Macworld

Periodic Audio Nickel headphone amp: Make your smartphone sound like a high-res digital audio player

Periodic Audio’s Nickel portable headphone amplifier will break you of the habit of listening to music on headphones plugged into your smartphone, tablet, or laptop.

And that’s how most of us listen to music these days, right? Dedicated high-resolution digital audio players deliver superior audio performances, but mobile devices are just so much more convenient—even when we’re using the type of high-end, high-impedance cans that more general-purpose mobile devices find so difficult to drive.

Modern computers and mobile devices have much better digital-to-analog (DAC) converters than they used to, but the headphone amplifiers on those products remain the weakest link in the audio reproduction chain. The Nickel is a high-end, battery-powered, portable headphone amp that promises to wring peak performance from just about any wired headphones, including high-impedance models.

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from MacWorld

MacWorld1 min read
How The IPhone’s Headphone Safety Setting Can Affect A Bluetooth Speaker
Apple wants you to avoid damaging your hearing when you’re using an iPhone or iPad (but, strangely, not a Mac). In Settings → Sounds & Haptics → Headphone Safety, enable Reduce Loud Audio, and you can set a threshold above which your iPhone or iPad w
MacWorld5 min read
14-inch M3 Pro MacBook Pro: The Sweet Spot For Price And Performance
The $1,999 14-inch MacBook Pro with an M3 Pro System on a Chip is $400 more than the base 14-inch MacBook Pro with an M3 SoC. While that higher price tag looks like a lot, the $1,999 laptop ends up being a better value. You get a faster CPU and GPU,
MacWorld1 min read
Hot Stuff
Social media is in love with Fujifilm’s latest, and with good reason—it’s a small yet powerful camera that’s easy to use for novices but has features pros will love. This fixed-lens camera has a 40.2- megapixel sensor that can capture 6K video, five-

Related