Socially Connected Smart Headphones
Today is the day the headphone becomes "smart" with the launch of Muzik, an innovative company inspired to transform the way music is experienced. Muzik, founded by disruptive innovator, Jason Hardi, is pioneering a new space called Social Smartware, coined to describe the seamless connection of consumer electronic devices, content and social media platforms to make music instantly discoverable and shareable in an effortless way.
Muzik is launching a full line of smart audio products synced to their mobile Muzik ecosystem that will activate a new wave of innovation in the headphone space.
Muzik's game-changing lineup includes their marquee product: the smart, on-ear wireless headphone that combines high-fidelity audio in a simple, elegant sleek design with groundbreaking capacitive touch controls. They are the first headphones in the world that allow users to natively share what they are listening to on Facebook and Twitter or instantly send a song anywhere in the world.
"While the music industry has seen its challenges, technological advances have also created a world of opportunity, which Muzik is seizing to create an entirely new category," said Jason Hardi, founder, president and CEO, Muzik. "Headphones will never again just be for listening to music or talking on the phone – our headphones will improve the way we socially discover, share, listen and experience music. In addition to music exploration, I look forward to working with the developer community to create amazing applications leveraging smart headphones."
"After my last headphone project, I saw a lag in advancement and innovation within the headphone space, so I began to design a headphone that would bring forth real connectivity and feature controls to the consumer. As I was bringing Muzik to life, I knew I needed someone who understood my vision, had a sharp business acumen and keen understanding of the industry," added Hardi. "John Cawleywas a natural first choice given his distinguished track record of running multi-million dollar operations in entrepreneurial environments and a decade of experience in the music industry."
John Cawley, Muzik's Chief Strategy Officer and Vice Chairman, comes to Muzik after a successful stint as the COO for Music World Entertainment, best known as the management company for Beyonce and Destiny's Child.
"We are not another headphone company in the audio space," said Cawley. "We are a wearable technology company making smart headphones and accessories. Jason's vision is genius and we were singularly focused on joining the ranks of the world's most innovative companies -- Apple, Google, Microsoft, Nike and Samsung -- in one of today's hottest sectors, wearable technology and connected devices."
"We are very clear in our mission," continued Cawley. "We will focus on product development and patent portfolio building as we continue to build state-of-the-art products with a compelling user experience."
Together, Hardi and Cawley have built Muzik over the last year, created a robust hardware and software product lineup and recruited a powerhouse team that includes industry leaders, connected investors and forward thinking strategic partners who are driven to provide consumers an enhanced, interactive music listening experience.
Muzik headphones and other related products will be publicly available in the fourth quarter of 2013. Presales for Muzik products will be announced shortly.
Senior Member
Posts: 1066
Joined: 2011-12-04
Digital dementia, anyone?
Senior Member
Posts: 1822
Joined: 2005-08-12
While I really like some "social features" of current music services, I'd pass on these. Product separation and isolation are important if you care.
For example, I use Spotify - it's really great that you can check what your friends are listening to, give and receive recommendations, get radio suggestions, follow regular people and artists. However, I wouldn't want that in my headphones nor built in a playback device.
If one day I decide I don't like Spotify, I'll install another service on my phone - it's as easy as that. And if I decide I want another phone (music source device), I'll buy another one without changing the service nor headphones. And headphones? Recently I got Westone UM-3X and I love them, they're unbelievable. I can't imagine replacing them just to change the sound provider. That would be just stupid.
However for people who do not really care and would like to be provided with 1-button cruise control, that might be and interesting device.
Senior Member
Posts: 341
Joined: 2012-12-31
People are really becoming lonely and dumb it seems. What's this whole thing about (virtually)sharing and connecting? Do all these guys who have 100s of friends online think that others actually give a $h.t? Think the world needs something bad to happen for people to understand what really is important and who their friends are. Pity it will probably have to be the WW3..
Senior Member
Posts: 4198
Joined: 2004-09-28
Nah I will pass on these. I can't see the majority using this. I can see some facebook and twitter fanatics using this. To me this is a lazy form of people not using a keyboard and mouse to share information such as music. Also this would remind me of using Yahoo voice chat a few years back talking about sports and the like and some moron would use the voice chat function to spam some stupid crappy song. I do not care what music anyone is listening to.