I walked to the Book Fair today (well, skipped a few bus stops, but mostly walked). I was under the impression that I’d taken some pretty cool photos on the way there. After all, I crossed the city center. This is what I actually found later in my camera roll.
Three photos in total.
A colorful building on Lyuben Karavelov street. I twist my neck every time I pass by because the people who restored it painted outside ACs. I don’t know why but I find it cool.
Sticker graffiti with USA’94 near the Romanian embassy. It’s ironic because I ordered a gamebook called USA’94 a few days ago. After seeing the photo, I googled the book to see if there’s any resemblance – none. Whoever does these stickers is unrelated to the gamebook community.
And a Twingo 1. Renault is about to revive the Twingo 1 car (1993-2007) as Twingo E-Tech. The concept car has eyelashes by design. I owned a similar car when I was younger. It’s great for parking.
This particular unit is the facelift version from around 2001-2006.
I purchased several headphones this year. I’m still not entirely sure how or why, but it happened.
I do some calls. Not a big number, but still more than one per day on average. Both planned and unplanned. That means I need to be able to open my laptop and jump on a call at short notice. To make that work, I either need to carry a sufficiently good headset everywhere, or keep one at each place where I take calls. Since I have three such places, I ended up buying three different JBL headsets over the years, plus one backup in my backpack at all times, just in case.
One day, the best one of the JBLs broke down, and I replaced it with a flashy new SteelSeries Arctis Nova 7. They were so much better than the rest of my headphones that I started carrying them with me everywhere, gradually ignoring both the other headsets and the backup from my backpack. They are wireless, but came with a backup cable. Even if the wireless connection failed, I could always plug them in, and I did once or twice during calls.
Still, something didn’t feel right. My backpack became heavier, and the lack of a proper case made me feel like I was going to crush them sooner or later. So I decided to order another, similarly priced headset for the co-working space, together with an external microphone. After some research, I went with one of the leaders in the budget headphones category: the Fiio FT1.
Here come the only two ugly photos of the headphones, for reasons that will be revealed below:
Pros
The headphones sound well. The sound is clear and pleasant. My ears aren’t trained enough to judge things like depth or soundstage, but to me they sound sufficiently good without a wow.
More comfortable than the old JBLs.
Very solid cable. It feels durable and will probably survive cat encounters.
Good box, which I adopted for my other headphones.
Build quality is fine.
Cons
Exaggerated bass. My current favorite band, Lorna Shore, sounds noticeably off in the bass-heavy parts. I often find myself lowering the volume during those moments. Over time, this also becomes tiring when listening to metal, unlike the SteelSeries.
I don’t like how they look. I find them quite ugly, and this might actually be their biggest problem for me. They don’t spark any joy. They’re bulky, seemingly built around hiding the 60 mm dynamic driver rather than elegance.
Less comfortable than the SteelSeries. While they may be better than the JBLs, they can’t compete with the light, well-designed Arctis Nova 7. I’ve already been spoiled by something that fits my head better.
No microphone. This greatly limits their usefulness for work. In practice, I only use them at my desk.
Mediocre isolation. I have the feeling my external microphone picks up some of the sound leaking from the headphones, which can be an issue during calls.
Overall, I don’t think I made a wise choice buying these. I don’t listen to as much music as I used to, and they’re not particularly good for work calls either. I genuinely don’t know who they’re made for.
Perhaps somewhere a marketer decided the market was ripe for headphones that look audiophile, sit in the pricing range of gaming headsets, and ultimately sound like a gaming headset. The result probably sells well, but I’m ready to move on from them long before they show any real signs of use.
I like visiting the book fairs in Sofia. We usually have two per year, one in December, and one in May. I would often go 3-4 times, slowly navigating through the landscape, buying 1-2 books at a time.
I went there with the goal to buy the new book by Nicci French and maybe return for another round over the next 3-4 days. Came back to the office with 8. That’s a bit too many. This means I’m not returning to the fair as I exceeded the reasonable maximum of new books for the month 🙂 Anything else will have to wait.
Highlights:
The Dungeon Crawler Carl – I have to admit I made a purchase decision based on the fact that this book has a hole in the cover. It also has a very high score on Goodreads but that wouldn’t have been enough to buy it.
The Devils by Joe Abercrombie – you can say by the beautiful print that Joe Abercrombie has a new publisher for Bulgaria. The last one only did paperbacks.
The Last Days of Kira Mullan – Maud O’Conner’s part 1 was quite interesting I hope this book lives up to the expectations. That would likely be the next book I’ll start (currently reading two other). I like Nicci French.