Samsung is looking to give wireless earbuds true lossless sound by swapping Bluetooth for UWB tech from AirTags

Samsung is looking to give wireless earbuds true lossless sound by swapping Bluetooth for UWB tech from AirTags

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Samsung is looking to give wireless earbuds true lossless sound by swapping Bluetooth for UWB tech from AirTags
Published: Jan, 31 2025 13:11

Samsung's UWB earbuds patent promises better audio and lower latency too. When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission. Here’s how it works. Samsung's earbuds could get a big boost to their sound quality and overall performance by using the same tech as the company's own SmartTags and Apple's AirTags: UWB. Ultra wide-band, like Bluetooth, is a short-range wireless technology. It operates in different frequency bands to Bluetooth, it has potentially longer range than Bluetooth and it has exceptionally low latency – sub-milliseconds compared to Bluetooth's milliseconds.

 [Carrie Marshall]
Image Credit: TechRadar [Carrie Marshall]

That's not all. UWB uses less power, and it can deliver much better data transfer speeds. So all things considered, it's the kind of tech you might want to put in a set of earbuds. And Samsung clearly intends to do just that. For now, it's just a patent: as 91mobiles reports, the patent is called Wireless Earphones And Control Method Thereof, Computer Equipment And Storage Medium. It was filed in late 2023, but only published this week.

 [An Apple AirPod Pro with an illustration of sound coming in one end, and being cancelled]
Image Credit: TechRadar [An Apple AirPod Pro with an illustration of sound coming in one end, and being cancelled]

According to the patent, the earbuds would connect to your device over Bluetooth before letting a UWB connection take over. The device would then stream audio over UWB directly to the earbuds in much the same way Bluetooth does in most of today's best wireless headphones. The patent suggests data transfer speeds of around 20Mbps, in addition to be very low-latency. While Bluetooth is theoretically capable of this, it doesn't happen in practice for audio – the maximum known data rate for Bluetooth audio right now is LDAC's 990kbps. If Samsung's UWB can actually use this big bandwidth, it's more than enough for really high-resolution audio – truly lossless sound.

 [A quartet of images claiming to depict the Powerbeats Pro 2, in lilac and orange colorways]
Image Credit: TechRadar [A quartet of images claiming to depict the Powerbeats Pro 2, in lilac and orange colorways]

Sign up for breaking news, reviews, opinion, top tech deals, and more. The downside is that while Bluetooth is in everything, UWB isn't; for example, even the base model Samsung Galaxy S25 doesn't have it. That means that if Samsung does indeed go ahead with UWB buds in the successor to the Samsung Galaxy Buds 3 Pro, it'll only be of benefit to owners of more expensive smartphones until UWB becomes more widely supported.

 [Zeekr 7X SUV]
Image Credit: TechRadar [Zeekr 7X SUV]

Writer, broadcaster, musician and kitchen gadget obsessive Carrie Marshall has been writing about tech since 1998, contributing sage advice and odd opinions to all kinds of magazines and websites as well as writing more than a dozen books. Her memoir, Carrie Kills A Man, is on sale now and her next book, about pop music, is out in 2025. She is the singer in Glaswegian rock band Unquiet Mind. Please logout and then login again, you will then be prompted to enter your display name.

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