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NewHass
105
May 11, 2019
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Just to confirm, these non-Qualcomm chipset buds use BT to connect to each other, with the right bud being the master earbud? Not near field magnetic induction like the Jabra Elite 65t / Sports Elite or the Bragi Dash or The Headphone? Given that other buds that use BT to connect to each other can drop quite often (see the Sony WF-1000X or cheaper TWE ones), what is being done differently here? And how does that impact the battery life or latency?
May 11, 2019
Jyri
818
Nuforce
May 14, 2019
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NewHassSo Qualcomm or non-Qualcomm both can work the same way. No difference there. Majority of True Wireless connect as you described - one being master. NFMI technology has benefits increasing the connectivity between left and right but it has higher battery consumption and the some have had issues with the connection distance it can support. For MOVE vs older BT - within the last 12-18 months the chipsets have taken huge steps forward. Battery efficiency, connection stability, RF performance etc. In addition, lot of effort has been done on the antenna performance which further increases the connection stability. It is true that every true wireless can drop connection occasionally but compared to previous generations you should expect huge difference between them and the Move.
May 14, 2019
NewHass
105
May 14, 2019
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JyriGuess I'll throw in on this one to see how it compares to the 65t and my earlier Bragi along with the Sony's. It can't be worse than the Sony WF-1000X, anyways. Those things sound good, but they drop like nothing else I've had. The NFMI ones didn't skip or lose sync, but their sound quality wasn't anywhere as good.
May 14, 2019
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