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96 lines
7.9 KiB
Plaintext
96 lines
7.9 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 2599
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Title: HPR2599: Fitting a 3.5mm adapter to a bluetooth receiver.
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr2599/hpr2599.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-19 06:21:53
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---
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This is HBR episode 2005-199 entitled Fitting a 3.5mm adapter to a Bluetooth receiver.
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It is hosted by Ken Fallon and in about 8 minutes long, and Karim and exquisite flag.
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The summary is, Ken cobbles together a Bluetooth adapter for any 3.5mm headphone.
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This episode of HBR is brought to you by AnanasThost.com.
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At 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HBR15, that's HBR15.
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Better web hosting that's honest and fair at AnanasThost.com.
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Hi everybody, my name is Ken Fallon and you're listening to another episode of Hacker Public Radio.
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Today I want to talk about the quandary that I'm going through with my podcast listening.
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Before the ideal podcast, for me at least, was Langer's style in ear earbuds, not squashy
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interior but sitting in your earlobe, that was around a Langer that you hung around your neck
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and off that you clipped onto a sunset clip and that clipped onto your shirt.
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It was perfect, free standing. You could pop one out without too much difficulty.
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You didn't suffer from the heat that you get with over the ear microphones.
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You didn't have the awkwardness of plugging the earphone interior in ear ones.
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And it was very convenient for working outside, but also on the train.
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You could quickly pop out an earbud and then pop it back in again when the announcements were
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over from the conductors. They also had the advantage that you didn't lose them because
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they were around your neck the whole time. There was nowhere for this thing to go.
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And when you took it off, you took it off, wrapped the headphones around, the
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sunset clip and then that was that. Unfortunately, the world conspired against me
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insofar as Philip stopped making those Langer's. Each pair lasted me about two months and then
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they would invariably break. There was some flaw in them and then they just stopped making them
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and went to making just a long lead. So I lost the ability there to have a
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dangle around my neck and support it. So now I was relying totally on the clip part of the
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sunset clip mechanism to hold on my ears. There was also this disadvantage that when the ear,
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one earbud fell out, then the alternative way it fell down and then pulled out the other ear as a
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result. So not very handy. And the other thing that happened was of course that the sunset clips
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are now becoming so rare. The newer models don't support Rockbox. They've got less memory,
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basically a cheaper device and they're not as great mobile devices and the older ones that do
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support Rockbox are coming in with a price tag of around 150 euros. And the whole point of using
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a small MP3 player or out player or music player was that you didn't run the risk of losing a lot
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of money with these devices if you were outside working with a garden or you put it somewhere
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and it accidentally gets smashed or you lost it on the train or whatever. So I always had a limit,
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you know, around 50, 100 dollars, that's 100 euros. That's that's the most time I want to spend
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definitely if I spend 200 or 150 and something I don't want to be going out into the garden with
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this thing. I need to have some sort of protection on it. So that was the argument against using
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a mobile phone as well. Now as as ever the world has conspired against me and I am no longer
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able to to get what I actually want. So what we're left with then is that the world has actually
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moved on a little bit and that Android devices, you can now get a mobile phone for 60 euros outright,
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go down to the shop and you can buy a device for 40 to 60 euros. That's a mobile phone and if you
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bought it and never put a SIM card in it you could use this thing as like the original iPod
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things as a media player just. And quite a lot of what another thing that's happened is that
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Bluetooth headphones are becoming a lot cheaper. Down in the action which is a sort of wholesale
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type shop here in the Netherlands. They had a set of headphones speakers for under $15
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with Bluetooth and they're the in-ear squash you want. And the Hayman which is a retail outlet
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relatively respectable one has a set for 25 euros. I'm using dollars and euros interchangeably
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just to kind of give you an idea of of what the price are. The cheaper ones they they you know
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five ten dollar ones are terrible. The audio quality is terrible. It's fine for for podcasts but the
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music quality is terrible. The 25 euro ones are actually fine. The music is fine. The only thing is
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I don't like the in-ear squashy things that gives you this when you're putting in putting them in
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or the wires touch you have this scratch thing in your really just find it irritating. So what I
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actually wanted was the choice of headphone to use while having the portability of having
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using a Bluetooth device. So I could have the small mobile phone in my pocket and then use
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a Bluetooth adapter to get myself music. So at the price of 25 euros and my new found
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soldering skills I thought to myself hey what about what if I take off that adapter there
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cut off the headphones and then just put on a female 3.5 millimeter
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headphone jack on it and let's see how that works out. Well it worked out grand actually one
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thing that so basically all it did was cut the two wires strip them got a an adapter female adapter
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which I had in my bits and pieces box and basically sold them together. The only thing you'll find
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is that on a lot of these headphones they use insulating varnish or lacquer around the two wires
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for call saving and size. So you'll have like a green wire and a gray or uncolored one
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and it doesn't take solder very well. So what you got to do you can use nail varnish remover to
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remove it but the best thing that you can do is just scrape it lightly with a bit of sandpaper
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but the wires themselves are so thin that you run the risk of completely you know making the
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bulb as you do it. So what I did was just mechanically twisted them around the wires that I had
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on the receiving side you know in the female jack there's a photo of this in the show notes
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it is ugly it is ugly I'll give you that and just applied lots and lots of soldier to it and
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it was fine. So then I just connected them up using this the headsets that I have here on the audio
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actually perfect. It didn't degradation at all in the process so I can use my
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traditional Phillips over the ear headphones which I actually like for as an over the ear headphones
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and then I also have the option of using any or ones whatever earbuds that I want to use
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at a particular time with this thing. So it gives me a lot of a lot more options.
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So yeah it's a it's pretty cool it's not the best lifehark in the world but it works for me
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some people might ask but Ken could you not go and get a set of Bluetooth headphones speakers
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but yes but that doesn't give me the flexibility I want I want to be able to kind of use these
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headphones and then just change them and then not have to worry about connecting up my phone to
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another Bluetooth receiver and stuff so that was it a little bit of a lifehack there don't know if
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it's of any interest anybody but no doubt if you tune in tomorrow there'll be another exciting
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episode here on Hacker Public Radio.
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You've been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio dot org.
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We are a community podcast network that releases shows every weekday, Monday through Friday.
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Today's show, like all our shows, was contributed by an HPR listener like yourself.
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If you ever thought of recording a podcast and click on our contributing to find out how easy
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it really is. Hacker Public Radio was founded by the digital dot org pound and the
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infonomicum computer club and it's part of the binary revolution at binwreff.com.
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If you have comments on today's show please email the host directly leave a comment on the website
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or record a follow-up episode yourself unless otherwise stated today's show is released on
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re-creative comments, attribution, share a light 3.0 license.
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