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Denon Launch New Top End Buds For ‘Sound Obsessed’

Denon has set a new benchmark for “Sound Obsessed” consumers who want simply the best sound buds, with the introduction of new Denon PerL and Denon PerL Pro buds.

Masimo the owner of Sound United, and a leading developer of medical technology solutions and consumer health and audio devices announced the new buds earlier today that have as a unique feature their Masimo AAT (Adaptive Acoustic Technology).

This new audio technology, allow users to create a personal audio profile to optimise the sound quality of the headphones.

The name of the earbuds was chosen to represent Masimo’s goal of transcending how people enjoy music: through a truly Personalised Listening experience.

Joe Kiani, Founder and CEO of Masimo said, “The era of one-sound-fits-all is over. PerL automatically figures out the optimal sound for each individual, to cater to your unique ears”.

“I am personally blown away by how good PerL Pro is”.

An audiophile he added “I have not heard my music like this since I was 18”.

PerL is intuitive, comfortable, and ergonomic claims Sound United.

“With the launch of PerL, we are transcending the listening experience. We can’t wait to have our customers join us in this new paradigm.” Kiani added.

Sound United claims that ‘Hearing varies from person to person and can impact the listening experience. The two Denon PerL TWS models—Denon PerL Pro and Denon PerL—use proprietary Masimo technology to measure faint otoacoustic emissions (OAEs), which are produced by the inner ear in the presence of a range of tones played to assess each person’s unique response to sound.

Once the OAEs are analysed to determine how sensitive a person’s ears are to each frequency, a personal hearing profile is created in the Denon PerL Headphone app, using artificial intelligence.

This individualised profile provides unparalleled depth, detail, and clarity – tuned perfectly to your own hearing and elevated by Denon’s vivid and spacious signature sound. Another key benefit, unique to Denon PerL Pro earbuds, is the delivery of high-quality sound wirelessly. While standard Bluetooth® technology compresses and decompresses audio during wireless transmission, Denon PerL Pro earbuds provide a streaming experience similar to listening to a CD. \

This means users can enjoy high-fidelity streaming sources with excellent audio fidelity. PerL Pro also creates a surround sound effect that enhances the overall audio experience in a compact and comfortable wireless earbud design. Both the Denon PerL Pro and PerL models offer active noise cancellation and a more transparent social mode, allowing you to tune the world out or let it in. PerL Pro features eight microphones (vs. four in PerL) and upgraded noise cancellation, automatically adjusting the level of cancellation according to the amount of leak-through, the environment’s sound, and the tightness of fit in the ears.

Denon PerL users will be able to elevate their personalisation journey by viewing their unique profiles through the Denon Headphones app for iOS and Android, with the ability to customise features such as selective noise cancelling or Social Mode and on-earbud touch controls such as play/pause, skip track, change volume, and more. Denon PerL and PerL Pro headphones will be available in Australia in August 2023.
One observer said that stores that discount brands, can make it harder for the brands to sell items at full price through their own stores and websites. Moreover, brands can lose control of how their products are displayed when they are sold by other retailers, which often buy only a few items, not the whole collection.

Still, some executives at digital startups said their assumption that brands could make more money without the traditional retailers doesn’t always prove true.

Let’s say it costs a brand $25 to produce a product that it sells to a retail store for $50, netting it a $25 profit.

The department store will mark up the product and sell it for $100.

Digital brands figured that if they could sell the shirt directly to consumers for $100, or even a little less, they would make more money.

But once marketing, shipping and other costs were factored in, many brands wound up losing money, or making less than they expected, an online retailer told the Wall Street Journal recently.

“To scale a business, you have to meet customers where they want to shop,”

“In a lot of cases, customers still want to shop at stores that carry multiple brands.” said one observer.



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