USA TODAY US Edition

AirPods turn into hearing aids in a pinch

Apple device exploits ‘Live Listen’ technology

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You almost certainly bought Apple’s wireless Bluetooth $159 AirPods to listen to music or podcasts, not because you planned to use them as a sort of hearing aid substitute.

But hearing more clearly in a noisy environmen­t is just what AirPods promise to help you do through the iOS 12 operating system that launches in the fall, and that — with all the associated risks — is available now as a public beta.

Through iOS 12, AirPods can exploit a “Live Listen” Appledevel­oped assistive-hearing technology that has been available since 2014 on an iPhone, iPad or iPod touch with compatible, third-party made-foriPhone hearing aids or cochlear implants.

To use the feature with your AirPods, pair them like usual through Bluetooth on your iOS 12 device. Then, in Settings, go to Control Center, tap Customize Controls and then Hearing. After placing the AirPods in your ears, bring up Control Center on your phone, tap Hearing — it’s the onscreen button with an ear — and then tap Live Listen.

By using the iPhone’s microphone as a directiona­l mic, you’ll hear the amplified sound through the AirPods.

You may want to place the phone next to the person you want to hear for optimal results, lest you hear unwanted sounds, as I did while trying the feature out in a crowded and noisy diner.

You can also imagine a student placing a phone next to a professor in a lecture hall, provided the handset and AirPods remain in Bluetooth range.

During my tests in the rather loud diner, I could indeed better hear the people across the table, though I couldn’t compare the audio quality on AirPods to traditiona­l hearing aids. But Apple is quick to point out that AirPods are by no means trying to supplant or become substitute­s for these devices, and the company advises you to consult a doctor or audiologis­t if you are having difficulty hearing.

AirPods have been a surprising success for Apple, with CEO Tim Cook recently calling them a “runaway hit.”

And if a Bloomberg report is to believed, Apple is working on new water-resistant AirPods with noise cancellati­on, likely to hit next year and likely to exceed their current price.

I recently asked Bose Chairman Bob Maresca about the competitiv­e threat to his company that comes from AirPods: “They did a nice job” on AirPods and sell them “at a very competitiv­e price,” Maresca said. “But for those people that buy Bose for the reason that they buy Bose, it hasn’t hurt our business.”

Maresca, in fact, says that AirPods have raised the bar for everybody, “because now it’s very acceptable to walk around with something in your ears.”

Now, there’s another purpose for Apple’s AirPods — as devices in your ears to help you pick up what other people are saying more clearly.

Personal Tech

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MICHAEL DESJARDIN/REVIEWED.COM Apple’s wireless AirPods can help with hearing in noisy places.
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