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Amazon Affiliate Link: https://amzn.to/3Qi25af Price as reviewed: $50 (MSRP: $80) W&P Open Ear Earbuds, True Wireless Open Ear Headphones with Earhooks,Bluetooth 5.4,28H Playtime, Hi-Res Audio, Snug Fit,for Running, Cycling, Hiking, and Workout From the W&P Store I'm happy with the comfort and functionality of these wireless on-ear "headphones". The battery sits behind your ear like the hook of eyeglasses, while the speaker sits on top of (but not pushing into) your ear. They are comfortable to wear, and I've never had them come off accidentally. They play for 5-6 hours before reporting a low battery (beeping once per minute, at 20% remaining shown on the connected phone status), and the included charging case powers them back up in under 3 hours. Total playtime of the headphones + charging base is at least 25 hours (they claim 28 hours, and it is possible that I missed a few hours in my accounting). The charging base recharges fully in under 3 hours, and only takes 3 watt hours of power, which is in-line with the claimed 2 Wh capacity combination of the headphones (80mAh each) and base (400 mAh) (Any 5 volt USB cable can provide the 0.5 amps power it needs to recharge). The earphones have a capacitive touch sensor, but zero feedback about when it detects a touch, so you just have to blindly paw at your ears until it does what you want. After a little practice, I was able to reliably trigger a volume up/down (single click on right/left earphone), to play/pause the audio (double click) or to advance/go-back a track (triple click). I wish they had a click or beep sound every time it detected a touch, so you would be sure that it was getting the right number of clicks. As it is, you just have to see if it does what you wanted to figure out if it detected the correct number of presses. They automatically turn on when you take them out of the case, and turn off when you put them back into the case. Or, you can press the sensor for 5 seconds to turn them both off without putting them back into the case. [If you manually hold the sensor for 5 seconds, it will turn on a single earphone, and you can use one while charging the other.] The Echo noise cancellation is just a fancy way of saying they amplify audio from the speaker and try to filter out background noise when you are using them as a microphone/headset. I made several phone calls with them and the audio was good, but I was not testing them in a super loud environment. The do NOT have active noise cancellation to filter out background sound from your music. They are plenty loud, but since they don't go INTO your ear canal, they don't block out (isolate) ambient noise, so what you are listening too can get overwhelmed if you are in a very noisy environment. [On the plus side, I'd feel safe biking/walking with them, as you could still hear traffic/horns, etc...] So while you can certainly use them to listen to music in quiet/normal/somewhat noisy environments, they won't block out loud noises. [If you want that ability, go for full sized over the ear, or something that goes into the ear...] I've used them for at least 25 hours at this point, and have been very happy with their comfort. Audio quality is just fine (I'm not an audiophile), they worked with my phone and (linux) computer perfectly. The only downside is the overloaded "touch x times to do Y things with no audio feedback of how many touches I've detected" user interface, but it mostly works once you get used to it.