Anker’s new Soundcore Liberty 4 earbuds can do something that Apple’s AirPods Pro 2 cannot

As close to perfection as Apple has undoubtedly managed to bring its second-gen AirPods Pro, the highly anticipated and long overdue noise-cancelling earbuds didn’t end up integrating the potentially game-changing technology that was tipped for months by several different insiders ahead of their official announcement three weeks ago.

Whether or not this was actually planned at any point in the AirPods Pro 2 development process and nixed at the last minute like the iPhone 14 Max name, you’re definitely going to have to wait another year or two (or more) to be able to measure your heart rate from your ear.

Alternatively, you can order the $149.99 Soundcore Liberty 4 right now in Midnight Black and Cloud White hues. Yes, the latest super-premium earbuds sold under Anker’s Soundcore sub-brand come with a built-in heart rate sensor (in the right bud) alongside other more “traditionally” high-end features and capabilities including adaptive noise cancellation, spatial audio, and up to 28 hours of (combined) battery life.

Interestingly, Anker isn’t exactly advertising the heart rate monitoring very aggressively, highlighting a number of other things as the Liberty 4’s apparent key selling points and thus suggesting the health tracking technology may not be particularly advanced or reliable.
That was certainly the case when Samsung tried something similar with the Gear IconX all the way back in 2016 and 2017, and it might help explain why Apple isn’t rushing its eventual first heart rate-tracking AirPods generation to the market.

Of course, even if we file that feature under useless gimmicks, which may or may not prove to be the case in real-life Soundcore Liberty 4 use, these bad boys still deliver objectively great value for your 150 bucks (at least on paper).

That’s a significantly lower price point than those of the second-gen AirPods Pro or Samsung’s Galaxy Buds 2 Pro, mind you, yet Anker promises to offer super-crisp and clear sound, 360-degree immersive spatial audio, and “cloud-like” comfort for up to 9 hours on a single charge, with a bundled wireless charging case boosting that endurance rating all the way up to the aforementioned 28 hours.
Given that this is a company with not one but two products currently listed among the very best wireless earbuds money can buy, it’s safe to expect these seemingly superior fourth-gen Liberties to join that roster before long. The black flavor is already shipping from the official US Soundcore website, with white models set to start going out “before October 20.”

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