AfterShokz OpenComm Bone Conduction Bluetooth Headset Review: Much More Than A Simple Gimmick
Who Is The AfterShokz OpenComm Bone Conduction Bluetooth Headset For?
The AfterShokz OpenComm Bluetooth headset is ideal for those who want to listen to audio without causing any ear fatigue
The headset features a great microphone that can be swiveled into place when needed
The AfterShokz OpenComm has the best battery life of any headset or earbuds I ve tried recently
The AfterShokz OpenComm headset offers surprisingly great sound quality without touching your ears
Headphones and earbuds come in all shapes and sizes, but the one thing they share is at some point, they all have a speaker that produces sound. That isn t true for bone conduction headsets like the AfterShokz OpenComm. Can a headset with no speakers really compare to a more traditional option? Not only can the AfterShokz OpenComm compete with the others, it even stands tall as a great headset option.
Nithari killings: From recovery of bones to death sentence to Pandher and Koli; a chronology of events
Nithari killings: From recovery of bones to death sentence to Pandher and Koli; a chronology of events
A Central Bureau Of Investigation (CBI) Court In Ghaziabad On Monday Awarded Death Sentence To Moninder Singh Pandher And Surinder Koli In The Murder And Attempted Rape Of 20-year-old Pinki Sarkar â One Of The 16 Murder Cases In The Sensational Nithari Killings.
News Nation Bureau | Edited By : Deepak Mahato | Updated on: 24 Jul 2017, 05:32:16 PM
New Delhi:
A Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) court in Ghaziabad on Monday awarded death sentence to Moninder Singh Pandher and Surinder Koli in the murder and attempted rape of 20-year-old Pinki Sarkar one of the 16 murder cases in the sensational Nithari killings. The CBI special judge Pawan Kumar reportedly termed the case as ‘rarest of rare’.
Benjamin L. Ebert, USA, receives this year's Sjöberg Prize, worth one million US dollars, for his research into how lenalidomide works as a treatment for blood cancer.
Researchers from Uppsala University show in a new study that inhibition of the protein EZH2 can reduce the growth of cancer cells in the blood cancer multiple myeloma.