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Bose tries crowdsourcing to develop sleep improving earbuds

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Bose is looking for dedicated product testers for its upcoming sleepbuds in-ear plugs
Bose
Bose is looking for dedicated product testers for its upcoming sleepbuds in-ear plugs
Bose
Bose says that 10 soothing sounds will be available to Indiegogo testers
Bose
Indiegogo testers will get a pair of sleepbuds, a charging case, and early access to the Sleep companion app
Bose
Instead of rocking you out, the sleepbuds are designed to rock you to sleep, replacing the sounds of bustling traffic below an apartment window, noisy neighbors or even a snoring partner with sounds to soothe you into a peaceful slumber
Bose
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Bose is a tried and trusted name when it comes to noise-cancellation technology, with its Quiet Comfort headphones being among our favorites. Now the company wants to help folks get some quality sleep. Though many folks would likely pop in some foam plugs to try and drown out bumps in the night, student parties or the clatter of a two-stroke as a scooter rider zooms past an open window, Bose wants to fight such noise with sounds. Soothing sounds to be precise. The project is still at the prototype stage and Bose has turned to Indiegogo to build a test bed of users that will help with product development.

Bose has made a batch of sleepbuds prototypes available to Indiegogo pioneers for an "exclusive price," hoping that they will share their thoughts and experiences to help Bose refine the buds prior to global release.

So why is a big company like Bose essentially crowdfunding product development? "We acknowledge that we don't need the money like a typical startup does. However, quite candidly, we're charging a discounted price for the prototype because we believe it's the best way to find highly motivated testers. We believe that testers who pay for the prototype are likely living with a severe 'noise in the bedroom' problem, they're going to use the prototype rigorously, and they'll provide more and better feedback to help us improve the product and user experience."

The sleepbuds look similar to truly wireless earphones. But instead of rocking you out, they're designed to rock you to sleep, replacing the sounds of bustling traffic below an apartment window, noisy neighbors or even a snoring partner with sounds to soothe you into a peaceful slumber.

Instead of rocking you out, the sleepbuds are designed to rock you to sleep, replacing the sounds of bustling traffic below an apartment window, noisy neighbors or even a snoring partner with sounds to soothe you into a peaceful slumber
Bose

The sleepbuds pair with a smartphone running a companion app – so you'd best leave your phone on charge all night to ensure unbroken slumber. Snoozers personalize the Sleep app by choosing their own ideal sonic soothers from 10 pre-loaded options (such as nature sounds or red noise), the volume level and play duration. The sound bank is divided into noise-masking and relaxation categories, which suggests that the sleepbuds might also be useful for meditation. And the app can also send a wake up sound through the sleepbuds to get you out of bed in the morning.

If all this sounds eerily familiar, you'd be right. We tried out some Hush smart earplugs last year, which were also developed for the same purpose. Bose now owns Hush, and has merged its audio know-how with the strides already made by Hush to develop the sleepbuds.

Normally, this would the point where we would list pledge levels available to backers. But the project has already proven to be such an attractive proposal that, with 2 weeks left to run on the campaign clock, all of the available test slots have been snapped up.

Intrepid sleepbuds tester will get their development kit – which includes a pair of sleepbuds, different-sized tips, a charging case and a travel pouch – in February 2018. Bose plans to launch in the marketplace later that year.

The video below introduces the project.

Sources: Bose, Indiegogo

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4 comments
guzmanchinky
I bought the hush earbuds. The noise they made was more distracting than soothing. If anything, having them be able to play someone talking about science quietly or some other subject like the history of classical opera or something would work better. Or REAL ocean sounds, recorded from an ocean, not simply fake ocean sounds repeated over and over (my brain seems to be able to notice it's repeated).
KaiserPingo
As a veteran, I can never drive, bike, walk, run and defenitely not try and sleep, with something hindering my hearing.
MerlinGuy
The big, rich companies have caught on that crowd-sourcing excellent way to gauge the public's response to a new product and have that same public fund the initial development. Can't wait for the crowd-production phase to kick in.
Dan Lewis
It needs to be able to negate the low frequency thump of the next door neighbor's subwoofer. If it can't do that, it's just another 'also ran'.