| ▲ | mcculley an hour ago | ||||||||||||||||
The modern world is funny. I have a hearing impairment, tinnitus, and use both AirPods and less visible hearing aids to hear people better. I only wear the AirPods around people who know me well enough to know that I am wearing them so that I can better hear them. I don’t want strangers to think I don’t want to hear them or that I am being rude. When I am out among strangers, I wear the less visible hearing aids. But a funny consequence is that because my modern, less visible, hearing aids are connected to my phone, I am often listening to podcasts or news and nobody can tell. So sometimes a stranger will say something and I have to pause the audio and ask them to repeat themselves. I am wondering what social norms will be like once everyone has less visible electronics in their ears. | |||||||||||||||||
| ▲ | russdill an hour ago | parent | next [-] | ||||||||||||||||
Wouldn't it be cool if this situation could be detected and when you hit pause it would actually repeat them for you? | |||||||||||||||||
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| ▲ | rogerrogerr an hour ago | parent | prev [-] | ||||||||||||||||
Ever thought about wrapping your AirPods to be skin-colored? I wonder if that would be more inviting for strangers than the stereotypical white color. | |||||||||||||||||