Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Emerging Tech
  3. Mobile
  4. News

Doppler Labs’ bionic hearing earbuds let you tweak live sound with a smartphone app

Add as a preferred source on Google

At first, the idea of a hearing aid for people who can already hear just fine seems ridiculous — but if you entertain it for a second, it starts to make a bit more sense. Imagine what it would be like if, with the help of technology, you could make your already good hearing better. What if you could filter out certain noises and amplify other ones to customize what you can hear? Well, if NY-based startup Doppler Labs has its way, you might soon be able to.

Doppler’s product, which it showed off this year at CES, is called Here. It’s essentially a set of earbuds that gives you the ability to selectively filter and amplify sounds from the world around you in real time, thereby allowing you to fine-tune your hearing for certain environments. If properly adjusted, this little gizmo (which its creators refer to as the world’s first “hearable tech” device) could help you do things like hear your dining partner better in a crowded restaurant, understand your friends at loud concerts without them screaming in your ear, or even eavesdrop on people from the other side of a room.

Recommended Videos

We had our doubts about the technology’s effectiveness, but when we got a chance to actually try them out, we were absolutely blown away. Once we had them in our ears, Doppler’s demo guy immediately fired up the “crowd filter” on the accompanying app, and our jaws dropped as the din of a thousand background voices suddenly disappeared. Here we were, smack in the middle of Pepcom, surrounded by a zillion noisy journalists — but all we could hear was the voice of the guy running the demo. It was astonishing, and that’s just one of the many tricks these buds have up their proverbial sleeve. Demo guy then proceeded to adjust the volume of his voice, add reverb, and even tweak the treble and bass levels — all in real time, without any kind of lag.

Here’s how it works. On the outward-facing part of the earbuds, there’s a set of microphones. These pick up audio from the surrounding world, which is then sent through a digital signal processor (DSP), and subsequently played into your ears with no perceivable latency (i.e. under 30 microseconds). With the help of a smartphone app, you can adjust how the DSP behaves, and make the headphones produce sound waves that add, remove, or augment the original audio signal. It’s basically like having a volume knob and EQ settings for every single sound that enters your ears.

The range of potential uses for this tech is huge. Want to tune out the annoying pop music playing in the grocery store, but still hear the cashier when you get up to the register? Wish there was a mute button on that crying baby on your red-eye flight? Feel like your car stereo doesn’t have enough bass? With the right signal processing algorithms, Here could totally make it happen.

The earbuds aren’t quite available for purchase just yet, but Doppler is currently shipping to Kickstarter backers, and it expect to have the earbuds available to everyone else before the end of January. When that happens, you’ll be able to get your paws on them for about $200 bucks.

Drew Prindle
Former Senior Editor, Features
Drew Prindle is an award-winning writer, editor, and storyteller who currently serves as Senior Features Editor for Digital…
The best new ChatGPT feature is one most people will never use
Logo, Emblem, Symbol

For years, the biggest conversation around AI has been what these tools can do. They can browse the web, analyze documents, connect to your apps, conduct research, and increasingly act on your behalf. But as AI systems become more capable, another question has become harder to ignore: what happens when an AI assistant is tricked into handing over information it shouldn’t?

OpenAI’s new Lockdown Mode is its latest answer to that problem. Available across all ChatGPT account types, Lockdown Mode is an optional security setting designed for people and organizations handling sensitive information. The trade-off is that you get stronger protection against certain forms of data theft, but you lose access to some of ChatGPT’s most powerful features.

Read more
An app that lets anyone control a robot from their phone, no coding required
Sounds cool, right? Forget doomscrolling, now your phone can operate a robot arm instead
Representative Image

A team of researchers at Georgia Tech has developed a new smartphone-based system that could dramatically simplify how people interact with robots. Called COBALT, the platform allows users with little to no computing experience to remotely control robot arms from virtually anywhere in the world using just a phone and an internet connection.

The project, developed at Georgia Tech’s People, AI & Robotics (PAIR) Lab, transforms smartphones into motion controllers for robotic arms. Users simply move their phones in different directions, and the robot mirrors those movements in real time. Basic tasks such as grabbing, moving, and releasing objects can be performed through simple on-screen controls, making the experience feel more like playing a mobile game than operating industrial machinery.

Read more
Coursera wants users to learn through shorter, faster content
Coursera wants online learning to feel more like TikTok
Coursera

Online learning platform Coursera is taking a page straight out of TikTok’s playbook. The company has launched a new AI-powered feed designed to serve short-form educational content in a scrollable, personalized format, signaling a major shift in how digital learning platforms may try to keep users engaged.

The feature introduces bite-sized video lessons, clips, and explainers curated through artificial intelligence based on a user’s interests, learning habits, career goals, and previous course activity. Instead of committing to hour-long lectures or full certification programs upfront, users can now discover short educational snippets designed to make learning feel more casual, accessible, and addictive.

Read more