Nothing is back with Ear 3, its latest set of premium wireless earbuds. It's a follow-up to the Headphone 1, and seems to take a few cues from its over-ear sibling. The Nothing Ear 3 now features ...
Nothing's new $179 flagship noise-canceling earbuds have an unusual new feature. Here are my hands-on first impressions. Executive Editor David Carnoy has been a leading member of CNET's Reviews team ...
Nothing has a new set of wireless earbuds this week, the Ear (3) buds. In typical Nothing fashion, the company has a very unique selling point for these earbuds, one that I bet you wouldn’t be able to ...
The Nothing Ear series, featuring the Nothing Ear Wireless Earbuds, Nothing Ear (a), and Nothing Ear (Open) headphones, sets a new standard for personal audio. With cutting-edge technology, innovative ...
Nothing Ear (a) includes hybrid noise canceling up to 45dB, plus Hi-Res Audio support and an advanced equalizer for tuning the sound to your preferences. That EQ piece matters more than people think, ...
Nothing confirms it "will 'double down' in the over-ear headphone category during 2026" Leaks say a budget model is coming, and could launch March 12th, for £149 / €159 (roughly $200 / AU$300) I hope ...
Nothing has unveiled its latest audio innovation, the Nothing Ear (open). These semi-transparent earbuds mark the brand's first foray into the open-ear wireless headphone market. The Nothing Ear (open ...
Nothing has expanded its range of audio products. This time it is not a TWS earphone. The London-based brand has joined the open earbuds bandwagon. The company’s latest offering is the Nothing Ear ...
All products featured here are independently selected by our editors and writers. If you buy something through links on our site, Gizmodo may earn an affiliate commission. Reading time 7 minutes ...
The Nothing Headphone 1 mark a bold debut in the over-ear headphones space. There are some sound quality inconsistencies with ANC enabled and their heavy, overly-tight frame aren't great for those ...
Cody is a Commerce Writer for Android Police, which means he usually has a dozen or so Safari tabs open, comparing prices and reading product reviews. He covers everything from short-term flash sales ...