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Now hear this: Apple headphones get new level of customizat­ion

- Bob LeVitus DR. MAC Bob “Dr. Mac” LeVitus has written more than 90 books, including macOS Monterey for Dummies and iPhone For Dummies. boblevitus@mac.com

Did you know you can customize your headphones to amplify soft sounds and adjust certain frequencie­s for your hearing needs? You can if you’re running iOS 14 or iPadOS 14 with supported Apple headphones: AirPods (2nd and 3d generation, Max, and Pro), EarPods (3.5mm or Lightning connector), Powerbeats, Powerbeats Pro, Beats Solo Pro, or Beats Fit Pro.

If you have a supported iDevice and headphones, you’re going to love the new Headphone Accommodat­ions features baked right into iOS and iPadOS 14. To check it out, tap Settings > Accessibil­ity > Audio/ Visual, enable Headphone Accommodat­ions, tap Custom Audio Setup, and follow the onscreen instructio­ns to fine-tune your headphones for your ears.

By listening to audio samples and choosing which (if any) sounds better to your ears, it can adjust your settings to help you hear words and music more clearly.

Another way to customize your settings is by choosing one of three tuning options: Balanced Tone, Vocal Range or Brightness, and three soft sound settings: Slight, Moderate or Strong.

After customizin­g your settings, you can apply those settings to Phone (phone calls, FaceTime calls, and third-party video calls), Media (music, movies, podcasts, audiobooks, Siri, voicemail, and Live Listen) or both.

For even more feedback and precision, you can use an audiogram from the Health app rather than the built-in Custom Audio Setup feature to customize your audio more precisely. I tried a free app called Mimi Hearing Test, which I discovered by looking in the Hearing section of the Health app’s Browse tab.

Considerin­g the abuse my ears have taken over the past 60+ years, I was not surprised that my audiogram (made by Mimi Hearing Test) revealed that I have a slight (16 to 25 dB) hearing loss in both ears. The app explained this might cause me to have difficulty understand­ing people who are far away or speak quietly, and it may take more effort for me to hear faint sounds.

If you use AirPods

Pro, enable Custom Transparen­cy Mode if you’d like to adjust the amplificat­ion, balance and tone of outside sound with Transparen­cy Mode enabled. There’s also a slider to adjust the amount of environmen­tal (background) noise you hear when Transparen­cy is enabled.

There is one more Custom Transparen­cy adjustment, and it has become my favorite. Enable Conversati­on Boost to “focus your AirPods Pro on the person talking in front of you, making it easier to hear in a faceto-face conversati­on.” It seems to work when I remember to switch to Transparen­cy mode instead of pulling the AirPods Pro out of my ears.

I’d be remiss if I didn’t mention that none of the above is a replacemen­t for proper medical care and treatment. If you’re concerned about hearing loss, you need to see a real doctor. (Feel free to tell ‘em Dr. Mac sent you.)

 ?? Stan Olszewski / Associated Press ?? You can customize your Apple headphones to adjust certain frequencie­s for your specific hearing needs.
Stan Olszewski / Associated Press You can customize your Apple headphones to adjust certain frequencie­s for your specific hearing needs.
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