Skip to main content

Nothing’s Ear 1’s really are nothing like your usual true wireless earbuds

After months of teasing and a near-constant drip-feed of information, Nothing has fully announced the Ear 1 true wireless earbuds, and they’re visually unlike any we’ve seen before. Anticipation has been high due to Nothing being the new tech company formed by Carl Pei, co-founder of OnePlus, after he left the smartphone maker in September 2020, along with the release of some very intriguing concept images revealed early on.

The Ear 1 are not designed like your usual, boring true wireless earbuds. The stems are transparent, revealing the circuit board, magnets, and microphones inside, along with delicate, pixel-art style branding, plus a cute red dot to differentiate the right-hand earbud. They’re attached to a white oval body that houses an 11.6mm driver. The sound has been tuned by Teenage Engineering, a company with considerable experience in audio products, for balanced bass, mids, and treble.

The Nothing Ear 1 earbuds inside the case.

The case is also transparent with a white central section housing all the components, and an unusual “fish-eye” indentation to keep the earbuds from moving around should they break free from the magnets. The entire package looks stylish, unusual, and really eye-catching. It’s a very different look to the usual black or white cases and buds we’re used to seeing, especially when you find out how much the Nothing Ear 1 cost.

Nothing Ear 1 earbud in someone's ear.

Weighing just 4.7 grams — an individual Apple Airpods Pro earbud weighs 5.4 grams, for comparison — they connect to your phone using Bluetooth 5.2 and feature three different active noise cancelation (ANC) stages. A Light setting minimizes ambient noise, while the Maximum setting is ready for more noisy environments, and there’s a Transparency mode to allow noise from around you back in. It’s all enabled by three microphones.

Nothing says the battery will last for five to seven hours on a single charge, with 34 hours in total from the case. It’s not clear whether these figures are based on using ANC or not. The case can be charged using a USB Type-C cable or wirelessly using a Qi charger, and it has a fast-charging system too. Nothing says that after 10 minutes the case will have enough power to charge the earbuds for eight hours of total use. An app allows you to control the earbuds, view charge status, activate in-ear detection, and there’s fast pairing — open the case, press the Pair button, and that’s it — for Android phones. The Ear 1 have an IPX4 rating and are splash and water resistant.

The Nothing Ear 1 case and earbud.

How much will you pay for these very attractive true wireless earbuds with ANC? The Nothing Ear 1 cost an extremely reasonable $99, or 99 British pounds. We rate the Google Pixel Buds A highly, which also cost $99, but they do not have ANC. The Apple Airpods Pro are $250, and our pick for the best ANC true wireless earbuds, the Bose QuietComfort Earbuds, are $279. For the design and features on offer, the Ear 1 are shaping up to be a great value.

You’ll be able to buy the Ear 1 on July 31 through Nothing’s own online store, but it’s going to be a limited run, and if you miss them you’ll have to wait until August 17 for a wider release.

Editors' Recommendations

Andy Boxall
Senior Mobile Writer
Andy is a Senior Writer at Digital Trends, where he concentrates on mobile technology, a subject he has written about for…
6 weeks in, can the Nothing Phone 1 still light up our life?
Nothing Phone 1 with the Nothing Ear 1 headphones.

The lights on the back of the Nothing Phone 1 caught all the attention when it was released at the end of July. Rightly so, as they set the phone’s design apart from the competition, and when configured right, can be surprisingly helpful. But now that the honeymoon period has passed, how is life with the Nothing Phone 1, and do those lights still make our eyes sparkle when we see them?
I’ve forgotten about the Glyph lights
I’ve spent the last days using the Nothing Phone 1 again, after a short break with phones including the Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 4 and the Oppo Reno 8 Pro, and it has been great to get back to this easy-to-live-with device. It slips into my pocket and isn’t a pain because it’s so nice and light. While the sharp, flat sides aren't especially uncomfortable to grip, the wide phone can be a bit slippery, so I’ve been using the basic transparent case and find there's less chance of it escaping my hand.

But what about the lights and sounds? I almost don’t think about them, which sounds bad as that’s what happens to gimmicks. But it’s not that I ignore the lights or don’t use them; it’s because I’ve configured them to fit neatly into my life. Returning to the Nothing Phone 1, I've used one main feature: Flip to Glyph. This activates silent mode when you put the phone screen down on a surface, so the Glyph lights alert you of calls and notifications.

Read more
Nothing Phone 1’s numerous LEDs counted by YouTuber
Nothing Phone 1 Glyph Interface lights.

Popular YouTuber Zack Nelson -- he of the Jerry Rig Everything channel -- promised during a recent teardown of the new Nothing Phone 1 that he would count all of the LEDs that make up the handset’s striking Glyph Interface if the video got at least 50,000 likes.

How many LEDs does Nothing have? - Lets Count Together!

Read more
OnePlus 10T vs. Nothing Phone 1 camera battle shouldn’t be so close
Nothing Phone 1 and OnePlus 10T camera modules.

The OnePlus 10T is the first new phone to come from OnePlus since former co-founder Carl Pei launched his company’s first phone, the Nothing Phone 1. The OnePlus 10T is more expensive than the Nothing Phone 1, yet isn’t as stylish and doesn’t share the same materials, but there are some similarities in the cameras. Putting Pei’s former company’s new phone against his own seemed like an opportunity too good to miss, so which has the better camera?
OnePlus 10T and Nothing Phone 1 camera specs
The OnePlus 10T has a 50-megapixel Sony IMX766 main camera, with optical image stabilization (OIS), plus an 8MP wide-angle camera and a basic 2MP macro camera. The Nothing Phone 1 also has a 50MP Sony IMX766 main camera with OIS, but it's joined by a 50MP wide-angle camera and entirely foregoes a third camera. On the front of both is a 16MP selfie camera.

What makes this test interesting is seeing the differences not only in the way both companies tune the same main camera, but also in how the different processors assist with image reproduction. The Snapdragon 8+ Gen 1 in the OnePlus 10T is the top chip available from maker Qualcomm, while the Nothing Phone 1 has a mid-range Snapdragon 778G processor.

Read more