Skip to main content

Beyerdynamic’s Lagoon ANC cans combine customization, noise cancellation

There’s a trend afoot here at CES 2019 in the personal audio space. It’s bringing the power of software to bear on the question of how to make sure every listener is getting the most out of their headphones. Two people can listen to the exact same music track, at the same volume, on the same device while using the same set of headphones, and yet they will hear two different sounds. Beyerdynamic’s new Lagoon ANC headphones bring their own take on this trend with an intriguing new partnership.

More CES 2019 coverage

Beyerdynamic began experimenting with customization when it included an app from Mimi Defined with its Aventho Bluetooth headphones in 2017. That app lets users set up custom listening profiles based on how they heard different sounds. Using that data, the app then applies its algorithms to selectively enhance certain parts of the EQ. This calibration can balance out the subtle effects of hearing loss that affect all of us at different ages — there’s even a difference between men and women.

These days, Beyerdynamic calls the system “Mosayc,” and it reminds us a great deal of another CES 2019 launch: Sonarworks’ mobile version of its True-Fi headphone calibration software. It’s also got much in common with Nuheara’s hearing-enhancing system but isn’t as simple as Nuraphone’s automatic calibration system, which is designed to tell who is wearing the headphones.

As advanced as the Aventho headphones were, they did not offer any noise cancellation. Beyerdynamic’s new Lagoon ANC closed, over-ear headphones have hybrid active noise cancellation — and they work with the Mimi Defined-powered Mosayc personalization app too. The folding cans come in two colors, and feature several Bluetooth codecs including  SBC, AAC, aptX and aptX Low Latency, provided your source device supports them. A touch-sensitive surface gives control over playback and volume.

There are some other cool new features in the Lagoon as well, including an LED ring inside the earpieces that is both aesthetically pleasing and relatively useful in that it not only lets you know how much charge is left in the wireless cans (red for low, orange for medium, and green for fully charged), but it also lights up in white and red to indicate stereo channels when you first pick up the cans. As for battery life, the cans offer around 25 hours with all the bells and whistles in play, and as much as 45 hours or so without them.

We’ll likely be getting some ears-on time with the headphones once they make their way to market in the new year, so stay tuned to find out more.

Editors' Recommendations

Simon Cohen
Simon Cohen covers a variety of consumer technologies, but has a special interest in audio and video products, like spatial…
Sony’s new flagship headphones promise best-in-class noise canceling and calling
Sony WH-1000XM5 headphones seen in silver.

As expected, Sony has taken the wraps off the fifth generation of its flagship line of active noise cancellation (ANC) wireless headphones. The WH-1000XM5 have been priced at $400 -- $50 more than their predecessors, the WH-1000XM4 -- and they sport a new, lighter-weight design, dual noise-canceling processors, eight microphones, and hi-res audio capability. The XM5 can be pre-ordered starting May 12 in both black and silver (a sort of sand color), and general retail availability begins May 20.

Sony plans to keep selling the older XM4 model alongside the new XM5, at least for the foreseeable future. The biggest change to Sony's design for the WH-1000 series is a move away from the traditional flat-headband plus earcup forks design to an integrated approach. The headband sliders are now tubular and connect to a hidden pivot inside the tops of the earcups, creating a similar profile to both the Bose Noise Cancelling Headphones 700 and the Apple AirPods Max. The new design means that, unlike the XM4, which can fold flat, then fold again to take up less room, the WH-1000XM5 can only fold flat.

Read more
Dyson Zone are noise-canceling, air-purifying headphones
Dyson Zone air-purifying headphones.

Dyson, the U.K. company known for its line of stylish and pricey vacuum cleaners, has announced a set of noise-canceling headphones that it says are also the world's first air-purifying cans. They're called the Dyson Zone, and they look like something out of a Daft Punk video, with a huge set of earcups and a large, chrome-finished mouthpiece that wraps around the front of your face, from ear to ear. Dyson hasn't said how much the Zone will cost or when they will be available for purchase.

Editor's note: This article was updated on April 1, 2022, with a response from Dyson regarding public health criticisms of the Zone (bottom of page).

Read more
Next-gen AirPods could let others override your ANC
A woman wearing AirPods 3rd Generation while exercising.

Ever since Apple debuted its now-iconic AirPods true wireless earbuds, it has been expanding what these handy devices can do. The list now includes hands-free access to Siri, enhanced hearing with Conversation Boost, head-tracking spatial audio, and the super-popular combo of active noise cancellation (ANC) and transparency mode. But if a recently published patent application is any indication, Apple could soon let a trusted person remotely disable ANC mode, just by uttering a pre-determined word or phrase.

The patent application, entitled "Interrupt for noise cancelling audio devices" was first spotted by AppleInsider, and it details -- at great length -- how AirPods owners could allow their attention to be grabbed by another person, by automatically shutting off ANC mode when that person says a specific passphrase.

Read more