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What if public sound worked like Wi‑Fi—discoverable, labeled, and just a tap away? We sit down with Dr. Dave Fabry and Dr. Heike Heuermann to explore Auracast, the new Bluetooth broadcast audio that lets a single source stream to many listeners at once, from hearing aids to everyday earbuds. No more chasing the wrong gate call or straining to hear through echoes; you choose your channel and get clear, direct audio where it counts.
We trace the path from proprietary wireless and telecoils to a unified, open approach that scales across homes and venues. Heike explains why Auracast is more than the next Bluetooth spec: it’s a usability leap. The MyStarkey Auracast Assistant makes discovery feel like joining Wi‑Fi, while Google Fast Pair removes pairing pain so users can connect in seconds. Dave shares real‑world wins—targeted airport announcements, cleaner speech in train stations, and labeled streams in places of worship—showing how broadcast audio brings clarity without extra gear or complex apps.
This shift also changes who benefits. Instead of infrastructure serving only hearing aid users, venues can offer inclusive audio that welcomes anyone with compatible earbuds or headsets. That broader value speeds adoption: gyms can stream TV audio and class instruction side by side, classrooms can reach every student, and families can share the same TV feed without splitters. Along the way we compare telecoils’ strengths with Auracast’s flexibility, discuss battery and quality trade‑offs, and map how this technology becomes the default for public listening.
If accessible audio has ever felt like a workaround, Auracast points to a simpler future: discover, join, and hear what matters. Subscribe for more deep dives into hearing tech, share this episode with a friend who struggles in noisy spaces, and leave a review to help others find the show.
Connect with the Hearing Matters Podcast Team
Email: [email protected]
Instagram: @hearing_matters_podcast
Facebook: Hearing Matters Podcast
By Hearing Matters4.4
2020 ratings
Send a text
What if public sound worked like Wi‑Fi—discoverable, labeled, and just a tap away? We sit down with Dr. Dave Fabry and Dr. Heike Heuermann to explore Auracast, the new Bluetooth broadcast audio that lets a single source stream to many listeners at once, from hearing aids to everyday earbuds. No more chasing the wrong gate call or straining to hear through echoes; you choose your channel and get clear, direct audio where it counts.
We trace the path from proprietary wireless and telecoils to a unified, open approach that scales across homes and venues. Heike explains why Auracast is more than the next Bluetooth spec: it’s a usability leap. The MyStarkey Auracast Assistant makes discovery feel like joining Wi‑Fi, while Google Fast Pair removes pairing pain so users can connect in seconds. Dave shares real‑world wins—targeted airport announcements, cleaner speech in train stations, and labeled streams in places of worship—showing how broadcast audio brings clarity without extra gear or complex apps.
This shift also changes who benefits. Instead of infrastructure serving only hearing aid users, venues can offer inclusive audio that welcomes anyone with compatible earbuds or headsets. That broader value speeds adoption: gyms can stream TV audio and class instruction side by side, classrooms can reach every student, and families can share the same TV feed without splitters. Along the way we compare telecoils’ strengths with Auracast’s flexibility, discuss battery and quality trade‑offs, and map how this technology becomes the default for public listening.
If accessible audio has ever felt like a workaround, Auracast points to a simpler future: discover, join, and hear what matters. Subscribe for more deep dives into hearing tech, share this episode with a friend who struggles in noisy spaces, and leave a review to help others find the show.
Connect with the Hearing Matters Podcast Team
Email: [email protected]
Instagram: @hearing_matters_podcast
Facebook: Hearing Matters Podcast

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