It’s a new year and there’s already a fresh Apple rumor hot off the presses: the upcoming AirPods 2 Pro will support lossless audio streaming . According to a note published by analyst Ming-Chi Kuo, the company is planning a design overhaul of its top-end wireless buds, along with a new case that will beep to help you find it.
The Cupertino-based company launched a lossless music tier for Apple Music last May. But there were only a few ways to enjoy it: if you’ve got an iPhone, you had to get an external DAC (Digital to Analog Converter) to listen to lossless files; if you’ve got a Mac or a MacBook, you could technically use a high-end pair of wired headphones to enjoy high-fidelity music.
However, the surprising bit was that none of the AirPods models — including the $550 AirPods Max — support lossless audio streaming out of the box. That seemed like an odd choice from Apple. Thankfully, the rumored AirPods Pro 2 could be an answer to that.
While I want to jump with joy, I am keeping my feet firmly on the ground for the time being . Until the new AirPods Pro are out, we would have no idea how they’ll improve the audio with Bluetooth’s current limitations.
Gary Geaves, Apple’s VP of Acoustics, told What Hi-Fi in an interview last week about the wireless standard’s bottleneck for audio delivery:
It would be interesting to see if Apple’s solution could be applied to a wider range of wireless audio solutions. Currently, there are some standards such as Qualcomm’s AptX and Sony LDAC — which can transmit audio at a bitrate of 990kbps. You can learn more about bitrate here .
Apple’s challenge would be to surpass that and provide the industry best wireless audio experience. If the company manages to do that, it might push other stakeholders, including the Bluetooth Special Interest Group , which manages the standard, to update our beloved Bluetooth wireless spec for better sound.
In the end, the lossless audio support feature might not make a huge difference in the audio quality of the AirPods Pro 2. But it’ll hopefully make wireless audio less shitty.