I wonder if there’s a way you can do this for single sided deaf people with the cable. Have it split for the implant and a normal earbud on the other. Would be huge for me if possible
I used to have two but one broke and now I have one. Right now I use it mostly on my right ear which is my good ear. When I get upgraded to the new implants, I will be able to use the new wireless system for both years. :) Make sense?
Nick Corbo, great question! When I used the auxiliary cord it was only wired to my cochleae implant so no one else could hear. I have since upgraded to using the new Roger Select system that allows me to stream my music wirelessly but still only I can hear it. I will be working on a new video to talk about that. :)
@@DavidBCluff That's seriously amazing. Incredible to think that just a couple generations ago even the concept of regular headphones would've sounded insane. Technological advancements are cooler than magic at this point.
@@ravirajpoot9037 this is right, I have done many research, cochlear implants can’t provide the stimulations that natural hearing gets, I have an implant for years, and music still doesn’t sound the same or close to it. Cochlear implants are meant to provide speech clarity but not music. I know this because I had decent hearing before I lost it
😂😂😂 just love the little co-host. Save this ammo for later ok!? 😅 lol
I wonder if there’s a way you can do this for single sided deaf people with the cable. Have it split for the implant and a normal earbud on the other. Would be huge for me if possible
So do you only have the direct hookup for one of the ears?
I used to have two but one broke and now I have one. Right now I use it mostly on my right ear which is my good ear. When I get upgraded to the new implants, I will be able to use the new wireless system for both years. :) Make sense?
David B. Cluff Yeah totally! Thanks for the explanation! Great video as always :)
how long you have cochlear implant?
Cool video. How old was you when you got these implants?
When you set up to listen to music through your auxiliary chord, can someone else hear it at the same time?
Nick Corbo, great question! When I used the auxiliary cord it was only wired to my cochleae implant so no one else could hear. I have since upgraded to using the new Roger Select system that allows me to stream my music wirelessly but still only I can hear it. I will be working on a new video to talk about that. :)
@@DavidBCluff That's seriously amazing. Incredible to think that just a couple generations ago even the concept of regular headphones would've sounded insane. Technological advancements are cooler than magic at this point.
where can get the cable? what's it called? and dose it work for all models?
How is listening to music with CI? Do you think it sounds the same as what hearing people hear?
No, this electric sound
@@ravirajpoot9037 this is right, I have done many research, cochlear implants can’t provide the stimulations that natural hearing gets, I have an implant for years, and music still doesn’t sound the same or close to it. Cochlear implants are meant to provide speech clarity but not music. I know this because I had decent hearing before I lost it
He so cute
From where I get this pin connector online.....
Nice video
Thank you!
cant use that for N7, hahaha...