Skip to main content

Nothing Headphone 1 Launched in India With Up to 80 Hours of Battery Life, Transparent Design


Nothing Headphone 1 were launched in India on Tuesday alongside the Nothing Phone 3. The devices were also unveiled in select global markets. The over-the-ear headphones feature active noise cancellation (ANC) and 40mm dynamic drivers, with sound tuned by British audio company KEF. They are claimed to offer up to 80 hours of battery life on a single charge when using the AAC codec, and up to 54 hours when playing LDAC audio. The Headphone 1 are compatible with both Android and iOS devices.

Nothing Headphone 1 Price in India, Availability

Nothing Headphone 1 price in India is set at Rs. 21,990. They will be available for purchase in the country via Flipkart, Flipkart Minutes, Vijay Sales, Myntra, Croma, and leading retail stores starting July 15.

The headphones are sold in Black and White colourways and as part of a launch day offer, customers can get them for Rs. 19,999 on the first day of sale.

Nothing Headphone 1 Specifications, Features

The Nothing Headphone 1 has an over-the-ear design with transparent, rectangular body that have a slightly raised oval module in the middle. They are equipped with 40mm dynamic drivers and support up to 42dB ANC, including a transparency mode. The headphones are tuned by KEF audio engineers. The headphones feature a four-microphone backed environmental noise cancellation (ENC) mode said to improve calls.

For connectivity, the Nothing Headphone 1 supports Bluetooth 5.3 as well as AAC, SBC and LDAC audio codecs. The headphones also support dual-device connectivity and are compatible with devices running Android 5.1 and iOS 13 or above. Nothing has included tactile buttons on the headphones instead of touch controls. You get a Roller, Paddle, and a Button to adjust volume, change media, and switch between the ANC modes.

Nothing Headphone 1 gets a 1,040mAh battery, which are said to attain a full charge in 120 minutes via the USB Type-C port. The headphones also have a 3.5mm audio jack. Without ANC, a fast charge of five minutes is claimed to offer a playback time of up to five hours.

The Nothing Headphone 1 can offer up to 80 hours of battery life from a single charge when playing AAC audio without ANC, according to the company. Without ANC and while playing LDAC audio, the battery life is claimed to be up to 54 hours. With ANC enabled, the headphones are said to last for up to 35 hours when listening to AAC audio and 30 hours when using the LDAC codec.

Nothing Headphone 1 measures 173.8x78x189.2mm in size and weighs 329g. In the box, the headphones come alongside a softshell storage case.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Telegram Bot Reportedly Spotted Selling Sensitive Personal Data of Indian Users

Telegram reportedly has a bot that sells sensitive personal data of Indian users to willing buyers. As per the report, the bot operates independently and shares information such as names, addresses, father's name, and even Aadhaar, Pan Card, and Voter ID numbers. The bot reportedly lets users find the full profile data of another Indian user based on their phone number. It also charges a fee for this service, which starts as low as Rs. 99. Telegram Bot Charges Rs. 4,999 for Bulk Plans The Telegram bot was discovered by Digit. The publication did not reveal the name of the bot to avoid its misuse or spread, but mentioned that its existence was revealed to them via a tip. Bots are a staple feature of Telegram, and can be created by anyone. These bots can be set up to send automated messages, connect to databases, and even handle financial transactions. As per the report, this bot was designed to provide users with sensitive user data of users based on a mobile number. However, before...

Two Spacecraft Recreate Artificial Solar Eclipses to Observe the Sun’s Superhot Corona

Two spacecraft have achieved a rare milestone: recreating a total solar eclipse in space. The European Space Agency's (ESA) Proba-3 mission released the first images on June 16 from a successful test where one satellite blocked the sun's light, allowing the other to capture the blazing outer atmosphere—the corona. Unlike fleeting eclipses on Earth, this artificial version offers prolonged, repeated observations. “We could see the corona without any special image processing,” said Andrei Zhukov of the Royal Observatory of Belgium. “It was just visible there, like during a natural total solar eclipse.” ESA's Proba-3 Spacecraft Recreates Eclipses to Study Sun's Million-Degree Corona in Unprecedented Detail As per ESA reports, the Proba-3 spacecraft orbits Earth in an elliptical path, up to 60,000 kilometres at the far end. During alignment, they float a mere 150 metres apart, one satellite casting an accurate shadow on the other. This method allows scientists to block the ...

CSIRO Uses Quantum AI to Revolutionize Semiconductor Design

Researchers at Australia's CSIRO have achieved a world-first demonstration of quantum machine learning in semiconductor fabrication. The quantum-enhanced model outperformed conventional AI methods and could reshape how microchips are designed. The team focused on modeling a crucial—but hard to predict—property called “Ohmic contact” resistance, which measures how easily current flows where metal meets a semiconductor. They analysed 159 experimental samples from advanced gallium nitride (GaN) transistors (known for high power/high-frequency performance). By combining a quantum processing layer with a final classical regression step, the model extracted subtle patterns that traditional approaches had missed. Tackling a difficult design problem According to the study, the CSIRO researchers first encoded many fabrication variables (like gas mixtures and annealing times) per device and used principal component analysis (PCA) to shrink 37 parameters down to the five most important ones. ...