When Griffinintroducedits TuneBuds for nano ( $ 34.99 ) , a lanyard that vie directly with Apple ’s iPod nano laniard that cost $ 15 more , our pursuit was piqued . After 24 hr of intense listening to all dissimilar kinds of music and talk , we can only say that the TuneBuds do n’t sound quite as good as the Apple version , but the difference is subtle . The TuneBuds sound a little tinny and slenderly vacuous compared to the Apple phones , but that difference of opinion is far dwarf by the sound closing off from its in - pinna style phone , as opposed to Apple ’s earbud - style drivers .
https://gizmodo.com/griffin-tunebuds-nano-176003
TuneBuds are n’t adjustable — the Apple lanyard phones are — but we acknowledge that the TuneBuds ’ necklace length is just about perfect for easy usability anyway . A plus for the elan - conscious : TuneBuds are available in either black or clean to perfectly match that nano .

TuneBuds have solid - sounding bass and crisp highs even when play sub - standard - fidelity mp3s , and the remainder in sound between them and the Apple lanyard does n’t justify the $ 15 difference of opinion in price . Overall , we give the Griffin TuneBuds for nano a big thumbs - up .
Full review : Griffin TuneBuds Lanyard for iPod nano[Consumer Electronics Net ]
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