I always feel a bond with people who tell me they owned a Zune back in the day. Microsoft’s also-ran MP3 player never became a hit, but it was a fabulous little music machine and its influence can still be felt in the company's hardware and software a decade later. Its Surface devices have put a focus on high-quality design since they debuted in 2012, and now Microsoft is using the brand to re-enter the audio market with the Surface Headphones.
The Surface Headphones look and feel nothing like a Zune, but Microsoft’s attention to detail is still intact. The company didn’t just plop out a set of headphones for a quick buck; it spent several years meticulously designing them. Juha Kuosmanen, Microsoft's senior director of Experiences & Devices Program Management, says the company’s initial goal was to make a good pair of headphones for Skype. It broadened its horizon during development and now thinks its cans are at least comparable to some of the best wireless headphones you can buy, complete with a voice assistant (Microsoft’s Cortana, of course) and active noise cancellation.


