Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Phones
  3. Android
  4. Mobile
  5. News

Galaxy Buds Pro bring fresh features, tight integration to Samsung phones

Add as a preferred source on Google

After months of leaks and tons of hype, Samsung has finally launched the Galaxy S21 series, with improved performance, an all-new design, and more. Alongside the phones, however, Samsung also launched other new devices — like the Bluetooth-tracking SmartTags, and the new Samsung Galaxy Buds Pro earbuds.

You might assume that the new earbuds are simply an upgraded version of the Galaxy Buds Live that Samsung launched alongside the Galaxy Note 20 Ultra. Instead, they offer a fresh true wireless design, along with a series of high-end features that should appeal to any Galaxy user that wants a pair of portable earbuds.

Recommended Videos

The headphones come in a small and very portable charging case, along with an ergonomic design that’s aimed at offering a comfortable fit. The buds also have an IPX7 water resistance rating in case you sweat or get caught in the rain.

Image used with permission by copyright holder

As you would expect, the headphones also offer a series of smart features, both to improve audio quality and to help ensure the headphones better integrate with your other devices. Notably, the Buds Pro offer noise-cancellation that Samsung says can reduce background noise by up to 99% — and you can tune the ANC to your preferred level. They also offer an Ambient Sound mode, which can amplify outside sounds for things like having a conversation. And the headphones can intelligently switch between those modes by detecting when you’re speaking.

You can count on Samsung to rapidly iterate on its true wireless earbuds.

The headphones integrate with the rest of your Galaxy tech too, even though many of these features are taken directly from Apple. For example, they can automatically switch between your Galaxy phones and tablets, and if you get a call on your phone when watching a video on your tablet, your video will automatically pause so you can take a call with the buds on your phone.

The headphones also offer 360 Audio, which is built with Dolby Head Tracking technology. Essentially Samsung’s take on Apple’s Spatial Audio, the feature should help you get a surround sound experience in a pair of stereo headphones. Last but not least, the Galaxy Buds Pro support Samsung’s new SmartThings Find, which helps you locate each individual bud if you lose it, even if they’re no longer connected to Bluetooth.

Image used with permission by copyright holder

The Galaxy Buds Pro headphones offer 8 hours of continuous battery life, with an additional 20 hours of use with the charging case, without ANC. With ANC, you’ll get only 5 hours of continuous use, with an extra 13 hours thanks to the charging case — though that’s still not bad.

The headphones are now available from Samsung for $200 and will be available from other retailers starting on January 15. Samsung also intends to keep the Galaxy Buds Live and even the older Galaxy Buds+ in the market, for those who are more price-conscious.

Christian de Looper
Christian de Looper is a long-time freelance writer who has covered every facet of the consumer tech and electric vehicle…
Samsung PenUp adds new stylus tricks to your Galaxy phone, if it support an S Pen
Galaxy S Pen users now have more brushes to mess around with
Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra in hand

Samsung’s PenUp app is getting a useful creative upgrade for Galaxy users, especially those who use the S Pen for casual digital art. For those unaware, PenUp is Samsung’s app for sketching and coloring templates. It works with touch input, but the latest update should be most useful on Galaxy phones and tablets with S Pen support.

The latest PenUp update, version 3.9.22.23, adds 53 new brushes through the “Download more brushes” option. It also adds Dual brush, a new tool that lets two strokes work together for layered effects.

Read more
Apple should just give the Neo treatment to its upcoming iPhone 18e and I’ll bite
There, I said it, I want the iPhone Neo
iPhone XR

For years, Apple has approached its affordable iPhones with a predictable formula: take an older flagship design, remove a few premium features, lower the price slightly, and position it as the “entry point” into the ecosystem. Financially, the strategy works. Emotionally, it often does not.

That is exactly why the upcoming iPhone 18e represents such a major opportunity for Apple. Instead of treating it as another watered-down flagship, Apple should fully embrace a “Neo” identity, one built around color, personality, experimentation, and smart hardware reuse. Apple has already executed it perfectly with the MacBook Neo. It just needs to follow that template for an affordable iPhone.

Read more
Your Android phone can now share files with any iPhone using a Quick Share QR code
Quick Share just got a trick that makes cross-platform file sharing almost painless.
iPhone receiving file via quick share qr code

Sharing files between Android and iPhone has always been a pain, but Google is quietly fixing that. The company launched a new Quick Share feature that made Android devices compatible with Apple’s AirDrop, allowing users to easily transfer files between iPhones and Android devices. 

However, not all Android devices have the hardware to support Quick Share-AirDrop compatibility, which means not all Android smartphones can access this feature. To solve this problem, Google announced a new QR code-based file-sharing system, which allows any Android device to transfer files to iPhones. 

Read more