{"id":1264,"date":"2020-10-05T08:00:41","date_gmt":"2020-10-05T07:00:41","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/techsofar.com\/?p=1264"},"modified":"2020-12-27T11:01:12","modified_gmt":"2020-12-27T10:01:12","slug":"treblab-xfit-earbuds-review","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/techsofar.com\/treblab-xfit-earbuds-review\/","title":{"rendered":"Treblab xFit TWS Earbuds Review: 5 Reasons to Buy It"},"content":{"rendered":"
With smartphone manufacturers gradually phasing out the inclusion of the 3.5mm audio jack from the latest smartphones<\/a>, not that cool by the way, the need to evolve and rely on other mechanisms for listening to music or even audio from your devices persists.<\/p>\n While there’s simply less and less option by the day to just plug in a headset into your phone and listen away, Bluetooth based headphones, and the newly, not that new way of listening to music “earbuds” are now the order of the day.<\/p>\n In fact, earbuds have never been more relevant in today’s world with each company releasing its own set of earbuds with one or two unique features.<\/p>\n This is a classic business move that has worked for decades, create a problem, in this case, remove the headphone jack from phones limiting the way we get the audio from these devices then providing a solution, earbuds, small audio devices connected to your phone via Bluetooth<\/a> that stick to your ears.<\/p>\n Apple started this trend with the AirPods and no sooner than later, other smartphone maker brands followed with their own versions, Samsung introduced and launched the Galaxy pixel buds<\/a>, Google announced its own pixel buds, Amazon launched the echo buds with Alexa, Microsoft also recently introduced its own surface buds to the market alongside others.<\/p>\nThe rise of earbuds<\/h2>\n