Sony WH-1000XM4

Active Noise Cancelling Headphones

Very enjoyable listening experience if a bit unnatural. Amazing extreme deep bass response. A few useful smart features but ambient/noise-cancellation modes can be unpredictable.

Sony WH-1000XM4 Wireless Active Noise Cancelling Headphones

Definitions:

  • Ambient/Passthrough: microphones are used to pass external audio to hear your surroundings. I’ll use “passthrough” as I feel it’s more descriptive, Sony calls this “ambient”.
  • NC: Noise Cancellation.

WARNING! The Sony WH-1000XM4 may not be suitable for you if you have a small head: The headband doesn’t go that small.

Summary

  • Very capable.
  • Unnatural but enjoyable sound signature.
  • NC is up there with the best. Atmospheric brown/pink noise can be heard with no music playing. Other headphones are almost silent.
  • Head band too big for small heads!
  • NC settings overly complicated but you can turn off smart switching.
  • Voice activated passthrough is great. Handy for pausing music and hearing surroundings without using your hands.
  • Touch panel volume control only allows a single step ≈3% per full swipe. You can swipe and hold to continue volume adjustment but this is slow.

App

First you need to install the app. It has a rating of 3.5/5 from 1.5k reviews on the Apple app store. It installs quickly suggesting small size which is a good sign.
It’s fine but could be simpler and more customisable. In practice you won’t use it that much. It was reliable with no connection issues.

Unboxing

The box combines plastic and card, a plastic covered wire tie is used for the 3.5mm cable and a piece of plastic for the USB-C cable. Please stop using plastic in your packaging Sony.
The case is fabric coated with a nice with loop and mesh pocket on the outside.
The case appears to be quite sturdy, durable and offers good crush protection.

Opening up the case reveals a neat package including a short USB-C cable, flight adapter and 3.5mm cable, each have their own section. I prefer a short USB-C cable as it’s easier to store and manage plus is neater to use with your laptop. Some may prefer longer but you can swap it out. The headphones are well protected with a non-padded but felt covered divider.

The headphones give you get an oozing of quality. The cup pivots are so smooth, like they’re on bearings and the hinges are smooth too. It’s a floppy mess taking them out due to the hinges and swivels. The left cup is on the right in the case and vice versa. It’s not a big deal and I’m sure it’s something that you’ll get used to. The headband has a ratchet mechanism that is easier to extend than to retract. It's too easy to extend and it has led to the headband being extended by accident.

The cups seem very well made but not as seamless as other headphones, the pads are slightly wavy at the top and bottom. The leather and padding is very soft making them more comfortable for long periods.

There are two buttons, “Power” and “Custom” and a touch panel on the right cup.

Inside the left cup is a proximity sensor. I don’t like how this is asymmetrical with the right cup, in theory producing a slightly different sound signature from right to left.

Putting the headphones on I noticed two issues one of which could be a deal breaker!

  1. My head is quite small and the smallest setting was slightly too big for me so these may be too big for you if you have a particularly small head.
  2. The ratchet mechanism is quite high on the band so you can’t hold the cans in your hand and use your index finger to adjust. You can hold above the cups to reach the upper part of the band, but this isn’t as natural as holding the cans where you want them and then adjust the band into place. There is a little raised dot on the back of the left cup to help you to identify left from right. I didn’t notice my fingers accidentally pressing on buttons as I put them on. The power button is hard to reach on the bottom, tt’s possible, but a bit awkward. It’s not going to be easy to put these on and turn them on at the same time as I find works well with some headphones.

I’m quite disappointed that the headband doesn’t go any smaller.

The clamping force on the Sony feels light. This spreading of weight and pressure makes the headphones feel very light, lighter than other ones.

Turning on requires a long press of the power button. They immediately went into pairing mode with what I thought was passthrough mode because the noise floor of NC is so high. The app took me through setup where it asked for my location as it can automatically change the mode of the headphones. Initially you can’t tell the app to always use your location and have to select “Allow when using app” later the phone asked if I wanted to always allow.

The app also took me through 360º reality audio. This took pictures of my ears and optimised Tidal (the music app I use). After that I had a prompt as to what software version was running. It wasn’t very clear what to do but I shortly noticed it was “Transferring the latest headphones software...” There is a noise cancelling optimiser process. Not sure what it does beyond optimising for the environment you’re in but I didn’t notice a difference and I wonder why doesn’t it just do it automatically?

Comfort

These pads are slightly larger and softer than their predecessor which should make them more comfortable. As above, the band doesn’t go small enough for small heads. As a result my left ear, if not positioned carefully would touch the proximity sensor and after a while became painful. This shouldn’t be a problem if you have normal sized ears and head. The cups are also quite shallow relative to other headphones. I never felt discomfort from the band or the pads.
Larger pads may make them warmer than other headphones and although I didn’t get sweaty, my ears did feel a bit clammy after an hour or two.

Multipoint/multiple connections

These headphones support multiple simultaneous connections e.g. Laptop and phone.
LDAC will be turned off which is used for Hi-Res streaming. LDAC is not available on iPhone.

Bluetooth pairing and connection

The pairing process was easy, without issue. The app quickly recognised the headphones. Unfortunately I can’t say it is completely rosy. I’ve had occasions where it appears to connect to my MacBook but I can’t select them as the audio output, shortly after, they disconnect. Nothing I did would fix this when I was able to connect and select other headphones. The only way I could then get this to work was to enable “Connect to 2 devices simultaneously”. Connection stealing is possible but very unreliable so you have to manually disconnect from one device before connecting to another. I can confirm that this is the cause of the issue mentioned above. In multipoint mode, connection stealing might be more reliable and you get a “Bluetooth device 1 replaced” confirmation. The downside is that you can’t use the higher quality LDAC in this mode. When it does work, the earliest connected device is disconnected.

I found the range to be pretty average but nothing bad. I would have hoped for a better connection given the price and all that space to fit an aerial?! I get the same range with a pair of truly wireless earbuds!

Noise cancellation

With NC on you get an atmospheric brown/pink noise, it’s not that loud and sounds kind of natural but it’s something I don’t experience on other headphones. I turned my ultra quiet fan on to full power. I can only just hear the fan. The fan noise is kind of added to the atmospheric noise. This atmospheric sound isn’t necessarily a bad thing, it gives you a sense of spaciousness but it doesn’t give you the same reassurance of noise cancellation that other headphones do. Wind noise can be picked up by the microphones.

With general, less predictable ambient noise such as talking, I found the headphones would dull them but strange artifacts occurred. e.g. a change in the atmospheric noise. I found this distracting. Not something I experience with other headphones.

With simulated plane noise I noticed a whooshing sound that was more prominent than other headphones.

In a simulated cafe environment I found a fair bit of higher frequency atmospheric noise as well as seemingly less consistent noise cancellation than other headphones. I found the NC overall more distracting as certain sounds would cause weird artifacts, not be very well cancelled or cause more atmospheric noise. Just to clarify, I’m nitpicking, the NC is very impressive, I do find other headphones are more consistent but not necessarily better.

Random noises - NC vs NC off (not passthrough)

Handheld jigsaw outside my window: I actually found these slightly amplified the saw. With NC off I couldn’t hear it. With NC on, I could only just hear it. Low frequency noises were however completely cancelled which were pretty loud with NC off. This is similar to other headphones.
Keyboard: The thud of the keyboard is removed, but the “clack” isn’t.

I’ve heard a lot of people saying the NC on the XM4 is better than certain headphones. I can’t agree that is absolutely the case. They are virtually identical to other headphones I’ve tried. The XM4 does have the brown/pink noise that can mask (not cancel) some sound and this could make it seem like they are better. I have even gone so far as to have one cup of one headphone on one ear and a Sony one on the other. I wouldn’t base your purchase decision on this.

Passthrough/Ambient mode

On some headphones there is virtually no atmospheric noise, the distinction between NC and passthrough is obvious. Passthrough on those headphones is almost like you’re not wearing them, the passthrough is very natural and it sounds almost identical to real life. The Sony performed worse here. It cuts out some of the higher frequencies, especially sibilant sounds - hissing sounds such as those when you pronounce an S. They also add to that atmospheric noise. I also noticed that they amplify the rustling sound of your clothes if you’re walking and this can drown out other noises. This is a clear and distinct loss for the XM4. That said, if you weren’t directly comparing then you might not find this such a big issue, but it’s just a wow how natural passthrough is on some models. It really is very close to not wearing them. Overall, I found the passthrough mode made the environment sound more noisy than it actually is, providing a larger contrast on the Sony vs other headphones between NC and passthrough.

The Sony has a “Focus on Voice” setting. It’s good to have it but I found it a bit weird in that the atmospheric noise would change making me feel a bit queasy! It seems to think some noises are voices so it passes them through.

A standout feature of the Sony is the voice detection. They will pause your music and turn on passthrough mode. After 30 seconds they revert back or you can double tap. This is customisable between 15s, 30s, 1minute or not revert automatically. Detection sensitivity can be changed. “Automatic" will adjust depending on the environment, there is also high and low. A throat clearing will activate this feature, even in low sensitivity. I would like low sensitivity to ignore a throat clearing, you can turn this off. I would also like to see a 5 second delay. I found the activation to be reliable and was never triggered accidentally. One strange thing I did notice is that if you’re already in passthrough mode and start talking, then the voice detection is triggered and the headphones go into a slightly different passthrough mode. Perhaps it’s to optimise for voice but it just didn’t seem right to me.

When talking with these I found my own voice passthrough to be disconnected, you get that talking in your head experience. It’s not too bad but I felt they could do better. I didn’t feel it natural to talk with these on. Other headphones perform better in this area.

Custom button

By default this cycles through Noise Cancelling > Ambient Sound > Off. Long press for Noise Cancelling Optimizer. Switichng between three modes with the Sony feels like a chore. Just having NC and passthrough would be better. You can’t customise the three presses, you can only change it to activate smart assistant. A long press on the touch panel also activates the smart assistant.

Pressing “power” announces battery level. Long press (2 seconds?) will power on/off. This seems a too long for my liking but it stops you accidentally turning them on/off.

Touch panel

Controls are:

  • Double tap: Play pause
  • Swipe up/down [hold]: Volume control [continue increasing/decreasing]
  • Swipe backwards/forwards: Skip back/forwards
  • Long press: Voice assistant
  • Long press with two fingers: Turn on/off voice detection
  • Cover cup: Ambient/Passthrough (Music continues playing at low volume. This isn’t customisable so not good for audiobooks or podcasts which you would want to pause.

You can completely turn off the touch panel with the “Touch sensor control panel” setting.
When changing volume you get feedback tones which can be annoying. There is a setting “Notification & Voice Guide” but this doesn’t turn off volume tones which I think is important to be able to do. I couldn’t find a setting that would. This does turn off the NC mode announcement which makes it easier to tell the difference in sound because it’s not hidden behind the voice prompt.

Volume control takes several swipes, way more than feels reasonable if you’re making a big adjustment. It’s not smart, you can only change the volume 1 step with a full swipe, Sony takes maybe 10-30 swipes! I also found that I couldn’t always adjust volume accurately enough, either being slightly too loud or too quiet. You can swipe and hold for the headphones to continue changing the volume up/down but this is very slow. I feel this doesn’t work as well as other headphones where you can change volume varying steps in a single swipe, they almost feel like an analogue volume knob.

Smart controls

Taking the headphones off pauses music. Some headphones with this functionality will play audio that is paused when you take them off, and then pause when you put them back on. The XM4 paused audio stays paused and will not play when you put them back on.
Voice detection pauses music and activates passthrough automatically. This works well but can be an issue if you like to sing or hum along. You can touch and hold the touch panel with two fingers to deactivate “speak to chat”. Two seconds seems too long, I would prefer 1. You can come straight out of “speak to chat” mode by double tapping. Unpausing from your device also brings you out.
Ambient/Passthrough mode can be set automatically depending on location e.g. at home or on the street.

Call/Microphone quality

I tested by recording my voice, these performed fine but not quite as good as other headphones.

Audio/Video lag

No perceptible lag. Tested with an audio video sync test video.

Sound quality

I’ve mentioned the noise floor but noise cancellation isn’t everything, especially with music playing so you can’t hear the noise. There’s a certain level that noise cancellation needs to be, mainly to cancel loud sounds such as on a plane and general chit chatter and noise in a cafe or public environment. It’s about the whole experience.

I’m pleased to say these sound great. They don’t sound very natural but I think they sound pleasing and enjoyable. Bass is strong, controlled, doesn’t sound muddy but could be tighter, mids are clear and smooth, highs go all the way up with accurate sibilance that’s not harsh, the XM4 sounds airy. Instruments are accurately placed and the soundstage is wide. Cinematic, deep, low, rumbly bass is strong and all there. The XM4s are like a juggernaut, powering through long bass lines, nothing can stop them. But is the bass a bit too overemphasised? If it is, I’m sure you can dial it in with the EQ.

360˚ audio

You will need a streaming source that provides 360˚ audio tracks. These libraries are typically limited. Is it a gimmick? Actually, no it’s not, it does expand the soundstage in a sphere around your head. It’s a great experience and separates instruments in 3D space.

Analogue wired mode and Noise Cancellation

The 3.5mm cable supplied isn’t symmetrical. I assume the right angle end goes into the source but can be plugged in either way. Being 3.5mm on each end it should be easy to replace.

In wired mode The XM4 doesn’t have volume control, others do. The XM4 is effectively full volume, therefore you could have an issue if your source volume is too high or volume steps too wide. On a plane with so many headphone jacks, cabling etc. the signal coming out of the jacks can be quite noisy and you can hear it in headphones, especially if they’re sensitive. A trick you can use is to turn the headphone volume down (not possible with the XM4) and turn the source up so you get a higher signal to noise ratio. I’ve found some headphones filter electrical noise. I have been on a flight and able to hear electrical noise with other headphones turned off but with them on the noise was removed! I haven’t been able to verify this with the XM4.

Hi-Res audio

These have DSEE Extreme and LDAC so they’re [more] compatible with Hi-Res audio and in theory they should sound better than other headphones. I have a Hi-Res walkman which can take advantage of DSEE Extreme and LDAC. At this level of audio quality it’s difficult to hear differences in the music itself but you do hear better separation of instruments which gives the illusion that the music is clearer, well it probably is! It’s like seeing in 2D vs 3D, both have the same visual quality but you get that extra depth information that allows you to better estimate where objects are. It also sounds smoother. This is all very difficult to discern any difference. LDAC is not available on iPhones.

Battery life

5 hours for a 10 minute charge is very useful, they generally charge quickly.
I did an initial battery life test with: Multipoint off (single device connected), DSEE Extreme on, NC on. Listening to around 80% spoken audio (videos etc.) and 20% music at 50% volume. I only got about 22 hours until flat which is a far cry from the advertised 30 hours. A full charge took about 3.5 hours. I turned DSEE off and Multipoint on (LDAC off) (two devices connected, laptop and phone). I then got about 28 hours.
All of the following will draw significant battery:

  • DSEE Extreme on
  • NC on
  • LDAC on, there is no specific setting for this, you need to turn Multipoint on “Connect to 2 devices simultaneously” which turns off LDAC.
  • Speak to chat on

Complexity

The Sony has more functionality than others but this results in a more messy experience. Whether the added complexity of the Sony adds value or not I’ll just have to live with them for a couple of weeks… in the end I turned off the automatic NC/Ambient location detection. It would occasionally change mode when I want it to stay in NC and the automatic mode changing is distracting. I guess you will get used to how they will react and what you don’t like, you can turn off.

Conclusion

The headband is too big for small heads. They feel overly complex in operation. They are pretty comfortable (head size aside). NC is right up there with the best. They sound fantastic but don’t sound that natural, they are very enjoyable to listen to. Extreme deep bass is more present than other headphones. The voice detection is useful if your hands are occupied. There is the brown/pink noise floor that I don’t understand why it’s there. I prefer the more analogue style of volume control on other headphones with touchpads. They are a bit of a floppy mess when getting them out of the case. The lack of volume control in wired mode could be an issue for people that regularly jack into in flight audio. I don’t know if they filter out electrical noise.

Resources

Settings affecting battery life

Bose NC700

Active Noise Cancelling Headphones

Great noise cancelling and microphone quality on calls, good sound and build quality but slightly let down by the occasional software issues.

Bose NC700

Please note: This review was originally written on the 29th August 2019. Bose released version 1.7.0 of their firmware on the 14th September 2020 which includes an EQ. This EQ makes them sound way better and comments below around the sound feeling lacking or not delighted are no longer valid, they sound fantastic. Even a year later these headphones are standing up against the best. I've left the original review intact as I'm sure this EQ update will cause confusion around whether they actually sound great or not, especially given the current competition which I can now say they can stand up against.

First impressions

The headphones come nicely packaged in an easy to open box. Inside is the carrying case containing the headphones and a section with a magnetic flap containing a 3.5mm to 2.5mm cable for an analog signal that can be used with no power, plus a USB-A to USB-C cable for charging the headphones. USB-C should be the charging port standard nowadays so it’s good to see this on the headphones. The case itself is fairly large since the cups of the headphones only swivel and don’t fold but the case is quite slim and light. It feels like it should offer good protection. The zip feels durable and opens easily allowing the case to lie flat. Since the headphones don’t fold it’s quick to take them out and put them on. The buttons can be accidentally pressed but this isn’t an issue once you get used to them and actually you can easily turn the headphones on while taking them out and putting them on.

Headphone design

The headphones themselves look nice but the design of the band going across the centre of the cups is a surprise, not a bad surprise mind you, but it does mean the touch panel is only on the front half of the right cup. In practice this works fine because you only skip forward and backward horizontally and you still get the full height for adjusting volume, allowing for multiple volume increments per swipe. Somehow I never seemed to need to adjust the headband size, perhaps because I have a small head but, because there is no ratchet, it’s easy to adjust anyway, potentially pushing the end of the band with both thumbs when you take them out, or pushing the top of the band against the top of the case to put them away. Essentially, taking these out of the case and putting them on always seems to be a swift process.

The overall design I would describe as smooth. The cushions are smooth and soft, almost perfectly fitting the plastic housing. The cushioning of the headband is smooth and goes pretty much round the entire band with a bit on top to give a more rounded appearance.

Overall, they feel nice and durable and after a month of use I was never concerned about the longevity of the cup swivel.

Initial experience

Turning them on for the first time was a delight. Outside noise just melts away as you hear some music much like you would hear in a cinema during its surround sound demonstration and shortly after you’re told they’re ready to connect and to download the Bose Music app. The first time connecting to the headphones went fine and two Bluetooth connections were made, one with an “LE-“ prefix which I assume means Low Energy but I’m not quite sure why this is required (if you need to repair, remember to forget both!). On later occasions I had issues with the app connecting to the headphones, nothing I would do apart from re-pairing the headphones would allow me to connect to the app, even though the headphones were connected and I could play music. I experienced this both on iPhone and Android and found that it was an extremely common issue. I emailed Bose about this but had no response however the issue seems to now be resolved. My first press of the Favourites button resulted in the headphones restarting but after that it was never an issue again.

Comfort

I have a relatively small head and have used the headphones all day during work with no discomfort at all, I also sometimes wear glasses and these were not an issue either. I would find I would get slightly warm as you would with any headphones but never sweaty.

Battery and charging

The manual states that charging takes 2.5 hours, with a few hours left of charge I usually put these on to charge over an hour’s lunch break and come back to find them still charging and get to maybe 15 hours of charge left, so 2.5 hours seems about right. The manual states 20 hours of charge and this seems about right too.

Noise cancellation

The premium feature of these headphones is their noise cancellation and I find it excellent. Any constant noise is pretty much eliminated but random noises as with any noise cancelling headphones aren’t cancelled to the same degree. Loud fans, air conditioning, train noise are all completely gone. On a plane I found I could still clearly hear it but on taking the headphones off I was extremely surprised at just how loud the plane was without them. People talking nearby are muted but not eliminated.

The headphones have 11 “noise cancellation” levels 0-10 plus noise cancellation off. 0 is a pass through mode where you can hear everything almost exactly the same as if you weren’t wearing any headphones.

One thing to note about planes is that you may need to use the wire. Noise cancellation still works when wired and I was surprised to find out that the Bose NC700 will in fact clean up electrical noise! You are also able to change the volume which I found isn't possible on other headphones, namely the Sony WH-1000XM4. I don't know if other headphones filter out electrical noise.

Features

There are three buttons, two on the right and one on the left:

  • Top right: Power, pairing and reset
  • Bottom right: Assistant
  • Bottom left: Favourites and long press for “listen mode”

Power, pairing and reset are self explanatory.

Assistant button:

When I initially set up the headphones it was difficult to get any assistant working easily. I couldn’t get Alexa working at all and Siri and Google Assistant didn’t respond to their wake word. I’ve now tried setting them up again and had no issue with any of them. However only Alexa responds to the wake word. If you have an iPhone on your desk then you can in fact say Hey Siri, the phone microphone will pick that up but it will respond through the headphones even if you have a different assistant selected. Alexa works as you would expect with the wake word except you have to wait for the “ready” tone, you can’t just quickly go “Alexa bla bla bla…” as you would with an echo, this is a very minor point that most people probably don’t realise they can even do with their echo but I felt mentioning. Even though Siri and Google Assistant don’t react to their wake words, there is still a “shortcut” setting where it looks like you can switch between battery level and enabling the wake word but that only turn off the battery level short cut. Only when Alexa is enabled is there a “Wake word” toggle visible so I believe the shortcut setting issue is an oversight from the developers.

Without the wake word you press and hold the assistant button while you talk.

If music is paused when you use the assistant then it will play afterwards which can be annoying.

Favourites button:

This allows you to toggle between 3 levels of noise cancellation including level 0 and a long press will put the headphones into “talk or listen” mode where the music is paused and noise cancellation set to 0. You can also set two of the favourites the same and it will perform as though there are only two favourites set e.g. 0 and 10 (I personally don’t use any other levels and prefer to be able to switch between the two quickly). It would be nice to be able to set one of the favourites as noise cancelling off but this is not currently possible.

Touchpad:

The front half of the right cup is a touch pad:

  • Double tap to pause/play
  • Swipe forward/backward to skip forward/backward
  • Swipe up/down for volume up/down. The further you swipe, the more it changes the volume level
  • Long press for shortcut: Hear battery life on enable/disable wake word

Under the right ear cup is the USB-C charging port which I had to problem having plugged in while the headphones were in the case with the lid closed but not zipped.

Under the left ear cup is a 2.5mm port for connecting the included 2.5mm to 3.5mm cable which doesn’t require the headphones to be turned on.

Sound quality

I couldn’t fault the sound quality but equally I wasn’t delighted. That’s not to say the quality is bad, it’s very, very good but at this price point I was expecting a bit more. The response is even across the board and while not as bass heavy as other headphones, they definitely have a good response at the low end which you could dial in if your app has an equaliser. At the top end the highs were very clear. On that note, the app doesn’t have an equaliser so your listening device/app must have its own. I personally was happy with the flat response, but to not include an equaliser feels like a huge oversight.

One feature Bose tout is “Signature active EQ” which promises to adjust the EQ depending on volume level. In practice I found this works well meaning you don’t have to turn up the volume high to get a good frequency response.

Sound sync/Lag

Watching videos on a MacBook Pro the sync seemed perfect.

Watching videos on a well known video upload site/app on my iPhone and often a culprit for laggy bluetooth audio had an almost imperceptible lag, you could only just detect it if you tried really hard and even then I wasn’t sure.

Watching videos on other streaming apps appear to have no lag.

Overall, they did very well in this regard.

Microphones

Apart from the noise cancelling abilities of these headphones, the microphones are another area where they shine. Feedback from people on the other side of phone calls and online meetings has been very good. The amazing pass through or ambient mode is a testament to how good the microphones are.

Issues

As I previously mentioned, there used to be issues connecting to the app but these must have been resolved with a background update to the firmware and/or app. I have experienced a call come in on my phone when on a video meeting on my laptop and my microphone on the headphones stopped working. I had to restart the headphones to get the microphone back. I also more recently had the headphones restart by themselves while I was in a meeting. Apart from that I haven’t had any other disconnection/restart issues.

The other thing I’ve noticed is that the headphones seem to stutter when listening to computer audio and something happens on your phone (iPhone). e.g. If I get a text message or open the Bose app. It’s not a big deal if you only get the odd message but if you’re frequently getting messages then this can be quite annoying.

Conclusion

For the price at the time of review I would hope that the initial experience would have been better with respect to the issues connecting the headphones to the app. Bose failed to respond to my message but the issue does appear to be fixed. A couple of minor issues still exist with the app and it would be nice to have “noise cancelling off” to be an option in favourites (there is no way to turn it off except with the app). I can forgive the restarting as I’ve only had that happen once in a month, but I don’t know if the issue with losing the microphone in an online meeting will happen again as a result of rejecting a phone call.

I would also hope for slightly better sound quality but then you’re not just buying these headphones for their sound quality, you’re buying them for their great noise cancelling and microphones, you truly can use these confidently for calls and online meetings etc. After a month of using them I believe the sound quality has got better with some break-in period. If sound quality is what you’re after and not so much noise cancelling or microphone quality then there may be better options. You certainly won’t be disappointed with the sound quality, I’m being very picky here because of the price point.

Update

As of the 14th September 2020 Bose released version 1.7.0 which includes an EQ. The EQ was included in previous updates but these updates were held back due to issues they caused. 1.7.0. was finally released and everyone is now able to update to it. I'm pleased to say that this EQ gets rid of what I felt "lacking" with these headphones.

Firmware Updates and Release Notes:

1.4.12 and 1.5.1 - 12th May 2020

Introduced EQ and better stability. Later held back due to various issues.

1.6.x

No release notes found. This may have been a botched release.

1.7.0 - 14th September 2020

Re-release of fixed >1.4.x.