Amazon has the Jabra Elite 5 True Wireless in-Ear Bluetooth Earbuds for $64.47. Shipping is free with the purchase. This item is usually sold for $150.
- Urgent Apple iOS 26.4.2 Update Delivers Critical iPhone Fix
- Once people switched chargers, this daily interruption quietly stopped happening at the worst times
- Why this cable choice became easier than constantly swapping spares
- Why a single charging block quietly replaced the default setup for many people
- Why the old charger setup started feeling inefficient after a short adjustment
About this item
- INTELLIGENT NOISE CONTROL — Elite 5 True Wireless earbuds block out more ambient noise with the Hybrid ANC or hear the world with the HearThrough technology. 6-mic call technology with dedicated microphones to reduce wind noise with these in-ear earbuds.
- PERSONALIZED SOUND — Play music with Spotify Tap Playback using 6mm speakers and a range of codecs that deliver first-class sound in these Jabra wireless earbuds which can be fine-tuned with a customizable equalizer.
- DURABLE WITH HIGH-PERFORMING BATTERY LIFE —IP55 rating protects the Bluetooth earphones against dust and water. Use either Jabra earbud independently in Mono Mode. Up to 7hrs of battery life, 28hrs with the case.
- EASY CONNECTIVITY — Connect to 2 devices at once with Bluetooth Multipoint, use Google Fast Pair for Android, or ask Alexa, Siri or Google Assistant (OS 6.0 or higher) for hands-free help with these wireless earphones.
- IN THE BOX — 1x Jabra Elite 5 Wireless Bluetooth Earbuds in Black – an Amazon only color. Qi-Certified Charging Case, EarGels in 3 Sizes, USB-C Cable, Safety Leaflet, 5g / 0.176oz. All in frustration-free packaging.

iPhone users are rethinking case texture and grip after years of prioritizing slim profiles over daily handling comfort
The iPhone slips out of your hand in a way it didn’t five years ago. Not dramatically—just enough that you adjust your grip three times during a walk, or catch it against your thigh before it hits the pavement. The…

iPad and mobile gaming users are confronting storage speed as games approach console file sizes without warning systems
Mobile games used to be small. A few hundred megabytes, maybe a gigabyte if the graphics were ambitious. You downloaded them on a whim, played for a week, deleted them when you got bored. Storage was a concern, but not…

Apple TV users are reconsidering fixed wall mounts as screens shift between work and entertainment throughout the day
The TV used to stay in one place. You mounted it on the wall, ran the cables through conduit, and that was it for five years. The room arranged itself around the screen. The couch faced it. The coffee table…

Apple’s USB-C transition created a cable management problem that most people quietly tolerate
Cable clutter accumulates gradually. A charging cable appears on the desk for the iPhone. Another for the iPad. A third for the MacBook when it needs power away from its usual spot. Each cable serves a purpose, but collectively they…

iPhone families created a household charging problem that individual solutions never quite solved
Family charging situations degenerate into chaos predictably. Multiple people, each with their own iPhone, iPad, and accessories, competing for limited outlets and surface space. Cables migrate between rooms. Chargers disappear into bags and never return. Someone’s phone is always dead…

Apple Watch charging created a specific problem that standard phone chargers couldn’t address
The Apple Watch introduced a charging constraint that didn’t exist with iPhones: it needs to charge quickly during narrow windows of time. Most people wear the watch almost continuously—throughout the day for activity tracking, increasingly at night for sleep monitoring.…
"Note: Readers like you help support The Apple Tech. We may receive a affiliate commission when you purchase products mentioned on our website."








