![adaptive sound control sony adaptive sound control sony](https://cdn.xingosoftware.com/audioxpress/images/fetch/dpr_1/https%3A%2F%2Fwww.audioxpress.com%2Fassets%2Fupload%2Fimages%2F1%2F20200807133338_Sony-WH-1000XM4-FrontWeb.jpg)
![adaptive sound control sony adaptive sound control sony](https://www.audiovideo.lt/media/catalog/product/cache/1/image/650x/040ec09b1e35df139433887a97daa66f/s/o/sony-wh-1000xm2_6-1024x682.jpg)
Whether at home, on the train, or in the office, noise canceling is fast becoming a must-have feature for over-ear headphones.īose and Sony are the premier brand in this space, but others like Bowers & Wilkins, Beyerdynamic, and Bang & Olufsen are offering compelling alternatives. But, as the world has grown noisier and technology has gotten better, we all now demand and are getting noise-canceling cans that sound great and don’t look like a Volvo parked on your head. Noise-canceling headphones used to be the exclusive preserve of frequent flyers who cared more about tranquility than sound quality or aesthetics.
ADAPTIVE SOUND CONTROL SONY SERIES
Just as it seemed as though Sony would slip behind the rapidly improving competition, however, the 1000X M3s arrive and rectify almost every issue the series has had so far, while splitting the cost difference between its predecessors with a sensible $349 price. Sony seemed to find little room for improvement with its second-gen 1000X M2s, so it chopped $100 off the price and polished up a couple of technical aspects - though that came at the cost of some excitement in their sound. The original 1000Xs cost a cent under $400 and were instantly among the best in their class. The Sony 1000X M3 over-ear, noise-canceling headphones are the third iteration of Sony’s already great 1000X series. This is why it’s such a nostalgic pleasure for me to today be reviewing a new Sony product that is the undeniable best in its category.
![adaptive sound control sony adaptive sound control sony](https://static1.anpoimages.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2019/01/Screenshot_20190113-052857.png)
Like any child of the ‘90s, I grew up with Sony’s name being synonymous with the most desirable technology. Since that day, I’ve owned a Walkman cassette player and a Walkman phone, a PlayStation, a NEX mirrorless camera, and an illogical desire for VAIO laptops. I put it there more than 20 years ago when my parents brought home a big-screen Sony TV and an accompanying Sony VCR. There’s an enthusiastic “It’s a Sony” sticker on a kitchen wall in my childhood home.