Sony's earbuds boast some meaty specs and features.
Sony's WF-1000XM3 come with 24-bit audio processing, which sounded great during my demo. I didn't have a pair of AirPods with me to compare them in audio quality, but I wouldn't be surprised if the Sonys sound better.
The WF-1000XM3 also have noise-cancelling, whereas Apple's AirPods have nothing of the sort. Combined with the in-ear design on the WF-1000XM3, the noise-cancelling chip did a great job of hushing ambient noise.
Noise-cancelling can work during phone calls, too, and can be enabled while you're on a call, which was a frequently requested feature from Sony fans. Sony says the WF-1000XM3 can also cancel out some of your ambient noise for the other person on the call.
Sony said its new Bluetooth chipset improves connectivity over the previous model, too.
Sony boasts eight hours of listening time, compared to the five hours you get with AirPods.
I'll have to test Sony's claim when I try the WF-1000XM3 for a meaningful amount of time, but if the claims hold true, the WF-1000XM3 will beat the AirPods in battery life.
Sony told me the WF-1000XM3 get eight hours of listening time with noise-cancelling turned off, and six hours with noise-cancelling turned on.
The charging case can store enough charge to give the WF-1000XM3 24 hours of battery life, a similar claim that Apple makes for its AirPods. The case can also quick-charge the WF-1000XM3: 10 minutes of charging can deliver 90 minutes of battery life.
The earbuds themselves also magnetically snap into the case, which is pretty nifty.