How to use Airpods with Live Listen in iOS 12 to help your hearing

Posted:
in iOS edited October 2020
Ironically, Apple keeps rather quiet about this feature but whether you're hard of hearing or just in a loud place, Live Listen is remarkable. AppleInsider explains how to get it set up and use it.

Using Apple AirPods as a hearing aid
Using Apple AirPods as a hearing aid


You may have been told for years that loud headphones will damage your ears but now Apple's using that same technology to help any of us hear better. If you have AirPods and an iPhone with iOS 12, you can now use Live Listening.

We hesitate to say that this turns the iPhone into a hearing aid but it is most definitely a boon for anyone who is actively hard of hearing. It's not exactly the most unobtrusive of hearing aids, though, as you have to have your AirPods in your ears.

You'd best explain to people that you're using this feature or else they'll assume you're ignoring them in favor of listening to the latest AppleInsider podcast.

Yet if you're in a noisy environment, if you need a little help hearing the TV or if you're just curious to see how well this works, pop your AirPods in and set it up.

New and not new

To use this feature you have to have iOS 12 and Apple has designed it specifically to work with the company's AirPods. However, it's a development of what Apple introduced in 2016 as part of its Made for iPhone program.






Previously you could pair qualifying Bluetooth headphones to your iPhone and through Settings, Accessibility, give them access to the iOS device's microphone.

That hasn't changed. What's new is that Apple has both brought this to the AirPods and also made it much easier to switch on and off.

Easy and not easy

You'll be tapping it on and off all day, once you've got it set up. Yet the way you get it working the first time isn't obvious.

Setting up Hearing in Control Center
Setting up Hearing in Control Center


On your iPhone or iPad, go to Settings and tap on Control Center. Now choose Customize Controls. You get a long list called Include that shows you what controls are already active in Control Center and then there's a Customize Controls section. In that, you'll find one called Hearing.

Tap on that and it leaps up into the Include section. This is where you can also drag to rearrange controls but leave that for now: until you see the Control Center in action, there's no obvious way to know what the best arrangement of controls is for you.

Now swipe down from the top right of your iPhone screen to call up the Control Center. Alongside WiFi, Bluetooth and other controls, you'll now have an icon for Hearing which has an icon of an ear. Don't tap on it yet.

Using the hard-to-spot Audio Sources option in Control Center
Using the hard-to-spot Audio Sources option in Control Center


Instead, with your AirPods in your ears, tap on the Music icon which is usually at the top right of Control Center. Tap specifically in the top right corner of that icon where you may see a mini icon that's meant to show sound waves coming from a speaker.

This is surely the poorest part of the entire iOS 12 design. Even though Apple now puts at least a greyed-out sound wave icon there, you have to know that this is where you change between speaker and headphones. Still, you know now, so tap on it and up comes a list of all audio options available to you. There'll be a tick next to the active one.

Top of the list will be your iPhone or iPad. Then there may also be Apple TVs that you've connected to recently but somewhere in the list there will be your AirPods.

Chose AirPods from your list of available audio outputs
Chose AirPods from your list of available audio outputs


Tap on them to make sure they're ticked and after a beat, you'll hear a tone in your ears saying they're on and active.

Hearing control

Now in another less than optimal design, there isn't a Back or an OK button. To dismiss this audio source control, you have to tap somewhere away from the dialog box.

If you're playing music, by the way, tap on the Pause button in Control Center. You'll thank us later.

Choosing Hearing in Control Center
Choosing Hearing in Control Center


The Hearing control is probably at the bottom of the page: tap on the Ear icon.

In the small dialog that appears, you initially get two pieces of information and one option. You're told the name of your AirPods, so you know you're connected to them, and you get a battery indicator for them too.

Then there's a button marked Off. It's a clear button under a greyed-out section called Live Listen. So when you're looking for how to switch this on, the section is harder to find and the button says Off.

Live Listen is off by default
Live Listen is off by default


Tap it to On and be prepared to be rather delighted.

What you hear

The Live Listen heading remains greyed-out but the button turns to On and there is now also a series of five dots opposite it. These are level indicators: they show you how loud the sound around you is.

Now position your iPhone or iPad where you want it. So you could put it in front of the TV set or you could point it toward a person you're speaking with. This is a Bluetooth connection and anyway your iPhone is a thousand bucks so you don't want to leave it halfway across the sports bar.

Switch on Live Listen and you get an audio level showing how loud the sound around you is.
Switch on Live Listen and you get an audio level showing how loud the sound around you is.


Yet you can exploit the fact that it's Bluetooth to mean that you've got the option to push it closer to someone if you need to.

When they speak, the iPhone or iPad's microphone picks it up and relays it to you.

Volume

There are no volume controls on the AirPods or in this Live Listen feature: to turn the sound up or down, you alter the volume on your iPhone.

And it is remarkable. Right now we're listening to the tick of a clock that's sufficiently far enough away from us across a room that we hadn't noticed before that it ticks at all.

Problems

As genuinely excellent as this Live Listen with AirPods is, use it sparingly. It gets through the battery life of your AirPods rapidly. We are finding that our original AirPods are not lasting as long as they used to so your mileage may vary but we saw a 24 percent drop in battery life in just ten minutes.

Apple's Control Center tends to switch itself off at every possibility so you can't expect to leave it open during a Live Listen session. However, while you're using the feature, the time in the top left of your iPhone display will be shown in a red lozenge-shaped icon, just as you get when you're recording audio.

Also, another reason for using them sparingly is that when you go to move or place the iPhone somewhere, Live Listen makes every tiny movement sound really loud. Do not drop your iPhone onto the table, okay?

It's a similar thing if you were playing music before you switched this on. Choosing the Hearing control and turning Live Listen on doesn't stop the music. Instead, it switches the music from the AirPods to your iPhone's speaker.

Only, what's right next to your iPhone's speaker? Exactly. You immediately get the music much louder and, oddly, a little distorted or broken up too.

We didn't notice any other issue with breaking up or connection problems during Live Listen, though, and instead merely got a little fed up now knowing just how creaky our chairs are.

Officially, and unsurprisingly, Live Listen only works with Apple's AirPods or at least it does in quite this fashion. You can still use Made for iPhone headphones or hearing aids which you set up via Settings, Accessibility. You can't get one-tap access via Control Center unless you're using AirPods.

Some users have reported being able to connect other Bluetooth headphones but we suspect that's down to this confusing business of Made for iPhone options. In our testing connecting other Bluetooth headphones simply never worked. Every time we would get an error saying that Live Listen was: "Unavailable for current route".

The route in question is the one the audio takes from iOS microphone to AirPods but, still, this isn't the clearest kind of message to give someone. Plus it's a little buried in the Control Center. Plus setting up Control Center requires you to know that you can set it up.

So it's not the smoothest system, but once it's running, you can get to it through just a swipe down on the iPhone screen and then a couple of taps.

Plus, we're not kidding, it sounds great.



Keep up with AppleInsider by downloading the AppleInsider app for iOS, and follow us on YouTube, Twitter @appleinsider and Facebook for live, late-breaking coverage. You can also check out our official Instagram account for exclusive photos.
randominternetperson

Comments

  • Reply 1 of 18
    "Officially, and unsurprisingly, Live Listen only works with Apple's AirPods or at least it does in quite this fashion. You can still use Made for iPhone headphones or hearing aids which you set up via SettingsAccessibility. You can't get one-tap access via Control Center unless you're using AirPods."

    I remember when this feature was announced it was said it was going to work with any headphone with the W1 chip, like a pair of BeatsX I own. Of course it doesn't work (as described in the article) and I haven't been able to find where I originally saw it mentioned. Too bad since I was going to test it out for my 90 year old Mom and get her some BeatsX like mine. Like me standard Apple earbuds, and I assume 
    AirPods that have the same design, don't fit my Mom's ears. A shame since she could really use this feature.
    watto_cobra
  • Reply 2 of 18
    If only Apple opened up its SDK to allow third party developers to access features like this, the UI would not be such hell. You could ask Siri to activate it or use an Apple Watch app to tap it on or off or ...
  • Reply 3 of 18
    If only Apple opened up its SDK to allow third party developers to access features like this, the UI would not be such hell. You could ask Siri to activate it or use an Apple Watch app to tap it on or off or ...
    You can buy MFi hearing aids already.
    watto_cobraRayz2016
  • Reply 4 of 18
    Thanks for the well done article.  I was very interested in this feature and tried it out, but found that the latency made making out dialog actually harder to follow. It's not quite an echo, but the delay is just enough to be distracting.

    But that's just me . . .
    mrboba1
  • Reply 5 of 18
    mac_128mac_128 Posts: 3,454member
    yoyo2222 said:
    "Officially, and unsurprisingly, Live Listen only works with Apple's AirPods or at least it does in quite this fashion. You can still use Made for iPhone headphones or hearing aids which you set up via SettingsAccessibility. You can't get one-tap access via Control Center unless you're using AirPods."

    I remember when this feature was announced it was said it was going to work with any headphone with the W1 chip, like a pair of BeatsX I own. Of course it doesn't work (as described in the article) and I haven't been able to find where I originally saw it mentioned. Too bad since I was going to test it out for my 90 year old Mom and get her some BeatsX like mine. Like me standard Apple earbuds, and I assume AirPods that have the same design, don't fit my Mom's ears. A shame since she could really use this feature.
    I too was hoping this would work for my mom, but I didn’t realize it amplifies only sounds picked up by the phone mics. While this could be useful on occasion, her phone is usually in a pocket or purse, so it would have to be an intentional use. I thought it amplified the volume picked up from the mic on the AirPods, like a hearing aid, but it doesn’t unfortunately. That would likely lower the power draw as well since it doesn’t require BT. And of course latency will always be a problem with BT devices that don’t incorporate some kind of low latency. It’s hard to believe that Apple hasn’t introduced some sort of Low Latency on their own, at least with their own devices, but they haven’t.
  • Reply 6 of 18
        I wear hearing aids made to specifically work with the iPhone. Wonder if this feature would work with them?
    watto_cobra
  • Reply 7 of 18
    dewmedewme Posts: 5,362member
    This is very cool. I too would like to see Apple open up an SDK (SoundKit?) to allow third parties to build additional apps around it. It would be interesting to allow the Apple Watch and external microphones plugged into the iPhone to be used as the audio source (if it doesn't already support this). Perhaps the Apple Watch could function as a diagnostic stethoscope for health and mechanical troubleshooting applications. In addition to audio relaying Apple could add additional microphones to the iPhone to allow beamforming and multipath audio processing. This would open it up to a plethora of additional audio related applications that require directionality, spatial, and distance determination. This would include everything from speaker & microphone placement assistance to public safety and law enforcement applications (direction finding). 
    watto_cobra
  • Reply 8 of 18
    No MFI or W1 chip required: works like a charm with a Phonak ComPilot II. 
    This is a so-called ‘streamer’, that turns my Phonak hearing aids into a Bluetooth headset. 
    Latency is noticeable but not too bad actually. 
    watto_cobraRayz2016
  • Reply 9 of 18
    I tried it and it worked well under certain circumstances, a noisy room isn’t one of them. I was hoping I would have more control over the direction and have some level of noise filtering like the Bose Hearphones provide but not yet. Maybe that’s something AI can be trained to deal with. 
    watto_cobra
  • Reply 10 of 18
    GeorgeBMacGeorgeBMac Posts: 11,421member
    Oh boy!
    So kids can now listen in on their parents.
    And parents can now listen in on their kids.

    TMI...
  • Reply 11 of 18
    "Now swipe down from the top right of your iPhone screen to call up the Control Center."
    You're assuming everyone owns a X, Xs or Xr. There's still a sizable number of us that have the OG IPhones with home buttons.
    randominternetperson
  • Reply 12 of 18
    MacProMacPro Posts: 19,727member
    jpmist said:
    Thanks for the well done article.  I was very interested in this feature and tried it out, but found that the latency made making out dialog actually harder to follow. It's not quite an echo, but the delay is just enough to be distracting.

    But that's just me . . .
    I have the same slight delay if I run a pair of HomePods at the same time as my surround sound system both connected to an Apple 4K TV unit.  It's a shame as the Netflix volume is well below that of anything else on Apple 4K TV and having both would really help as I have poor hearing.  Just using the surround sound system alone now sounds very muffled to me after the crisp sound from the HomePods but dang it, they are far too quiet on Netflix and that delay is just too annoying to tolerate.
  • Reply 13 of 18
    MacProMacPro Posts: 19,727member
    Oh boy!
    So kids can now listen in on their parents.
    And parents can now listen in on their kids.

    TMI...
    The Weasley twins had an early prototype of this in the Deathly Hallows movie.
    mrboba1
  • Reply 14 of 18
    If only Apple opened up its SDK to allow third party developers to access features like this, the UI would not be such hell. You could ask Siri to activate it or use an Apple Watch app to tap it on or off or ...
    Once you've set it up the first time, it's no more "hellish" than switching on flashlight or anything else you turn on or off via the control thingie.
  • Reply 15 of 18
    mac_128mac_128 Posts: 3,454member
    MacPro said:
    jpmist said:
    Thanks for the well done article.  I was very interested in this feature and tried it out, but found that the latency made making out dialog actually harder to follow. It's not quite an echo, but the delay is just enough to be distracting.

    But that's just me . . .
    I have the same slight delay if I run a pair of HomePods at the same time as my surround sound system both connected to an Apple 4K TV unit.  It's a shame as the Netflix volume is well below that of anything else on Apple 4K TV and having both would really help as I have poor hearing.  Just using the surround sound system alone now sounds very muffled to me after the crisp sound from the HomePods but dang it, they are far too quiet on Netflix and that delay is just too annoying to tolerate.
    I'm surprised to hear that. The Apple TV should be delaying the picture to match the latency inherent in the AirPods, with the hard wired output offset to synch to that delay, the sync should be perfect. I wonder if it's the settings on your AVR in surround mode that's causing the issue?
  • Reply 16 of 18
    macguimacgui Posts: 2,358member
    frustyak said:
     There's still a sizable number of us that have the OG IPhones with home buttons.
    Several iPhones after the OG also had Home buttons. Surely AI's instructions would hopelessly confound those users... If they'd never ever before heard of or launched control center by now. I hope those six people have figured it out. And I find it difficult to believe that someone wouldn't know that long before ever getting to this article.
  • Reply 17 of 18
    MacProMacPro Posts: 19,727member
    mac_128 said:
    MacPro said:
    jpmist said:
    Thanks for the well done article.  I was very interested in this feature and tried it out, but found that the latency made making out dialog actually harder to follow. It's not quite an echo, but the delay is just enough to be distracting.

    But that's just me . . .
    I have the same slight delay if I run a pair of HomePods at the same time as my surround sound system both connected to an Apple 4K TV unit.  It's a shame as the Netflix volume is well below that of anything else on Apple 4K TV and having both would really help as I have poor hearing.  Just using the surround sound system alone now sounds very muffled to me after the crisp sound from the HomePods but dang it, they are far too quiet on Netflix and that delay is just too annoying to tolerate.
    I'm surprised to hear that. The Apple TV should be delaying the picture to match the latency inherent in the AirPods, with the hard wired output offset to synch to that delay, the sync should be perfect. I wonder if it's the settings on your AVR in surround mode that's causing the issue?
    Sorry, you misread what I wrote.  I said HomePods.  I was referring to the Bluetooth fractional delay maybe being the common issue the poster I was replying to and I have.
  • Reply 18 of 18
    Can I alter the volume for live listen audio on my hearing aid?? A function I need at a seminar  if the phone is beside the speaker and I’m in the audience. 
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