Apple
announced
a
new
set
of
AirPods
Max
during
its
event
last
week,
updating
them
with
USB-C
and
in
a
new
set
of
colors.
The
switch
to
USB-C
is
a
welcome
one,
to
be
sure,
but
Apple
changed
nothing
else
about
them.
And
that
feels
weird,
right?
What
gives?
Apple’s
high-end
luxury
headphones
were
impressive
when
they
launched
in
2020.
They
had
all
the
features
of
the
AirPods
Pro
and
made
clever
use
of
the
Apple
Watch’s
digital
crown
for
volume
control.
They
also
sounded
fantastic
—
still
do,
in
fact!
But
the
rest
of
the
market
didn’t
sit
still;
alternatives
from
Sony,
Bose,
and
more
recently,
Sonos,
all
offer
comparable
features
and
sound
—
most
notably,
they
each
compete
with
the
AirPods
Max
when
it
comes
to
noise
cancellation
(Bose
does
this
the
best)
and
transparency
modes
(AirPods
Max
still
reign,
but
the
Sonos
Ace
are
close).
Despite
being
among
the
most
expensive
headphones
you
can
buy
without
going
into
ultra-high-end
audiophile
territory,
the
AirPods
Max
seem
to
have
caught
on
in
recent
years.
Apple
doesn’t
break
the
headphones’
numbers
out
when
it
reports
its
earnings,
but
they’re
all
over
the
place
in
New
York
City,
and
I
even
see
them
on
a
lot
of
heads
in
my
home
city
of
Milwaukee
too.
You’ll
see
them
in
airports
and
planes,
city
transit,
or
just
walking
around
the
block.
There
was
a
whole
trend
at
one
point
of
people
sharing
AirPods
Max
accessories
on
TikTok.
I’m
fond
of
the
crocheted
ones:
There’s
also
a
very
visible
market
for
“dupes,”
or
knockoffs.
They
have
a
hefty
presence
in
Reptronics,
a
115,000-member-strong
subreddit
where
people
share
deals
on
cheaper
fake
versions
of
popular
products.
(TikTok,
again,
has
tons
of
videos
about
dupes.)
This
was
a
fun
surprise.Photo:
Wes
Davis
/
The
Verge
27
minutes
into
episode
6
of
the
splashy
Netflix
drama
The
Accident,
a
teenager
is
wearing
AirPods
Max
knockoffs
that
I’m
certain
are
the
exact
pair
I
bought
a
couple
of
years
ago.
I
gave
mine
to
my
child,
who
quickly
broke
them.
So
why
didn’t
Apple
update
the
AirPods
Max?
Is
it
because
it’s
focused
on
Beats
and
doesn’t
have
time
for
the
AirPods
Max?
Did
it
just
need
to
get
something
out
the
door
so
the
EU
doesn’t
come
down
on
it
for
not
switching
over
to
USB-C
before
the
region’s
December
deadline
requiring
it
to?
Does
Apple
think
that
it
did
a
perfect,
no-notes
job
for
its
first
over-ear
headphones
right
out
of
the
gate,
even
with
its
several-years-old
H1
chip?
They’re
so,
so
expensive,
but
they’re
also
a
stellar
pair
of
headphones
that
I
love
listening
to
music
through.
The
ecosystem
benefits
like
being
able
to
pair
them
to
my
Apple
TV
to
watch
a
movie
at
night
or
quickly
switch
them
from
my
computer
to
my
phone
to
my
iPad
are
great.
And
they
still
feel
as
solid
now,
two
years
after
I
bought
mine,
as
ever.
But
in
their
original
iteration,
they’re
extremely
Apple
—
you
need
a
special
cable
that
only
Apple
sells
for
wired
listening
because
they
don’t
have
a
3.5mm
audio
jack.
They
don’t
have
a
power
button,
so
you
have
to
trust
that
they’ll
go
into
low-power
mode
and
will
be
ready
for
you
next
time
you
put
them
on.
(This
has
been
very
inconsistent
for
me.)
Apple
didn’t
change
any
of
that,
and
now
it’s
hard
to
feel
like
they’re
the
most
premium
headphones
of
Apple’s
lineup,
thanks
to
the
glaring
omission
of
the
AirPods
Pro
H2
chip
that
was
introduced
two
years
ago.
Without
it,
they
won’t
get
features
like
Adaptive
Audio
or
Conversational
Awareness
—
or
those
coming
to
the
AirPods
Pro
later,
like
doubling
as
hearing
aids.
I
wouldn’t
upgrade
for
those
features,
and
I
don’t
necessarily
think
anyone
else
should
either.
But
the
AirPods
Pro
being
more
“advanced”
sure
takes
the
premium
shine
off
of
the
AirPods
Max,
doesn’t
it?
It
doesn’t
help
that
the
market
has
more
or
less
caught
up,
either.
All
of
that
really
makes
their
$549
pricetag
a
hard
pill
to
swallow
in
2024.
(Originally posted by Wes Davis)
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