Apple's amazing AirPods are taking a baby step towards their full potential (AAPL)

apple airpods in ear
apple airpods in ear

Hollis Johnson/Business Insider

  • Apple will reportedly add Live Listen technology to its AirPods later this year.

  • Live Listen allows you to harness your iPhone and Airpods to improve what you hear in crowded situations.

  • It could represent the beginning of the long-awaited era of in-ear computing.



When iOS 12 comes to iPhones everywhere later this year, Apple's very popular $159 AirPods will get Live Listen, a nifty feature that makes it easier to hear conversations in noisy places. 

The addition of Live Listen to the AirPods was first reported by TechCrunch earlier on Tuesday. Live Listen has been around since 2014, but only on select Apple-certified hearing aids.

Essentially, Live Listen turns your iPhone into a microphone: If you're in a crowded bar, point your iPhone's microphones at the person across the table from you, or even slide it over, and you'll hear what they have to say in your hearing aid — or, soon, your Apple AirPods. 

The AirPods, which have been hailed as one of Apple's greatest inventions in recent memory, will expand the reach of Live Listen, and let far more people take advantage of a potentially very handy feature. That said, people with hearing loss should still get an actual medical device, and not rely on a pair of consumer earbuds like the AirPods. 

The future of Apple is in your ears

The really exciting part is when you look at what this could mean for the future of the AirPods, and for Apple itself. 

When Apple first launched the AirPods back in 2016, Slate's Will Oremus referred to them as "Apple's first ear computer." 

apple ios 9 live listen
apple ios 9 live listen

AppleIndeed, the sky seemed to be the limit. Because AirPods give users one-touch access to the Siri virtual assistant, and because they linked up with the iPhone's tremendous galaxy of apps, pundits were hopeful that the AirPods could enable all kinds of superpowers beyond what any other headphones could do. Almost two years later, though, those superpowers have yet to manifest, and the AirPods are still best suited for music and maybe phone calls.  

Still, we've gotten a glimpse of what the future could look like, thanks to some of Apple's competitors. Doppler Labs, a startup, released the Here One, a pair of earbuds that could increase the bass at a concert to quiet the sounds of a crying baby. Google, for its part, recently launched the Pixel Buds, which feature real-time language translation. 

Those products may have been too far ahead of the curve: Doppler Labs went out of business in 2017, after its cool technologies couldn't overcome the inherent challenges of the hardware market. And the Google Pixel Buds received lukewarm reviews, and they haven't become nearly as ubiquitous among gadgetheads as the Apple AirPods.