When was the last time a tech purchase made you laugh with joy? For me it was the first time I listened to my favourite songs on a set of Apple AirPods Max headphones, which enabled me to hear things in those songs that I’d never heard before. Never mind hearing what the artist was playing: sometimes I reckon I can hear what the artist was thinking.
Wireless headphones have come an incredibly long way in a very short space of time. But their history goes back further than you might expect, and includes some incredible innovations.
1880s: the headphones that’d give you a headache

Headphones weren’t originally designed for music. They were made for telephone operators who needed to physically connect everybody’s phone calls. The first model, unveiled in the 1880s, didn’t look much like today’s headphones either: it looked more like a phone that had been cut in half and attached to your head. And it weighed around 5kg, the equivalent of 111 pairs of AirPods .
The first headphones were designed by Ezra Gilliland, a friend of Thomas Edison who also designed the telephone switchboard, and set the template for many models to come: these weren’t headphones for fun. They were tools for the workplace, things you couldn’t wait to tear off at the end of the working day.
1890s: the original earbuds and Spotify too

If, like me, you thought earbuds were a very modern invention, think again: they’ve been with us since 1891, when Ernest Mercadier patented his “bi-telephone” and suggested using rubber covers to make them more comfortable. As with Gilliland’s operator phones, the bi-telephone was intended to be used by telephone operators.
The same decade saw the invention of the Electrophone, a kind of pre-digital Spotify where you could don headphones, dial in to a switchboard and listen to live performances from London theaters.
1910: the first headphones that looked like headphones
Nathaniel Baldwin came up with the first recognizably headphone-y headphones in 1910, selling them to the US Navy for use by radio operators. His headphones featured a new, more sensitive kind of receiver that Baldwin declined to patent because he thought his invention was “trivial”. But he did patent his headphone design, which you can still see in today’s over-ear headphones .
1958: the first stereo headphones and the first cans made for music

You can thank John Koss for whatever you listen to your music on today: his Koss SP-3 headphones not only introduced stereo listening, but they were the first cans designed specially for personal music listening. Koss was a big fan of jazz, and wanted to recreate the excitement of a live musical performance so you could enjoy it anywhere. Today Koss is a huge audio brand making every conceivable kind of headphone and speaker.
1960s: the first wireless headphones and open-back cans
The first wireless headphones were released decades before Bluetooth. In the 1960s, multiple manufacturers offered solid state radio headphones that enabled you to listen to radio while looking a bit like one of the Cybermen from Doctor Who.
Headphone design really evolved during this period. John Koss – yes, him again – had originally aped Baldwin’s Navy headphones, but in the 1960s his headphones borrowed from airline and military models and introduced broader, more comfortable headbands and noise-reducing ear cups to help you hear the music more clearly. You can see the airline-style designs of the era in the image above, which is an RCA advert from 1972.
Koss didn’t just make headphones. He made deals too, and one of his best ones was with The Beatles: the Beatlephones were the first big-name branded headphones and sold like hotcakes while Dr Dre was still taking his first baby steps, long before Beats .
There was another key development in the 60s: Sennheiser’s HD414, launched in 1968. These were the first open-backed headphones, allowing outside audio in, delivering a more spacious sound, and making them much safer for listening to on the move – something that was still relatively rare in personal audio. They also introduced something else that would soon become iconic: brightly coloured foam ear pads.
1970s: the future’s orange (and blue, and…)
By the 1970s headphones had become truly mass market products and worked in two key markets: the teen market and the audiophile market. And then Sony came along and changed everything. The Walkman, introduced in 1979, came with ultra-light open-backed headphones with a super-skinny headband that enabled you to wear them on your head or park them around your neck. Its brightly coloured headphones were as iconic in the 1980s as Apple’s iPod headphones would be in the 2000s, and they effectively introduced Main Character Syndrome: with your Walkman and your headphones on, you were the star of your own movie with an incredible, omnipresent soundtrack.
1990s: brand new retro
As new technology introduced higher quality portable music formats – portable CD players, portable DATs if you were loaded, and later on Digital Compact Cassette and MiniDisc –portable headphones got better too, although you wouldn’t always know it given the poor quality models that often came in the box with new audio hardware. That was great for the third party market, though, and the growing popularity of portable audio meant that nobody thought you were a weird loner if you wore your headphones in public. In fact, they became a badge of pride: in the 1990s, big closed-cup headphones were a sign that you took your music more seriously than the foam-eared brigade. Maybe you were a DJ!
With headphones firmly in the fashionable category, headphone design went to all kinds of interesting places in the 90s: headbands, neckbands, earbuds, over-ears and open-ears came in every conceivable shape and size.
2001: Apple changes everything
In 2001, Apple launched the iPod. You may have heard of it. It wasn’t the first hard disk digital music player and some would say it wasn’t the best either, but it became the digital music’s Walkman and made digital music mainstream. The headphones weren’t exactly great but they were a sign that you were cool enough to have an iPod, and Apple’s inspired ads made them the stars of the show.
2004: kind of blue
Bluetooth, named after the tenth-century Danish king Harald Bluetooth, was launched in 1999 as a way to wirelessly connect microphones and headphones. It wasn’t initially used for music because quite frankly the sound quality was awful, but it became popular among the business and professional driving crowd; for a while blinking Bluetooth earpieces made every travelling salesperson or taxi driver look like one of Star Trek’s Borg.
That’s not to say there weren’t Bluetooth headphones for music; the first products hit the market in 2004. They just weren’t very good.
2007: the iPhone arrives
Like the iPod, the iPhone wasn’t the first of its kind. But history repeated, or at least rhymed, and the iPhone put an iPod in everybody’s pocket. The intense competition in the smartphone market meant serious amounts of money going into research and development, and the results – ever smaller, more efficient batteries; ever-improving versions of Bluetooth; software-based noise cancelling; improvements in materials and manufacturing technology and so on – would soon have an impact on all kinds of devices, including headphones.
Bluetooth headphones became huge in the 2010s, with brands such as Beats driving the mass market. The sound quality wasn’t there yet for the audiophile market, but it was heading in the right direction.
2016: AirPods
Yes, Apple again – and stop us if you’ve heard this before. AirPods weren’t the first wireless earbuds , and they weren’t the best either. But they were a huge success, and dominated the earbud market by 2020. They’d been in development for a long time – the first recognisable patent was filed in 2011 – and their success was partly because Apple scrapped the headphone jack in the 2016 iPhone 7 , instantly making wired headphones an enormous pain to use.
That decision may have been wildly unpopular and hugely criticized at the time, but it cemented wireless headphones’ place as the present and future of mobile audio and set the template for what to expect: quality sound, easy pairing and the ability to find them if you misplaced them.
2022: Now what?
The final step in wireless headphone technology is to overcome its Achilles heel: bandwidth. Bluetooth can only stream so much data, and in basic Bluetooth that isn’t enough for truly high resolution audio. But Bluetooth aptX HD and Sony’s equivalent, LDAC, are vast improvements, and there are also aptX Adaptive and aptX Lossless to take things even further.
I’m currently testing a pair of aptX Adaptive earbuds and the sound quality is truly extraordinary – and the buds don’t cost any more than a pair of AirPods Pro . Just when you thought wireless headphones couldn’t get any better, they got better all over again.
Meta’s next VR headset might not replace the Oculus Quest 2 after all
Meta’s next VR headset (named Project Cambria) will focus on productivity over playtime, Mark Zuckerberg revealed during a recent Meta earnings call. As such it might not be quite the Oculus Quest 2 (now Meta Quest 2) replacement we expected it to be.
His statement was later reiterated on Zuckerberg’s own Facebook page , where he not only praised the Quest 2’s performance but reaffirmed that Project Cambria will launch this year.
"On the hardware side, Meta Quest 2 continues to be the leading virtual reality headset. Later this year, we'll release a higher-end headset, codenamed Project Cambria, which will be more focused on work use cases and eventually replacing [sic] your laptop or work setup. This premium device will have improved ergonomics and full color passthrough mixed reality to seamlessly blend virtual reality with the physical world."
More interestingly though, he went on to say that this “higher-end headset” will move away from gaming to “be more focused on work use cases”. Over time, the Meta CEO hopes that it’ll replace our laptop and work setup.
That being said, the new VR device won’t completely abandon Oculus’ gaming heritage .
Later on in his statement, Zuckerberg said that Meta’s new hardware is built to provide “the best metaverse experience – whether you're playing a game or meeting with co-workers in Horizon Workrooms.”
To achieve this Project Cambria will build upon the Quest 2’s existing infrastructure, but will also incorporate new hardware. Divulging a few more details about what this will entail Zuckerberg explained that this new device will offer “improved ergonomics” and “full-color passthrough mixed reality”.
Currently, the Quest 2 only offers greyscale mixed reality – and the live feed of the real world around you is a little grainy to boot. This improved performance will almost certainly mean Cambria will offer a superior mixed reality performance compared to what Meta’s current hardware can provide.

Beyond this, Cambria will also use new eye and face tracking features to enhance its ability to recognize a user’s facial expressions to then relay them in VR. Being able to recreate these kinds of social cues will be vital as Meta develops its digital social spaces in the metaverse. Without them, its virtual hubs could wind up feeling impersonal and devoid of actual emotion.
There’s still no word on exactly when Project Cambria will be released, though being a less consumer-related device may mean we won’t have to wait until the holiday season to try it out for ourselves. New gaming hardware usually drops around October or November to create excitement – and drive sales – in the run-up to the December holidays.
That's exactly when the Xbox Series X , PS5 , and Meta's own Quest 2 each were released.
With Cambria looking less and less like a device we can expect to find under our Christmas trees and more like a device that will replace board rooms and office spaces, there’s less of an incentive for Meta to delay its release.
We’ll have to wait and see what Meta announces though, but whenever its next VR headset drops – be it Project Cambria or the Oculus Quest 3 – we’ll be sure to keep you up to date on all the latest info.
Every movie and TV show coming to Prime Video in April 2022
April 2022 is shaping up to be a quiet month for Prime Video. Amazon's streaming service enjoyed a bumper March with its multiple movie and TV offerings, but the fourth month of the year is looking pretty slim by comparison.
While March brought us the likes of The Boys Presents: Diabolical , Upload season 2 , and Lizzo's Watch Out for the Big Grrrls, Prime Video 's upcoming slate is small by its standards. Still, that doesn't mean the streamer's forthcoming film and TV series are any less impressive, so there's plenty to be excited about.
A new cowboy-centric mystery TV show – Outer Range – starring none other than Josh Brolin (Avengers: Infinity War, Deadpool 2) is on the way, while Chris Pine and Thadiwe Newton lock horns in an espionage thriller flick called All the Old Knives. The underrated animated drama series, Undone, is back for its second season, too.
But there are other notable Prime Video shows , movies, and third-party content coming to Amazon's streamer in April 2022. Here, then, is what you need to know about Prime Video's small screen offerings before we wave goodbye to March.
Speed
When to stream it: Friday, April 1
Want to want the action-thriller that launched the careers of Keanu Reeves ( Cyberpunk 2077 , The Matrix ) and Sandra Bullock (The Lost City, Gravity ) for the umpteenth time? Or, if you've somehow not seen it before, for the first time ever? Of course you do.
For anyone who doesn't know, the premise of Speed is very simple: it revolves around a bus laced with explosives, and said vehicle will explode if its speed falls below 50 miles per hour. We know, it's shockingly straightforward.
It may sound like a dumb movie – in some ways, it is – but there's no denying that Speed is just good fun . Reeves and Bullock revel in their respective roles as police officer Jack Traven and everyday citizen Annie Porter, while Dennis Hopper is unexpectedly chilling and deranged as the antagonistic Howard Payne.
Speed earned rave reviews upon its initial 1994 release, going on to be a commercial success worldwide and landing Oscar wins in the Best Sound and Best Sound Effects Editing categories. Sure, its sequel was an unmitigated disaster at the box office, but Speed is a bonafide blockbuster that deserves to be seen. If nothing else, it spawned one of the best Simpsons jokes of all-time – that in itself makes Speed worth a viewing or two.
All the Old Knives
When to stream it: Friday, April 8
Chris Pine ( Star Trek , Wonder Woman) and Thandiwe Newton ( Westworld , Reminiscence ) star as one-time colleagues and lovers in a spy thriller that's sure to entice fans of the genre.
Based on Olen Steinhauer's novel of the same name, All the Old Knives will see Pine's veteran operative Henry Pelham given the unenviable task of locating a mole in the CIA's Vienna station after a leaked document costs the lives of more than 100 agents (and their loved ones). Pelham's globetrotting adventure eventually leads to a reunion with Newton's Celia Harrison but, as the pair get reacquainted in more ways than one, it soon becomes clear that there's more to Pelham's mission than meets the eye.
Laurence Fishburne (John Wick, The Matrix ) and Jonathan Pryce ( Game of Thrones ) play supporting roles in the espionage movie. Here's hoping it's not a 'by the books' style spy thriller that we've already seen before.
Outer Range
When to stream it: Friday, April 15
Now this could be a surprise hit for Prime Video – both in April and for 2022 as a whole. Outer Range stars Josh Brolin as Royal Abbott, a Wyoming-based rancher whose life is turned upside down by a supernatural mystery.
The Abbotts, who are already reeling from the disappearance of daughter-in-law Rebecca, find themselves embroiled in a land dispute with arch rivals in the Tillerson family at the start of the series. But, when an untimely death causes tensions to mount in the wider community, and an inexplicable black hole suddenly materializes in the Abbott family's back yard, Royal finds himself fighting for his family and future as secrets and mysteries unravel themselves in equal measure.
Imogen Poots ( I Know This Much Is True ), Lewis Pullman ( Top Gun: Maverick ), Noah Reid ( Schitt's Creek ), and Tom Pelphrey ( Ozark ) are just some of the other top talent attached to this project. The first two episodes of the eight-part TV show will premiere on April 15, with subsequent two-episode instalments arriving weekly after that.
Undone season 2
When to stream it: Friday, April 29
An underrated adult animated series that debuted in September 2019, the Rosa Salazar-starring Undone returns for its second season after more than two years in the wilderness.
For those unfamiliar with the TV series: Salazar plays Alma Winograd-Diaz, a woman who seemingly develops time travel abilities after a near-fatal car crash. Buoyed by her supposed new superpowers, Alma sets out to discover the truth behind the death of her father – Better Call Saul 's Bob Odenkirk – after years of being left in the dark.
Or so Alma thinks. With a history of mental health problems – most notably schizophrenia – running through her family, Alma may not actually be imbued with superhuman abilities. Despite the protestations of her mom, sister, and boyfriend, Alma continues her journey down the rabbit hole that is her dad's untimely demise, but she may not like what she finds.
Undone's second season seems set to pick up directly after the first season's finale – we won't spoil the surprise here – and it should be on your watch list if you haven't checked it out already. The show's use of rotoscoping animation – coupled with its multi-genre psychological thriller, semi-horror, comedy, and drama aspects – stand it out among its peers. Go and catch up now before its second season arrives.
Everything coming to Prime Video in April 202

Here's the complete – albeit brief – rundown of every film and TV show coming to Prime Video in April 2022:
April 1
April 2
April 7
April 8
April 15
April 22
April 28
April 29