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Two
iPod Headphones Clash
On the right red corner,
weighing one ounce and priced at around $80 is
Shure E2c Sound Isolating Earphones. On the
left blue corner, weighing one ounce and priced
at around $30 is the Apple In-Ear
Headphones.
Let's get ready to
rrrrrrrumble!
Which do you think is the
best between these two iPod
headphones?
For standard use, Apple iPod
headphones seem to work fine. But the point
will come wherein you will wonder, is there any
iPod headphones out there that could offer me
better sound, crisper, more booming base and
has a surround sound quality?
This question will prompt you
to search Google for the best iPod
headphones in the market. After seeing the
search results, you will be amazed that there
are handful of iPod headphones out there that
have features that may seem to be too technical
for the average iPod user.
We have tried a couple of those so called
isolating Headphones and the aurally-probing
ones and we come up with the Shure E2c Sound
Isolating Earphones to see if it really is
better than Apple in-Ear Headphones.
The one thing that we noticed
that these two iPod headphones both share is
the ability to lock in the sound. The person
sitting next to you wouldn't know that your
iPod nano, iPod mini, iPod video or iPod
shuffle is actually on. He won't hear the
treble or the bass sound that comes out in that
light scratching sound (which are the cons of
some low standard iPod headphones offered by
third party manufacturers).
In fact, if you wear these
two iPod headphones in public, you won't hear
that a car is coming or that the person beside
you is being mugged. So, with this feature,
these iPod headphones should be better be used
indoors or when you are playing text-to-speech
notes or recorded lectures, or any listening
activity that requires your full attention and
focus.
**Design wise
Apple In-Ear iPod headphones,
aesthetically speaking, looks better than Shure
E2c Sound Isolating iPod headphones. Apple
In-Ear Headphones has the standard Apple white
and Apple sleek design that most people has
come to associate with beautiful and techie
gadgets.
Shure E2c Sound Isolating
iPod headphones look like two sets of
mechanical bugs that are to buzz their way
inside your ears.
**Fitting of
earpieces
Shure E2c Sound Isolating
iPod headphones fits better than Apple In-Ear
headphones. Many users complain that Apple
In-Ear iPod headphones do not fit their ears
and always slip even if you choose the right
size for you.
Shure E2c Sound Isolating
iPod headphones come with a foam or flex
earpieces to ensure that the earpieces stays in
place even if you move around. Shure E2c Sound
Isolating iPod headphones, however, seem not to
have the right fit for people with small
ears.
Putting on these two iPod
headphones for the first time will give you a
strange unfamiliar sensation in your ears, such
as a small pressure and a feeling of not being
in this world (since you won't hear any sound
from the outside world). Don't worry, you will
get used to it, eventually.
**Sound Quality
Shure E2c Sound Isolating
iPod headphones produce high quality sound. You
will hear the deep bass in perfect balance with
the treble. White noise are blocked and you
will hear every note that is plucked on the
guitar and every sigh and breathing made by the
singer.
The sound quality of Apple
In-Ear iPod headphones is disappointing. It can
isolate sound, true but the bass sound cracks,
especially the deep ones. You would not want to
listen with these iPod headphones with fast and
upbeat music because it will sound like a
crackle. Best for use with country or western
music.
Shure E2c Sound Isolating
iPod headphones' performance is far better than
Apple In-Ear iPod headphones. But this good
performance comes with a price, an extra $50.
If your purpose for buying an isolating iPod
headphones is to listen to iPod music with
clearer lyrics, then the Apple In-Ear iPod
headphones fit you perfectly (or if you're a
transcriptionist or a student who listens and
needs to understand the recorded spoken words).
It is much cheaper and can do the job of
isolating of sound just right.
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