound and we found ourselves enjoying as we were placed in the middle of it all. Details are also clear and distortion at even high volume is very little to none.

From jazz to hip-hop to trance and acoustic,  we found ourselves grooving to every thump of bass, soothing vocals, and clash of hi-hats that these pair of cans reproduced. In my personal list, it’s definitely on the top 5 best-sounding closed-backs next to the Audio-Technica ATH-ES10 and the affordable Blaupunkt Comfort 112.

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Conclusion

The Bose QuietComfort 25, assuming you’re into constantly listening to music, is one of those headphones that would be on your Christmas list for two reasons: One is because of all the niceties you’ll get when you buy it, and the other one is because it’s steeply-priced at Php20,000. For an average person, it’s not something you’d see and decide to buy instantly.

We basically enjoyed everything about it except for one tiny aspect that may or may not affect other users. It’s got a nice look, comfortable wear, and amazing sound reproduction.

Bose QC (QuietComfort) 25 specs:
Type: Closed-back, circumaural (over-ears)
Design: Headband
Speakers: 40mm full-range drivers
3,5-2,5mm detachable cable with inline-mic
Protein leather ear pads
Active Noise Cancellation
191 x 152 x 23mm (dimensions)
195 grams (weight)
Price: Php20,000

What we liked about it:

  • Sturdy plastic build makes it lightweight
  • Use of standard removable cable
  • Impressively comfortable to wear
  • Balanced/clear sound (lows, mids, highs)
  • ANC is effective in canceling out sound

What we didn’t like:

  • ANC is too effective in canceling out sound

The post Bose QC25 Noise-cancelling Headphones Review appeared first on YugaTech | Philippines, Tech News & Reviews.

#TBT: 10 Old Tech We Sorely Missed

Lazada Philippines

Another fun and exciting year of tech is coming to a close and it’s amazing how gadgets have evolved to adapt to our needs. Yet somehow, there are a few devices/services that just don’t fail to put a smile on our faces whenever we remember them, particularly to those who lived through the 80’s and 90’s era.

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1) Pager

pager

Pager, or beeper as some would coin it, was an alternative way to communicate in the past. Pagers were available in two flavors; one-way pagers can only receive message, while response or two-way pagers can both receive and transmit messages. In its earlier versions, a telephone was needed to confirm sending and receiving messages back then.

2) Party Line

partyline

Back in the days when private phone lines were limited to the rich and famous, majority of the people opted for the more wallet-friendly Party Line service. It does, however, have some major drawbacks (especially privacy) and was used by nosy kids to pull a prank on their neighbor (dialing their own phone number and hanging up).

3) Collect Calls

collectcall

The introduction and steady rise of cellular phones and VoIP services has slowly made phone services like Call Collect obsolete. For the uninitiated, Call Collect is a reverse charge service wherein the person receiving the call will be charged for the call instead of the person placing the call.

4) Mixed Tape

Mix-tape

Unlike today, music lovers in the past have to be a little bit creative in compiling all of their favorite songs and putting all of them in a single source or what is commonly known as a Mixtape. But despite of the fact that cassette tapes have become a thing of the past and millions of songs are readily available through music streaming services, the process of creating a Mixtape, whether in the form of a digital playlist or by burning it in to a CD, still lives on today.

5) Trackball Mouse

Trackball

From its military used as far back as the 1940’s, the trackball has undoubtedly changed the way we interact with our computing devices. Think of it as an upside-down mechanical mouse with the ball exposed on top. Instead of moving the whole device, only the ball is wheeled into X and Y axes with the thumb, fingers, or the palm of the hand to move the cursor on screen.

The debut of optical and laser mice was a huge blow for the popularity of Trackball in the consumer market, but it has made its way to other devices like some of the older Blackberry handsets.

6) Dot Matrix Printers

dot-matrix-printer

Before inks became the norm, there were ribbons. Dot Matrix Printers were the predecessors to the digital printers of today. They are computer-operated machines which use a print head that moves back and forth, or in an up and down motion, on the page and prints by impact. As the name goes, the printer only produces dots to achieve graphics and text on paper. Think of it as an automated typewriter.

7) Electronic Typewriter

electric-typewriter

Speaking of typewriters, who wouldn’t remember them? Electronic typewriters have been a staple before the popularity of computers. Some of these machines are equipped with a plastic or metal daisy wheel mechanism, a disk with the letters molded on the outside edge of the “petals” that impact on the paper when a key is pressed.

The coolest thing about them is that you type a whole sentence, press enter, and the whole line is printed out in one swoop. There’s also the option to actually delete or erase the print-outs (the typewriter memorizes the letters and a white marker over-writes on top of them just like White-Out).

8) Calculator Watch

calculator-watch

Before the advent of smartwatches, one of the more successful attempts at incorporating other features on watches is adding calculator functions which gave birth to the Calculator Watch. Pulsar and Hewlett-Packard were the first to introduce the calculator-infused timepieces back in the 70’s, but it was Casio who put the Calculator Watches on the map.

9) Tamagochi

Tamagotchi P1

If you’re 90’s kid, then you’ve most likely wished for a Tamagotchi for your birthday or as a stocking stuffer for Christmas. Luckily, if you still haven’t had enough of taking care of virtual pets, or you want your kids to experience the fun of owning, Bandai is still selling a new and improved Tamagotchi Friends which we featured late last year.

10) iOmega Drive

zipdrive

Rounding up this list is a portable storage medium in the 90s. The iOmega drive was a ZIP drive superfloppy — a variation of the floppy drive. It boasted 100 MB, later 250 MB, and then 750 MB amounts of storage. Though it never reached the popularity of the 3.5-inch floppy drives, it was the most popular of all superfloppy media produced.

Have you used these devices before? Share with us your experiences at the comments section below.

Carl Lamiel contributed to this article.

 

The post #TBT: 10 Old Tech We Sorely Missed appeared first on YugaTech | Philippines, Tech News & Reviews.

Delay in justice proving fatal

For witnesses in the Ampatuan Massacre

By Cong B. Corrales

THE CULTURE of impunity continues to reign in the Philippines.

Media organizations and human rights advocates condemned the recent attack on another witness to the Ampatuan massacre, Wednesday, as they viewed the incident as an apparent attempt to silence and intimidate other potential witnesses to the case.

On Wednesday afternoon, Akmad Baganian Ampatuan—former mayor of Datu Salibo town in Maguindanao—was wounded when unidentified group of armed men ambushed his convoy coming from Cotabato City en route to Shariff Aguak.

G7

Ampatuan is the third witness to be ambushed.

Ampatuan’s convoy, which was escorted by Army troops, figured in a brief gun battle with the armed men at the boundary of Guindulungan and Talayan towns.

The latest attack occurred on the same day the rest of the world commemorated the 66th declaration of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and comes only weeks after the fifth year commemoration of the infamous Ampatuan Massacre, which claimed the lives of 58 persons, 32 of whom were journalists and media workers.

In a statement, Thursday, the National Union of Journalists of the Philippines (NUJP) condemned the incident and attributed the continuing attacks, threats, and intimidation of witnesses and relatives of the massacre victims to the slow pace of the trial, “which has barely cleared the starting gate after more than five long years because of what have been characterized as delaying tactics.”

“Justice delayed is not only justice denied, it is proving to be fatal to people involved in the trial of those accused of the November 23, 2009 Ampatuan Massacre and to the interests of truth and justice,” the NUJP statement read.

The recently formed Altermidya-Peoples Alternative Media Network—a non-stock, non-profit network of independent, progressive, and alternative media outfits, institutions and individuals— agreed with NUJP in condemning the recent attack.

“(Five) witnesses have already been killed and this bodes ill to the attainment of justice for the victims of the Ampatuan massacre and emboldens perpetrators of media killings,” Benjie Oliveros, Altermidya spokesperson, said in a text message, Thursday.

NUJP chairperson Rowena Paraan lamented the continued impunity with which witnesses and others involved in the trial are threatened and attacked. She said it will only make justice even more elusive.

A GMA News report, Thursday, quoted Maguindanao police director Rodelio Jocson confirming that Ampatuan and two of his companions were injured in the encounter. Ampatuan was rushed to an undisclosed hospital in Shariff Aguak for treatment, the same report read.

It can be recalled that at about 8:45 in the morning of November 18, this year, armed men ambushed Ampatuan massacre potential witnesses Dennis Sakal and Sukarno “Butch” Saudagal in a remote village of Bagong in Shariff Aguak town, Maguindanao.

Sakal used to work as a driver for Ampatuan massacre principal suspect Andal “Unsay” Ampatuan, Jr. He was declared dead on arrival at the hospital. Saudagal was wounded.

Sakal is the fifth witness to the Ampatuan massacre killed since the case was filed in court half a decade ago.

“This shows the inutility of the Aquino administration in protecting the witnesses and its failure to clip the powers of the Ampatuan clan,” Oliveros, who is also the editor-in-chief of Bulatlat.com, added in the same text message.

Paraan posits that the recent attacks may have stemmed from an “ongoing tug-of-war” between the defense and prosecution over witnesses for the massacre case.

“That these maneuvers can have fatal consequences for one side or the other clearly proves that government’s claims of advances in eradicating the conditions that made the Ampatuan Massacre not just possible but inevitable – corruption, patronage politics, governance by political expediency, warlordism, to name a few – are just as empty as its promises of speedy justice for the victims of the worst incident of electoral violence in recent Philippine history and the single deadliest attack on the media ever.”

NUJP reiterated its demand for the Aquino administration to make good on its pledge of a swift and fair trial to “fulfill its obligation to protect everyone involved in the Ampatuan Massacre trial.”

“The administration has acknowledged that this case will be a litmus test of its determination. Alas, it is a test it seems to be failing very badly,” the NUJP statement also said.

Delay in justice proving fatal

For witnesses in the Ampatuan Massacre

By Cong B. Corrales

THE CULTURE of impunity continues to reign in the Philippines.

Media organizations and human rights advocates condemned the recent attack on another witness to the Ampatuan massacre, Wednesday, as they viewed the incident as an apparent attempt to silence and intimidate other potential witnesses to the case.

On Wednesday afternoon, Akmad Baganian Ampatuan—former mayor of Datu Salibo town in Maguindanao—was wounded when unidentified group of armed men ambushed his convoy coming from Cotabato City en route to Shariff Aguak.

G7

Ampatuan is the third witness to be ambushed.

Ampatuan’s convoy, which was escorted by Army troops, figured in a brief gun battle with the armed men at the boundary of Guindulungan and Talayan towns.

The latest attack occurred on the same day the rest of the world commemorated the 66th declaration of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and comes only weeks after the fifth year commemoration of the infamous Ampatuan Massacre, which claimed the lives of 58 persons, 32 of whom were journalists and media workers.

In a statement, Thursday, the National Union of Journalists of the Philippines (NUJP) condemned the incident and attributed the continuing attacks, threats, and intimidation of witnesses and relatives of the massacre victims to the slow pace of the trial, “which has barely cleared the starting gate after more than five long years because of what have been characterized as delaying tactics.”

“Justice delayed is not only justice denied, it is proving to be fatal to people involved in the trial of those accused of the November 23, 2009 Ampatuan Massacre and to the interests of truth and justice,” the NUJP statement read.

The recently formed Altermidya-Peoples Alternative Media Network—a non-stock, non-profit network of independent, progressive, and alternative media outfits, institutions and individuals— agreed with NUJP in condemning the recent attack.

“(Five) witnesses have already been killed and this bodes ill to the attainment of justice for the victims of the Ampatuan massacre and emboldens perpetrators of media killings,” Benjie Oliveros, Altermidya spokesperson, said in a text message, Thursday.

NUJP chairperson Rowena Paraan lamented the continued impunity with which witnesses and others involved in the trial are threatened and attacked. She said it will only make justice even more elusive.

A GMA News report, Thursday, quoted Maguindanao police director Rodelio Jocson confirming that Ampatuan and two of his companions were injured in the encounter. Ampatuan was rushed to an undisclosed hospital in Shariff Aguak for treatment, the same report read.

It can be recalled that at about 8:45 in the morning of November 18, this year, armed men ambushed Ampatuan massacre potential witnesses Dennis Sakal and Sukarno “Butch” Saudagal in a remote village of Bagong in Shariff Aguak town, Maguindanao.

Sakal used to work as a driver for Ampatuan massacre principal suspect Andal “Unsay” Ampatuan, Jr. He was declared dead on arrival at the hospital. Saudagal was wounded.

Sakal is the fifth witness to the Ampatuan massacre killed since the case was filed in court half a decade ago.

“This shows the inutility of the Aquino administration in protecting the witnesses and its failure to clip the powers of the Ampatuan clan,” Oliveros, who is also the editor-in-chief of Bulatlat.com, added in the same text message.

Paraan posits that the recent attacks may have stemmed from an “ongoing tug-of-war” between the defense and prosecution over witnesses for the massacre case.

“That these maneuvers can have fatal consequences for one side or the other clearly proves that government’s claims of advances in eradicating the conditions that made the Ampatuan Massacre not just possible but inevitable – corruption, patronage politics, governance by political expediency, warlordism, to name a few – are just as empty as its promises of speedy justice for the victims of the worst incident of electoral violence in recent Philippine history and the single deadliest attack on the media ever.”

NUJP reiterated its demand for the Aquino administration to make good on its pledge of a swift and fair trial to “fulfill its obligation to protect everyone involved in the Ampatuan Massacre trial.”

“The administration has acknowledged that this case will be a litmus test of its determination. Alas, it is a test it seems to be failing very badly,” the NUJP statement also said.

An ex-convict, Heart’s lover…

…and FPJ’s daughter are among the top five in the presidential race

By Julius D. Mariveles

AN EX-PRESIDENT convicted of plunder, a vice-president accused of corruption, the solon-daughter of an action star, a politician engaged to a movie star, and a senator known for her pick-up lines – what do they have in common?

They are among the top five probable presidential candidates according to the November 2014 Ulat ng Bayan survey conducted by the reputable pollster Pulse Asia on the May 2016 polls.

Vice-President Jejomar Binay continues to lead in the presidential race with 26 percent of the 1,200 respondents saying that they would vote for him if the May 2016 elections were held during the survey period. Senator Grace Poe, daughter of action king and defeated presidential candidate Fernando Poe, Jr. came in after Binay with 18 percent.

ON TOP OF THE HEAP. The top five probable presidential candidates according to the Pulse Asia Ulat Ng Bayan November 2014 survey | Graphics by Julius D. Mariveles

ON TOP OF THE HEAP. The top five probable presidential candidates according to the Pulse Asia Ulat Ng Bayan November 2014 survey | Graphics by Julius D. Mariveles

Senator Miriam Defensor-Santiago, who was made more famous recently by her pick-up lines, got 12 percent while former President Joseph Estrada and Senator Francis Escudero came in fourth and fifth places with 10 percent and seven percent, respectively.

Santiago ran but lost in 1992 against former Armed Forces chief of staff Fidel Ramos who won the elections. She accused the former general of massive cheating. Estrada, on the other hand, was convicted of plunder while Escudero grabbed the headlines recently with his engagement to screen idol Heart Evangelista.

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Interior Sec. Manuel Roxas II was in the second five with Senators Ferdinand Marcos, Jr. and Alan Peter Cayetano, rehabilitzation czar and former Sen. Panfilo Lacson, and Senate President Franklin Drilon. Also making it to the list of 14 probable presidential candidates were Sen. Ramon Revilla, Jr., former Defense Sec. Gilbert Teodoro, former Sen. Richard Gordon, and House Speaker Feliciano Belmonte, Jr.

Senator Grace Poe is the top vice-presidential bet for the May 2016 elections with 33 percent or one in three Filipinos saying they would vote for him. Escudero came in second with 20 percent while Cayetano was third at 13 percent. The other names who came up during the survey were those of Sen. Antonio Trillanes IV, Drilon, Marcos, Estrada, Revilla, Representatives Leni Robredo, and Sherwin Gatchalian.

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Of the 59 individuals in the senatorial electoral probe, Pulse Asia reported that 14 have a “statistical chance” of winning in the May 2016 elections if it were held during the survey period. All of them are either incumbent or former government officials.

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Sharing the top spot are Senator Vicente C. Sotto III (54.7 percent) and Presidenital Assistant for Rehabilitation and Recovery Panfilo Lacson (52.9 percent). Both have a statistical ranking of first to third place. They are followed by Presidential Assistant for Food Security and Agricultural Modernization Francis N. Pangilinan (49.2 percent), who occupies 1st to 6th places.

Three probable bets are in third to eight places – former Senator Juan Miguel F. Zubiri (45.5 percent), Senator Ralph G. Recto (45.1 percent), and Senate President Franlin Drilon (44.9 percent). Former Senator Richard Gordon, on the other hand, is in fourth to ninth places with a rating of 42.9 percent and nearby is Senator Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr.

PA_2016 senatorial pref_02

The other probable winners are: Senator Sergio R. Osmeña (37.8 percent, 7th to 12th places), former Akbayan party-list Rep. Risa Hontiveros (35.4 percent, 8th to 14th places), former Sen. Jamby Madrigal (34.9 percent, ninth to 14th places), Department of Justice Sec. Leila M. de Lima (33.8 percent, ninth to 14th places), Senator Teofisto Guingona III (31.8 percent, 10th to 15th places), and Taguig City Rep. Lino Edgardo S. Cayetano (31.3 percent, 10th to 15th places).

Pulse Asia said in its media release that the survey field work was conducted from November 14 to 20, 2014 using face-to-face interviews with 1,200 representative adults 18 years old and above. The survey has a margin of error of plus / minus three percent at the 95 percent confidence level.

Among the issues that dominated the headlines during the conduct of the survey were:

the continuing investigation of the Senate on the alleged corruption against Vice-President Binay;
the cancellation of a debate between Binay and Trillanes on the alleged anomalies involving Binay;
the Senate probe into the reported overpricing of the Iloilo Convention Center involving Drilon;
the participation of President Aquino in the leaders meeting of the Asia-Pacific Economic Conference;
global efforts to stop the spread of the Ebola virus; and
the commemoration of All Saints’ Day and All Souls’ Day and the first year of Typhoon Yolanda, among others.