Headphones already are smart. Among models designed for mobile use, things like in-line remotes, Bluetooth connectivity, and active noise canceling are common. But such modern accoutrements are stodgy and stale for Parrot's Zik 2.0 over-ear headphones ($400). These cans re-imagine their role, turning something you connect to a high-tech gadget into something that exists as a high-tech gadget all by itself.
Central to the Zik's design is a bevy of sensors and microphones that drive some truly innovative features, including the ability to control your music and calls by swiping your fingers across the earcup.
The Zik 2.0s are an update to Parrot's original Zik from 2012. Like the originals, the curves were drawn by the hand of the famous designer Phillipe Starck. But the update improves the hardware, making the headphones lighter and hiding the microphones. The redesign also has rendered them small enough to be even more portable. The custom controller app, which you use to tune the headphones' sound profile, has been updated too. The result is a pair of versatile, great-sounding wireless cans suited to air travel, the daily commute, or at-home listening.
There’s only one button on the Zik 2.0s, the power button. Below that, on the right earcup, are a MicroUSB charging port and a 3.5mm port. All other controls are invisible. The soft faux-leather surface of the right earpiece is touch-sensitive, allowing you to pause, play, skip tracks, and adjust the volume. Inside the same earcup is a sensor that detects when you've put the headphones on. It pauses the music when you put them around your neck and resumes it when they're back on your ears. All of the sensors work well. It takes a few tries to get the hang of the gesture controls on the earpiece—it's a blank, soft touchpad without visual or textural cues—and I accidentally paused or skipped a track a few times while simply adjusting the headphones for comfort. I loved the auto-pause when you take them off your ears. It really comes in handy when you’re listening to music in public and suddenly interrupted by the real world. You don't fumble for a button, you just slip them down around your neck.

