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Home / Hot Stuff / Philips’ A7507 hybrid buds have bone-conduction mics for calls

Philips’ A7507 hybrid buds have bone-conduction mics for calls

And there's a pair of new rugged Bluetooth speakers, too

It can be difficult to set a new pair of true wireless earbuds apart from any of the thousands of others that are out there right now, but Philips might just have managed it with its A7507 hybrid buds.

As well as large, low-distortion, graphene-coated drivers and active noise-cancelling, the sport-friendly earphones have bone-conduction microphones for better quality calls when there’s a load of racket in the background. A dedicated algorithm also works to reduce wind noise, while support for LDAC and AAC codecs should mean your tunes sound as sweet as possible.

The battery in the buds lasts about eight hours, with 21 more in the charging case, but if you’re running really low and just need a bit of juice to get you home, 15 minutes plugged in via USB-C is enough to add an extra hour.

If you’re after a speaker rather than a pair of earphones, Philips has also unveiled two Bluetooth jobs: the 10-watt S4807 and larger 40-watt S7807. Both have built-in straps and a double layer of rubber to protect from the bumps and scrapes of life on the road, come with Bluetooth 5.2 which means they can be connected to multiple devices at once, and can be paired with second speakers for proper stereo sound.

Measuring  104x104x280mm, the S7807 includes a pair of 70mm woofers, a 20mm tweeter and a passive radiator to boost the bass, while the S4807 has a single 45mm mid/bass driver, a 20mm tweeter and two passive radiators. You’ll get 24 hours out of the 5000mAh battery in the S7807, which also doubles as a power bank, and half that from the S4807. 

Philips hasn’t announced pricing for any of the new products yet but they should be on sale later in the year.

Profile image of Tom Wiggins Tom Wiggins Contributor

About

Stuff's other Tom has been writing for the magazine and website since 2006, when smartphones were only for massive nerds and you could say “Alexa” out loud without a robot answering. Over the years he’s written about everything from MP3s to NFTs, played FIFA with Trent Alexander-Arnold, and amassed a really quite impressive collection of USB sticks.

Areas of expertise

Gaming (OK, mainly just FIFA), weird Alexa skills, USB sticks