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andrewmg

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andrewmg
·13 giorni fa·discuss
I am an audiophile, and for me the AirPods Pro replaced literally thousands of dollars of portable headphones, amplifiers, etc., which I don't miss a bit. Apple's audio engineering is truly top-notch, and all the convenience features are icing on the cake.
andrewmg
·mese scorso·discuss
It retains past passwords. Open the entry in the Passwords app and then scroll down to "View History" button.
andrewmg
·3 mesi fa·discuss
Our companion case in the Sixth Circuit tees up the issue:

https://www.buckeyeinstitute.org/issues/detail/ream-v-us-dep...

See the opening brief.
andrewmg
·3 mesi fa·discuss
Reposting my comment from the last thread:

For those wondering, the opinion[0] doesn't address the Commerce Clause power (and Wickard and Raich) becaue the government abandoned that argument. See footnote 5.

The Commerce Clause issue is raised in our other case[1] that's now pending before the Sixth Circuit.

(I argued both cases.)

[0] https://www.ca5.uscourts.gov/opinions/pub/24/24-10760-CV0.pd...

[1] https://www.buckeyeinstitute.org/issues/detail/ream-v-us-dep...
andrewmg
·3 mesi fa·discuss
Raich is teed up. See our opening brief[0] at pp. 38–39.

[0] https://www.buckeyeinstitute.org/library/docLib/2025-06-24-T...
andrewmg
·3 mesi fa·discuss
For those wondering, the opinion[0] doesn't address the Commerce Clause power (and Wickard and Raich) becaue the government abandoned that argument. See footnote 5.

The Commerce Clause issue is raised in our other case[1] that's now pending before the Sixth Circuit.

(I argued both cases.)

[0] https://www.ca5.uscourts.gov/opinions/pub/24/24-10760-CV0.pd...

[1] https://www.buckeyeinstitute.org/issues/detail/ream-v-us-dep...
andrewmg
·4 mesi fa·discuss
This seems backwards to me, mostly. A decade ago, quality sound on the go meant a pocket headphone amp wired to deep-seated inner-ear earphones or clunky over-the-ear cans.

Today? Airpods Pro do the trick: the second- and third-generation models rival or exceed most wired options. And that makes sense: Apple's R&D spending and engineering capabilities for a product like Airpods dwarf the resources of traditional audio companies--the built-in DSP alone is a staggering achievement. So they ought to sound great, and they really do.

And that's before you even consider all the other capabilities, like taking calls, etc. My pocket amps and wired 'phones (Etymotic, Shure, B&O, a few others I'm forgetting) have been gathering dust since the Airpods Pro came to market. I do not miss de-tangling the cables.

Of course, it is possible to do better, but not easy or inexpensive. On my desks at home and at the office are dedicated headphone rigs: DACs, amps, and wired open-backed cans (Focal, HifiMan). Those set-ups sound great--although not nearly so great as my two-channel speaker systems. But that's what it takes to get appreciably better sound than Apple's Bluetooth sets, and forget about portability.