Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Audio / Video
  3. Features

AirPods Max 2 are finally here — but Apple didn’t fix everything people wanted

Add as a preferred source on Google
 

After five years, Apple has updated the AirPods Max with a new H2 chip, improved noise cancellation, and a broader set of features that bring them closer to the rest of its audio lineup. On paper, this is a meaningful upgrade. In practice, it’s more selective.

What Apple has changed this time

The biggest shift is the move from dual H1 chips to dual H2 chips, the same silicon used in the newer AirPods Pro. That upgrade enables a range of features that were previously missing on the Max.

Active noise cancellation is now claimed to be up to 1.5 times more effective, while transparency mode has been tuned to sound more natural. Adaptive Audio blends both modes depending on your surroundings, and Conversation Awareness lowers playback when you start speaking.

Apple has also added personalized volume, which adapts to your listening habits over time, along with loud sound reduction to manage sudden spikes in external noise. Live translation is now supported as well, allowing real-time conversations across languages through the headphones.

Sound improvements are part of that upgrade

Alongside these changes, Apple is introducing a custom high dynamic range amplifier designed to improve bass response, vocal clarity, and instrument separation, while reducing distortion at higher volumes.

The original AirPods Max already offered a warm, balanced sound signature, so this update appears focused on refinement rather than a complete retuning. The combination of improved processing and stronger noise cancellation is likely where the biggest perceptible gains will come from.

Lossless audio arrives, but with a limitation

Lossless audio support has finally been added, with 24-bit, 48kHz playback now available through a wired USB-C connection.

Over Bluetooth, audio remains limited to AAC, with no support for higher-bandwidth wireless codecs. This means lossless listening still requires a cable, which stands out for a premium pair of headphones in 2026.

Additional features and how they translate in use

Apple is also extending functionality beyond audio playback. The digital crown can now act as a remote shutter for an iPhone camera, while voice isolation is positioned as a way to improve call clarity and enable more flexible recording scenarios.

Head gesture controls have been added for interacting with Siri, allowing users to respond by nodding or shaking their head. These features align the AirPods Max with capabilities already available on AirPods Pro, although their practicality varies depending on context, particularly with a larger over-ear design.

What hasn’t changed still stands out

Despite the internal upgrades, the physical design remains largely the same. The AirPods Max 2 retain the metal construction, non-folding structure, and the Smart Case, which continues to offer minimal protection and primarily serves to put the headphones into a low-power state.

There is still no dedicated power button, meaning the case remains necessary for managing battery usage. Battery life is unchanged at around 20 hours, which is increasingly modest compared to competitors offering closer to 30 hours or more.

The headphones are slightly heavier at around 386 grams, do not fold for easier storage, and still lack any official water or dust resistance rating.

What this upgrade really delivers

The AirPods Max 2 are a clear upgrade in areas driven by processing and software. The H2 chip enables a more adaptive listening experience, while improvements to noise cancellation and sound processing should translate into better overall performance.

At the same time, the design, usability limitations, and long-standing hardware concerns remain unchanged.

Is it enough to justify the update?

That depends on what you were waiting for. If better sound refinement, stronger noise cancellation, and deeper integration with Apple’s ecosystem were the priority, this update delivers.

If the expectation was a broader redesign that addressed comfort, portability, and everyday usability, the AirPods Max 2 will feel more familiar than new.

Sam Buckingham
Video Host
Sam is an on-camera host covering gaming, computing, and audio, with a passion for real-world performance and everyday use.
DJI Osmo Pocket 4 takes aim at low-light video and fast action
The new model combines a 1-inch sensor, 4K slow motion, and updated controls in a compact body
Camera, Electronics, Video Camera

DJI has unveiled the Osmo Pocket 4 with a familiar goal, better video from a camera small enough to carry anywhere. The standout upgrade is a 1-inch CMOS sensor, which should help it hold onto more detail in dim scenes while also giving fast-moving footage a cleaner look.

DJI also says the Osmo Pocket 4 can shoot 4K video at up to 240fps, while adding 14 stops of dynamic range and 10-bit D-Log support. That gives solo shooters a stronger mix of slow motion, highlight control, and grading headroom without moving up to a much larger setup.

Read more
Amazon reveals slimmest Fire TV Stick HD that no longer needs a wall adapter
Amazon made its best budget streaming stick even better at $35.
amazon-fire-tv-stick-hd

Amazon just refreshed one of its most popular streaming devices. The new Fire TV Stick HD is officially here, and it is the slimmest Fire TV device Amazon has ever made. At $34.99, it is available for preorder right now and ships April 29.

What's new with the Fire TV Stick HD and how is it different?

Read more
These camera-equipped earbuds offer a wild glimpse at the future of AirPods
These experimental earbuds show how AirPods could get a lot smarter
A team of researchers at Washington University built VueBuds TWS with a built-in camera

Wireless earbuds have already become the default wearable for a lot of people. This is why this new research feels more interesting than yet another smart glasses demo. Researchers at the University of Washington have developed VueBuds, a prototype system that adds tiny cameras to off-the-shelf wireless earbuds so users can ask an AI model about whatever is in front of them.

How does this work?

Read more