logo
Ditch Your AirPods: Galaxy Buds 3 Pro AI Earbuds Just Hit Their Lowest Price Ever on Amazon

Ditch Your AirPods: Galaxy Buds 3 Pro AI Earbuds Just Hit Their Lowest Price Ever on Amazon

Gizmodo2 days ago

Earbuds have also come a long way in recent years, from simple wireless accessories to smart audio companions. The latest earbuds are no longer meant for music listening alone: They are also equipped with advanced technologies like AI, adaptive audio and noise cancellation that make them smarter and more convenient than ever. Of all the items on the market, Samsung's Galaxy Buds 3 Pro are the latest and most surprising.
They're our top recommendation if you want to be at the forefront of technology. Right now, these AI earbuds are available on Amazon for just $184 which is a huge 26% off their regular $249 price. This is an all-time low for these earbuds and it's even cheaper than what you'll find on Samsung's own website.
See at Amazon
Why Are They Our Favorite Earbuds?
First of all, they've been completely reimagined for comfort so you can wear them all day without strain. The silver streamlined finish is sleek and sophisticated, and the in-ear fit is secure and comfortable. What's more, Samsung has filled the Buds 3 Pro with Galaxy AI which powers such features as Adaptive Active Noise Cancellation and an Adaptive Equalizer. That's a fancy description of how your earbuds adjust to where you are and minimize distraction when you need to focus and let in what matters when you need to stay alert.
The audio quality in the Galaxy Buds 3 Pro is just phenomenal: Whether you're listening to your favorite playlist or taking calls, the sound is rich, clear, and immersive. The adaptive equalizer ensures that every note and every word is finely tuned, no matter the genre or volume. And with the latest Bluetooth technology, your connection stays strong and lag-free, whether you're using a Samsung phone or any other Bluetooth-enabled device.
The most impressive of the new features is Galaxy AI-driven real-time interpreter: It lets you hear instantly in the moment of face-to-face conversation or over the phone so that you can travel and communicate worldwide with ease like never before. With the touch controls as simple as they are, you can tailor your listening to skipping music or taking calls with a simple tap.
With all these technological advancements, it's no surprise that the Galaxy Buds 3 Pro are our best wireless earbuds out in the market today. They combine the latest AI technology, industry-leading sound and fit and style—all at a price never before so reasonable. Make sure you grab yours before they sell out.
See at Amazon

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

The AI Collective Launches Globally to Mobilize Next Generation of AI Innovators and Stewards
The AI Collective Launches Globally to Mobilize Next Generation of AI Innovators and Stewards

Business Wire

time18 minutes ago

  • Business Wire

The AI Collective Launches Globally to Mobilize Next Generation of AI Innovators and Stewards

SAN FRANCISCO--(BUSINESS WIRE)--The world's largest grassroots AI community today formally detailed its global rebrand as The AI Collective, its official incorporation as a non-profit organization, and the launch of three foundational initiatives to cultivate a collaborative ecosystem for the responsible stewardship of AI. Formerly The GenAI Collective, the organization boasts 70,000+ members across 25+ global chapters and partners including AWS, Meta, Anthropic, Roam, and Product Hunt. AI's future depends not just on faster models—but on rebuilding trust, fostering global collaboration, and aligning progress with human values. Share This announcement builds on initial excitement sparked by a social media reveal on Monday, June 3rd ( and coincides with flagship launch events currently underway in San Francisco, New York City, and across its global chapters ( As the race to develop artificial intelligence accelerates daily, fueled by intense competition and unprecedented investment, the essential work of aligning these powerful systems with human values and societal trust is often dangerously sidelined. The AI Collective is responding directly to this critical gap, positioning itself as the essential human counterpoint in the age of acceleration by building a global community to steward AI, informing decision-makers, and supporting mission-aligned entrepreneurs. "The ground is shifting beneath us. AI's exponential progress brings immense possibility, but also profound questions about our future, our work, and our very identity – and the institutions we rely on weren't built for this velocity," said Chappy Asel, Co-Founder and Executive Director of The AI Collective. 'Trust is the invisible thread holding society together, and right now, that thread is fraying under the strain of misaligned incentives and rapid, uncoordinated change. We believe that in an era of exponential transformation, our greatest strength lies in each other – in creating trusted, in-person spaces to make sense of this moment, ask the deeper questions, and collaboratively shape a future where AI genuinely enhances human flourishing, not just surpasses human capability,' Asel said. The AI Collective believes that without deliberate intervention focused on trust, openness, and participation, AI's trajectory risks leaving humanity behind. Recognizing that managing this requires bridging the widening gap between technological progress and societal adaptation, the organization is launching three foundational initiatives designed to rebuild trust through action and participation: Expanding Global Community & Events: Rebuilding Trust Through In-Person Connection. The AI Collective will rehumanize innovation by launching 100 chapters across six continents by end of year. Each chapter will fuse its community's unique vision with global shared values of openness and inclusivity, curating salons, hackathons, demo nights, mentorship circles, and cross‑disciplinary mashups to deepen trust and collaboration. Their network will converge at Singularity Fest this November 2025 in San Francisco for a multi‑day, decentralized celebration attracting 10,000 pioneers across domains for hands‑on labs, purpose‑driven keynotes, thematic tracks, and community‑led activations, ensuring AI's next leaps keep humanity firmly at the center. Informing Decision-Makers: Bridging the Gap Between Frontier Insight and Responsible Governance. To counter the risks of institutional blind spots and lagging policy, The AI Collective Institute, the organization's participatory research arm, connects frontier technologists directly with policymakers, industry leaders, and the public. It translates ground-truth insights from the AI ecosystem into practical guidance through open research, equipping frontline leaders to foster responsible innovation and navigate future shock effectively. Supporting Mission-Aligned Innovation: Actively Incentivizing Human-Centric AI Development. In pursuit of a values-aligned AI ecosystem driven by the community's unique trust and insight, Collective Investments acts as a dedicated founder-investor matchmaking program under the non-profit umbrella. It identifies and supports promising founders building trustworthy, beneficial AI, connecting them with values-aligned capital allocators (VCs, grants, angels) and providing crucial support to ensure the AI future being built reflects the principles of human flourishing and responsible progress. The AI Collective is celebrating this evolution with its ongoing flagship events and global chapter celebrations. The organization invites builders, thinkers, policymakers, investors, and pioneers worldwide to join the conversation and contribute to shaping a future where technology serves all of humanity. Read the organization's foundational perspective, " Trust in the Age of Acceleration," learn more and join the community at: and follow the journey @_ai_collective on social platforms. ABOUT THE AI COLLECTIVE The AI Collective (formerly The GenAI Collective) is the world's largest non-profit, grassroots community dedicated to empowering the AI ecosystem to collaboratively steer AI's future toward trust, openness, and human flourishing. Founded in 2023, the AI Collective has rapidly grown into a global force: 70,000+ members: Comprising leading founders, researchers, investors, and multidisciplinary operators from OpenAI, Anthropic, Nvidia, Google, Microsoft, Amazon, Databricks, Cohere, and more. 200+ AI startups launched or showcased at demo nights, connecting directly with investors and clients; participating companies subsequently raised $72M+ in funding. 25+ active chapters with 200+ events hosted, located in major tech hubs globally including New York City, London, Paris, Washington, D.C., Seattle, Bengaluru and more. 40+ leading partners, including Amazon, Anthropic, Andreessen Horowitz, Meta, Github, TedAI, Product Hunt, Roam, Linux Foundation, and top academic institutions. A dedicated global team of 100+ volunteer organizers committed to building authentic, impactful community experiences. Through its focus on in-person connection, participatory research via The AI Collective Institute, and support for mission-aligned innovation via Collective Investments, the organization serves as a vital hub for sense-making, collaboration, and responsible stewardship in the age of artificial intelligence.

Deebo Samuel, Mike Sainristil and a promising sign for the Commanders
Deebo Samuel, Mike Sainristil and a promising sign for the Commanders

Washington Post

time19 minutes ago

  • Washington Post

Deebo Samuel, Mike Sainristil and a promising sign for the Commanders

After the Washington Commanders finished practice Wednesday, veteran receiver Deebo Samuel and second-year cornerback Mike Sainristil kept working out together in a moment that encapsulated the state of the team. Samuel, who's entering his seventh season, ran about a dozen routes to show the young corner how receivers could use different release techniques at the line of scrimmage to create separation against him. One big focus was refining how to stick to receivers who use an outside release to set up an inside route. Sainristil has seen such moves before, of course, but he wanted to see them again and again so his reactions would become automatic. The moment was a metaphor. The team is Sainristil, a young upstart with lots of promise, and it wants to be Samuel, a proven winner and consistent presence in the biggest playoff games. Their work together distilled the purpose of this space in the NFL calendar between the roster-building flurry of the spring and the training-camp battles of the summer. These offseason workouts, which will end next week with mandatory minicamp, are for experimentation, relationship-building and skill development. 'You would've thought he's been here the past five years of his career the way he's adjusted,' Sainristil said of Samuel. 'He's a guy that loves extra work, loves football, loves to win. So, any way I can pick his brain about what receivers do to help myself, I'm going to do exactly that.' Coach Dan Quinn gushed about 'the environment that the players have created together.' 'We all know, to be at our best, it's gonna take all of us improving,' he said. 'If that's Mike asking Deebo a certain technique or vice versa, that's really where it takes place. And so, we take these times on the field seriously, 'cause it's not just the scheme, it's the individual skill work.' There's a massive difference, Quinn pointed out, between knowing what to do and having the minute details ingrained in muscle memory. 'Be very specific; I think that's where the gold is,' he said. 'That's why I think the teaching this time of year has to shine on the coaches, and we've got some excellent ones because they'll get very specific on the certain techniques. 'Let's try that one again. Let's put the hand into this space.' You're not in a rush to get to the next play [like you are during the season]. … If they have to do it four or five times, that's okay.' Defensive coordinator Joe Whitt Jr. recently did similar work. He had a group of safeties practice press technique against a tight end. That specific skill set might not always be top of mind for coaches. But it could matter a lot in a big moment of a big game if safety Will Harris has to press, say, Philadelphia Eagles tight end Dallas Goedert. It might not have been a coincidence that Wizards Coach Brian Keefe attended practice Wednesday. 'We learn a lot from the NBA [in terms of] what that small group would look like, of a specific two or three players getting better on something,' Quinn said. Samuel said he knows there are things he needs to work on himself. His top goal of the offseason was 'being in better shape for sure,' he said, though he declined to detail what he focused on or how it would show up in his game. He pointed out he also needed to learn a new offense. But Samuel showed through his work with Sainristil that he understands his value to the Commanders goes beyond his individual skills. He's been here just for a few weeks but has already embraced the word 'brotherhood,' the team's favorite way to express closeness. 'The guys in the locker room make it easy,' Samuel said. 'When I walked in the locker room, I felt like I've been here before because of how the guys treated me.' Said Whitt: 'When we went on that three-game losing streak [last season], it wasn't anything other than the brotherhood that kept them together.' The brief post-practice scene Wednesday carried all this subtle significance. Mentorship from talented veterans can help younger players — and therefore the team — actualize their potential. And the relationships built in those moments can help players stick together during tough times.

On a Search for an Old E.V., Jay Leno's Car Obsession Came Up Clutch
On a Search for an Old E.V., Jay Leno's Car Obsession Came Up Clutch

New York Times

time20 minutes ago

  • New York Times

On a Search for an Old E.V., Jay Leno's Car Obsession Came Up Clutch

Times Insider explains who we are and what we do and delivers behind-the-scenes insights into how our journalism comes together. As an energy reporter on the Business desk of The New York Times, I often cover the transition to electrify the world around us, including automobiles and heating and cooling systems. But until I spoke with the historian at the Petersen Automotive Museum in Los Angeles, I did not know that electric cars rattled down city streets as far back as the mid-1890s. A century ago, roughly a third of taxi drivers in New York City shuttled passengers around in electric cars. I set out to write an article about these cars, and a time before lawmakers gave deference to the oil industry by offering numerous tax breaks, paving the way for gasoline-powered vehicles. But finding an original E.V. that I could ride in proved difficult. Most of them sit in museums and personal collections. Enter the comedian — and car collector — Jay Leno. My editor suggested I reach out to Mr. Leno after learning about his 1909 Baker Electric, housed in his famous garage. Mr. Leno's team gave an enthusiastic 'Yes' in reply. When I arrived at his warehouse garage in Burbank, Calif., in April, Mr. Leno had his Baker Electric charged and ready to hit the streets. The 116-year-old car, which had been refurbished, looked like it had just rolled off the showroom floor. Still, the wooden high-top body, 36-inch rubber wheels and Victorian-style upholstery whispered the car's age. It was basically a carriage with batteries, enabling drivers to free horses from their bits and harnesses. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store