Viaim RecDot earbuds ZDNET's key takeaways The Viaim RecDot earbuds are avilable now on Amazon for $199
These earbuds make real-time translation far easier than you can imagine
The Viaim RecDot earbuds also happen to sound fantastic. View now at Amazon
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An earbud is an earbud… right?
Until it offers a feature that's seriously impressive.
One such pair is the Viaim RecDot, which can serve as an AI voice recorder, earbuds, AI meeting assistant with transcription, translate to and from 78 Languages, flash record, make to-do lists & summaries with Viaim AI, and offers up to 48dB ANC for Meetings, Interviews & Lectures.
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I had my doubts until I gave these earbuds a go. Let's discover, shall we?
My experience
Before I tested the Viaim Recdots as standard earbuds, I decided to first give the special features a try. Before I could get to that stage, I had to install the Viaim app on my Android 9 Pro, sign up for an account (it's free), pair the earbuds with the phone and the app, update the firmware, and then reconnect them.
Whew.
The Viaim RecDot earbuds are ready to rock or translate. jack Wallen/ZDNET
With that taken care of, I opened the app, tapped record, selected "Live Recording" from the types of transcription available. I then recorded a simple voice message, tapped the three-dot menu button at the top of the display and hit Translate.
It then gives you a list of languages to translate into, and the AI does its thing. The translation happened far faster than I would have assumed, and once it was finished, it displayed the translated lines below the originals.
Color me impressed.
It gets better.
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The next test was to use the live translation feature. Essentially, what this does is listen to someone speaking in one language and automatically translates it into another in real time. This would be outstanding for those who travel a lot and don't have time to actually learn the language.
I've used tools like this before, and none have really impressed me. However, the Viaim RedDot certainly did. The one thing you have to do is make sure to select the right languages. For example, if I want to translate English to French, I would select French for the earbuds and English for the phone.
Once I hit the mic button, the phone translates what was said in English into French in real time.
The real time translation is very impressive. Jack Wallen/ZDNET
Basically, it all works very well, and I could imagine this feature alone making these earbuds worth the cost ($199 on Amazon), especially for the right person.
But what about the sound? Can you use the RecDot earbuds as traditional earbuds? You certainly can, and they impress in that area, as well.
The Viaim RecDot earbuds offer plenty of EQ presets, and there is also a custom option that gives you an 8-band equalizer. It took me all of 30 seconds to make the adjustments to the EQ curve to better match my hearing.
Once that was dialed in, the RecDot earbuds came to life. That's not to say the Balanced EQ (the default) is bad -- it's not. In fact, the RecDot Balanced EQ sounds better than a lot of custom curves I've added for other earbuds apps. But when I adjusted the custom option, I found the lows to be more present, the highs more crisp, and the mids just perfect.
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The presets work well with the genres they are assigned to. For example, the Pop EQ option brings out the mids, which is where the voice lives (and pop is all about the voice). This is one of the first pairs of earbuds that I could see myself switching EQs based on the genre I'm listening to. Most often, I create a custom EQ and leave it at that.
The Viaim RecDot earbuds specialize in transcribing and translating, something they do very well. But the added bonus is that they sound fantastic.
ZDNET buying advice
These earbuds are a bit tricky. Because of their $199 price point, it's certainly possible to find earbuds that sound as good or better. The thing is, you don't buy a pair of earbuds like the Viaim RecDot earbuds unless you need the translate/transcribe features. If you do need those options, they should be your first consideration.
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If you think you might someday need the translate/transcribe features, and you also want a pair of earbuds that sound great, the Viaim RecDots are a great option. I you're certain that you'll never use the translate/transcribe features, move on to another pair of earbuds.
The Viaim RecDot earbuds seriously impressed me on all fronts. The transcribe/translate feature works brilliantly, and the sound is quite good.
Viaim RecDot earbuds tech specs
11mm titanium-coated dynamic drivers.
Up to 9 hours of battery life (36 hours with the case).
48dB depth active noise cancellation.
Bluetooth 5.2, supports dual-device connections.
LHDC audio codec.
AI-powered real-time transcription and translation
A triple microphone array with a bone conduction microphone.