
I have been through several Bluetooth headsets that have more or less worked well on their own, or have had problems with my Treo 650. My wife and I finally settled on the Aliph Jawbone (she got a red one, natch), and we are very impressed with this unit.In order I have had a Plantronics 510 behind-the-ear (very good sound and very comfortable) that I promptly lost in the Bell Centre.
I then bought a Motorola H-500 on sale that would shut itself off after 5 minutes when paired with the Treo (but worked fine with the Powerbook and Wifey's Sony Ericsson phone).
I then bought a Moto H-375 at Costco (really cheap, and it came with a car charger) that looked quite nice but would also shut off after 30 minutes (an improvement), although it would slip out of my ear all the time. It was also not loud enough and the multi-function button was hard to press. Of course I promptly lost this one as well which was not quite as painful in the wallet as losing the Plantronics.
Since I found out on the 'net that the Treo's unique power saving didn't keep a constant link to Bluetooth peripherals, meant that headsets with power saving modes (like Motorola) meant you always had to keep turning them back on after they powered down. The ones that did not were Jabra and Plantronics, so this narrowed my choices. The local Wal-mart had the Plantronics 220 for under $30, so I decided to try it (thinking that I would promptly lose it)...but that was a big mistake. Incredibly poor reception and sound quality on the Treo, a Nokia 4400 and my wife's Sony Ericsson, so this was returned.
I had been curious about the Jawbone, having looked at it before buying the Moto H-500 in October, but the price was too steep, at $149. Lo and behold,
NCIX in Vancouver had them on sale for a mere $75 (in silver, $95 in red). So we ordered one of each based on the amazing
demo video on the Aliph site.
So far, we are very impressed with this headset. The noise cancellation works as advertised and is quite astounding for people to find out you are talking to them in a car or walking down a noisy street. All the receiver hears is your voice. Yes, the noise cancellation is that good!
My only complaint, which seems to be shared by many others on the forums is the fitment is not terrific. Wife has no complaints with the elongated ear tips but for me they don't sit right. The round tip was just too big and the ear piece would keep popping out of my ear.
After reading some posts about how people have been substituting Jabra eargels, I decided to order some on Ebay (try and find them in Montreal, I dare anyone!!!). I received them today and they are fantastic! They look like they were made to go right on the Jawbone, with the sound hole lining up perfectly, and even a slot to keep the small back mic open! Sound quality has improved (wider frequency response) and it is acceptably LOUD, whereby the sound before was quite tinny and not loud enough. Not only that but I could remove the ear loop - the Jawbone stays snugly in the ear without any assistance. Comfort is superb, even after 5 hours.
What I'm wondering is with all of the options that Aliph provides for fitment, they just didn't seem to get the ergonomics right. I am going to suggest they adopt Jabra-style gels, at least as an option.
For the rest, this is a very slick technology.