Отзывы о Компьютерная гарнитура Jabra Evolve2 40 USB-C UC Mono
101 отзывов пользователей о Jabra Evolve2 40 USB-C UC Mono
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Jabra Evolve2 40 USB-C UC Mono?
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Sound quality very good and noise reduction good
Excellent Bluetooth headset
Also be careful with the red band on the arc as when you put the headset around you neck and wear a white shirt, you will have the white shirt with red stuns... not good!
I will definitely not buy it again but have to admit the sound, mic and handiness is great.
Out sod the box paired up to phone no problem. Skype for Buiness calls ok - complimented on sound quality!
Switches between VOIP and phone calls - single button.
Only problem is hanging up voice calls when connected on Bluetooth.
Headset not used for music so no aspirations for stunning audio. As a business headset would recommend.
2 Mobiles, One Laptop no problem.
At last a voice optimized no hassle Head Set - Excellent with Dragon Premium
Was recommended by several senior colleagues that don't like tech that is fiddly/flaky or doesn't live up to hype or sales pitch
EDIT: I tried to persist for another day. I have also found that the connection quality is awful with my iPhone, with constant crackling. Also, it only occasionally decides to switch between the two devices I have. Overall, this product is junk. Judging by other positive reviews, perhaps I just had a faulty pair?
Needed a little bit of help setting up the wireless as it seemed to be interfering with the Bluetooth on my laptop (so I was told by a tech adviser!).
Comes with a neat little zip-up bag for storage when not in use.
Would recommend product and seller.
1-la gente me escucha muy claro cuando hablo
2-solo se escucha mi voz y no el ruido alrededor
3-puedo moverme libremente con ellos mientras estoy en una junta
Los puntos que se pueden mejorar:
1-la batería dura aprox unas 8 hrs continuas, podría mejorar el rendimiento de la carga
2-las almohadillas después de un rato considerable(2 hrs) si cansan pero nada que no se pueda tolerar
3-no puedes tener conectado los audífonos a la laptop al mismo tiempo que al celular ya que se desconecta de manera frecuente
It's fast to get out when you get a meeting reminder in Outlook. You just flick on the on button, you get "pc connected" in your ear, and off you go. There are no wires to worry about which is one of my main reasons for upgrading.
The dongle is easy to pair with if you only want it for pc use. It's a stylish minimalist design.
I tried a logitech wireless headset and it was totally unusable. This headset is usable and will work fine, just don't expect it to excellent and do expect some moderate annoyances.
Problems
The problems I experienced include it being difficult to hear properly on the stereo version. The headset blocks your ears so you can't hear your own voice. If you must buy it I would get the mono version instead.
It's not that comfortable to wear compared to the Jabra UC Voice 750 MS Mono that I have used for 5 years and always liked. If you tilt your head forwards the headset falls off meaning you must always look forwards! This happens because it's mainly plastic so there's nothing to keep it on except a small strip of rubber material. It's not as comfortable as the UC Voice either.
Magnet does not work properly. So many other people have mentioned this issue but nothing has been done about it yet (new purchase in May 2018). To me it's not much of a serious issue but the microphone does not stick to the headset properly and any kind of twisting motion causes it to pop off all the time. The mic does not fall down so it's only a minor issue in my opinion.
Cannot re-pair with pc after using bluetooth. This one I really bothers me. I tried to listen to music on bluetooth with my smartphone. When I was finished I tried to go back to pc connection but couldn't. I switched off the bluetooth on the phone but it did not revert back to pc again. The only way I found is to yank out the dongle (on the back of my pc and hard to reach) then plug it back in again. In the end I decided not to use it for music.
No instructions. There are literally 2 pages of instructions. It does not tell you how to solve the pairing issue I had above. I downloaded the pdf instructions from the website but no additional instructions are provided.
To switch audio devices you must use a separate piece of software, not provided, or use the system tray audio button in Windows 10. The Windows 10 switcher is a godsend and allows you to easily switch between speakers and headset, but without it you have to go right back into "Sounds" and manually disable the other device. Why didn't they put this in the instructions? Why didn't they provide extra software for Windows 7 and 8 users? Why didn't they test it on real people?! I dispair, this is embarrasing..
Audio instructions are quite annoying. It says things like "pc connected" or "sound muted". I could get used to it alone, but this brings me on to another issue - it's very slow to unmute. This means in a meeting you suddenly need to talk to everyone and you can't. To unmute you have to hold the down volume for 2 seconds, then you get the audio instructions for 2 more seconds, then everyone is wondering why you aren't talking yet, then you start talking. Did they not bother to test this in a real setting? The workaround is to use the on-screen mute button which makes things a little faster.
Audio quality is not great. Bluetooth is supposed to be digital audio meaning it's actually moving data around not analogue audio. This means the quality should be crystal clear and sound as good as a good pair of wired headphones. But the audio is coarse and the quality is equivalent to a good FM radio. It's not unusable but I expected a lot better for £102.
Conclusion
All in all I would stick with the wires and go with a Jabra UC Mono, for me the 65 is more fashion over function.
Humanity still hasn't found a good way to do wireless headsets yet.
Der Akku hält bei der genannten Benutzung ca eine Woche, auch wenn ich es zwischendrin mal vergesse auszuschalten, sondern es nur liegen lasse. Das Headset lässt sich über ein mitgeliefertes Dongle (bei mir: Jabra Link 370), über Bluetooth oder per USB-Kabel mit dem Rechner oder Smartphone verbinden, so lässt es sich notfalls auch benutzen wenn der Akku leer ist. Das Dongle leuchtet blau, rot oder grün, je nachdem ob es verbunden ist und ob das Mikro stumm geschaltet ist. Am Headset sind Tasten für Rufannahme, lauter, und leiser. Per Doppelbelegung lässt sich auch das Mikro stumm schalten.
Im Lieferumfang ist außer dem Headset das Dongle, ein langes weiches USB-Kabel und ein praktisches Täschchen dabei, so dass sich das Headset auch gut transportieren lässt. Die Ohrpolster lassen sich um 90° drehen, so dass die Tasche flacher ist. Wenn man mit dem Headset Musik hört statt zu telefonieren, lässt sich das Mikro hoch klappen, und wird dann mit einem Magneten fixiert. Das Mikro lässt sich um ca 320° drehen, so dass sich das Headset mit Mikro links oder rechts tragen lässt.
The thing that really sold them to us was when my colleague was driving (albeit only 30 or 40 miles an hour) in his convertible, and the customer asked him if he was in the office! The noise cancelling is brilliant, so effective. The main office we have has a very high ceiling and is therefore noisy when lots of people are on the phone. Calling people in the office was awful until we got these, all you could hear was everyone else. Now with the children running around in the background they are just as good at muting that noise too - don't expect them to cancel 100% of noise, but it will reduce it to such a level you can barely hear it at the other end.
Our needs for these are largely for calls. We spend a lot of time on conference calls to people across the globe, often to non-native English speakers, so it is super important we can concentrate on what they are saying, and that our speech comes through clearly.
We have tried mono versions, and I also have the 85h over-ear headphones and these strike the best balance. Some people have reviewed these saying they are difficult to hear your own voice whilst wearing, but they really are not. The thing is if you have the mono, and anyone else is around you, it can be difficult to concentrate on what the caller is saying, especially if they have a heavy accent and don't have a pair of these to cancel out their own background noise. You can hear the other caller more clearly with the 65s, and because they do not go over the ear they are more comfortable for longer periods. If it is warm over ear cans are sweaty!
The over-ear 85h's are so good at cancelling out the noise around you (they have excellent passive and active noise cancelling), but they make it so hard to hear yourself they are best left to when it is more important you hear the person talking than they can hear you (85h is no where near as good at cancelling background noise from your speech thanks to the lack of mic boom).
So in short, the 65's are excellent at cancelling background noise from speech, comfortable and strike the best balance for most calls where you being heard, and hearing them is equally important.
Connection was a breeze - simply plug in the Bluetooth dongle into your PC, turn on the switch on the headset and you're away. I'm using this at work with Skype and I've had no problems with it at all. It is so much better than the wired one I had been using before as it offers up a lot more freedom and you don't have to keep moving the cable away from going over the keyboard while talking and typing at the same time.
I've not yet managed to pair it up with my phone as well (yet to try that properly) as turning on Bluetooth on my phone didn't show up the Jabra. The description says that this can be done, but there is nothing detailed in the start up manual.
Very happy with it. I especially like that you can store the microphone out of the way onto the head strap. It clicks into place via a magnet in the strap.
The only issue I have is that with both ears covered, it is hard to gauge how loudly I'm speaking, but I'll probably get used to that.
The sound is clear and precise and I've not had any complaint with people unable to hear me.
Would recommend
- As a women with long hair, it sometimes get caught in the joints, which can get pretty annoying.
- When connected to the PC via the USB dongle, it does have some issues connecting correctly. You do have a faff about in Windows to get it right sometimes. If you connect it to the PC to charge, it can cause some conflicts there as well.
- After 1.5 years, the USB dongle stopped working. I used it a lot, but I expected a bit more quality.
- Having to switch to bluetooth to connect to my PC, the audio quality is not so good; I trust it's more the issue of BT rather than the headset.
- I wish the headset carrying case had a pocket for the USB dongle.
So it's done the job over the past 1.5 years, but hate the short lifespans of electronics today. For the price I was hoping to get a few years of use out of it.
Very buggy Bluetooth system - it gets totally confused with more than one connected device and all sorts of strange behaviour ensues.
The sound level is very quiet so you won’t be able to turn it up much at all. Music is a complete non starter.
The audible battery level always says it’s fully charged when it’s not. The visual indicator on your phone will tell you it’s low but the audible warning seems to have no idea. Also, I think the battery life is quite poor.
Noise cancelling also doesn’t seem to be a feature of this device. It’s either not present or almost totally ineffective.
I’ve gone for the much cheaper MPOW headset to replace these and am returning them. So far so good with the MPOW, great Bluetooth range. No issues connecting or staying connected and switching between devices seems logical and straightforward.
For well over £100 the Jabra is overpriced and wouldn’t be good value at well under £50 in my opinion
First off, the device feels flimsy. It did not sit well on my head, and the microphone did not clip back into place (this has been mentioned in other reports). It was hard to position the microphone. The on/off and bluetooth control is hard to reach while wearing it. It seems to connect to 2 bluetooth devices, but since it only announces "connected to 2 devices" it's hard to know which, and the instructions are so poor that if there is a way to tell I couldn't work it out. As far as I can see there's no way to switch between devices (says you're on a call on one device and another device rings, you can't switch.
I connected it to my Mac with the USB dongle. When using GTM, I selected Jabra as the device to use but could neither hear nor be heard. Same with Skype, although for some reason on the 3rd try it did work with skype, but then just kept dropping both my voice and sound. I also selected Jabra in the Mac settings - made no difference. I did manage to listen to iTunes, but the sound quality was terrible and it kept dropping.
Maybe mine had a fault, but I called the Jabra call line and they said as far as they could tell it was working. I sent it back and ordered a Plantronics UC Voyager Focus
My main problem was regarding answering my phone using facetime on the computer. I could not dial out numbers with the headphones and often could not pick-up properly.
When looking for a new pair, there was an obvious gulf in the old ones (£30) and these at over £100. However having taken the plunge, I CANNOT believe how terrible the old ones were...and how good these are.
First things first, the connection to the computer is via a USB dongle, not direct via bluetooth. This is done easily and connects within seconds of turning the headphones on each time. A huge advantage is that they connect to your phone separately via bluetooth at the same time. This means that if calls come in, you can answer either on your computer or on your phone - massive advantage for someone working at a desk.
I use them for all calls including Skype, conference calls and Facetime video and sound quality is great. Each ear has good padding and will flex to your ears - very comfortable. Finally the microphone rotates round to sit infront of your mouth, it is magnetised so when you push it back up it clicks into the headset.
Really recommend for anyone who isnt sure about splashing out. The extra cost is well worth it for the bluetooth headset.
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All I can say is, for me, with my setup (a DELL Latitude 5490) the Evolve 65 works flawlessly. Connected via Bluetooth to my laptop the audio is slightly worse that when using the provided dongle, but still acceptable. Range was also excellent on both, allowing me to roam the house with no dropouts. However, I would strongly recommend that you do use the dongle as you get a number of benefits:
- It is called "PC" when it connects
- It connects faster than regular bluetooth
- The audio quality is almost as good as the wired version
- There is an indicator LED on the dongle that shows the status (blue for standby, green for in-use, red when on mute)
- You get full control of your computer volume and Skype for Business
The battery is also excellent. After a charge and 2 or 3 hours of use, it still reports a full battery. The headset itself is lightweight, comfortable to wear for extended periods, and not having to mess about with a cable is, as per the title, liberating. Noise cancelling on the mic, based on the Evolve 40, is also really good at blocking out background chatter.
The only thing I'd avoid (and did) is the over-priced stand. It still needs you to line up a micro USB connector. Instead look out for those cables or adapters that make use of magnetic connections for an easy (and reversible) way charge the device without having to fumble around lining things up.
Edit: Forgot to add, people have been saying it's hard to gauge how loudly you are speaking when wearing these. Granted, they do have some noise insulating properties but I can't say it has been an issue at all.
After 6 months the second headset broke. This time it appears the slide mechanism in the head band is made of tiny cheap plastic parts and these had snapped causing the left ear piece to drop out and dangle from the cable. All in all, given the cost of these things they are junk and I wouldn't recommend them to anyone.
Also be aware that if you install the Jabra software to keep the firmware up to date, it will keep writing log files to your PC and after a few months you'll wake up one morning with no space on your hard drive.
The real problem is the obvious cost-cutting when it comes to usability and connectivity. Firstly the 'busy light' on the earpiece to indicate you're on a call is only on one side - alone on the blind side will be denied this indication. Then there's the connectivity; perhaps it's better on a Windows machine, but on a Mac it's complete garbage. You'd expect that when it's connected via USB it would behave as a regular USB headset but no, it only connects wirelessly. This would be fine if the Bluetooth connection could remain stable for more than 10 seconds but unfortunately this seems to be beyond its capabilities. So the best way to connect is through the supplied USB dongle - which doesn't come in a USB-C variant making it rather clumsy on a Mac.
The Jabra software is appalling too as it doesn't help with connectivity, rarely actually recognises that a headset is even connected (when it is) and does not successfully allow you to upgrade the firmware.
A colleague who'd been having the same audio issues as me with these said a firmware update in 2018 had fixed them. I dug them out, almost 1½ years after giving up on them and did the update - audio now working perfectly!
My only gripe now is they didn't survive falling off my head to the floor. The only mechanical connection from the ear cups to the headband is a thin plastic tube carrying wires through it, which the ear cups swivel around. A small drop caused one ear cup to break off and dangle for a few seconds by the two fine wires momentarily, before they snapped too.
My summary would now be: almost perfect, but don't drop them - very fragile design.
2016 review:
I want to like these headphones, I work from home and do a lot of conference calls over Lync/Skype.
Pros: Build quality, comfort and features, particularly dual connectivity with a phone at the same time as a PC
Cons: Everyone else on the calls says my audio goes robotic or unintelligible every few minutes for about 30 seconds. I'm using an HP Probook 430 G1 laptop running Windows 7, so I accept it could be a driver issue. Given they were £100 I've struggled on with them, tried recording sound with other software and the same thing happens, so it's not Skype or network issues. Updating the firmware has made no difference.
Stated 30m range is more like 10m straight line with no obstacles. You can't go to grab a cup of coffee in the kitchen next door whilst on a call, I've tried in three different houses.
Not really suitable for the professional homeworker.
I'm going back to a wired headset.
I've tried a number of Bluetooth headsets as I need them for my work on a daily basis, my requreiments are:
- Must work with an iPhone (6 at the moment)
- Clear audio in both directions (Need to use in noisy environments and in my car, I've decided I need a boom mic therefore)
- Reasonable time between charges
- Must fit my big head
- Comfortable to wear
For the last 9 months or so I've been using the 'AGPTek 2in1 Bluetooth headset with boom mic' and they did work although they weren't particularly comfortable and they lacked high frequency response so with some people I talked to I was constanly having to ask them to repeat what they'd said due to them sounding indistinct. They were a fraction of the cost of the Jabre Evolve 65s so maybe that's to be expected.
The Evolve 65s though are so far faultless, excellent sound quality, very simple to connect and turn on and off. They're comfortable to wear for extended periods and the battery life has so far been impressive.
The boom mic is a little short which can lead to the person on the other end getting some heavy breathing but is easy to re-position and can be stowed vertically against the outside of the headset band when not using the mic. The mic though won't stay attached in the stowed position when the headband is opened to anywhere near maximum (which I need). This is a negligable issue though.
So far I can heartily recommend this headset for anyone needing to use their phone while working with their hands.







