I’m finally getting my most-wanted Apple Music upgrade, but I can’t believe AirPods still didn’t get this obvious update

I feel strangely numb. For years now – and I mean years – I have been advocating for Apple Music to have some kind of auto DJ feature that can beat-match your songs in a playlist. This was my most recent excuse to harp on about it.
I first heard of this kind of feature in DJ apps a long, long time ago (I think Algoriddim’s Djay was the first one I was aware of, but things go foggy back then), and I heard about the potential for machine-learning algorithms (you know, the things we now universally call ‘AI’ for marketing reasons) to make them work super-seamlessly.
At this time, Apple was getting heavily into machine learning, promising to use it to suggest things on your Lock screen and manage your battery usage. So I made the case that this would be a really cool feature to have in Apple Music – much better than a boring old crossfade between tracks on your playlist.
Now, at the time, Apple didn’t even offer a crossfade… it only added that in iOS 17 two years ago, and last year we got a ‘smart crossfade’ in iOS 18. But in iOS 26 (Apple has switched to naming by year, rather than the version), I finally have my breakthrough.
As one of several new features of Apple Music in iOS 26, Apple has announced ‘AutoMix’, which is exactly what I always wanted. Apple says, “AutoMix uses intelligence to transition from one song to the next like a DJ, using time stretching and beat matching to seamlessly move from one song to the next.”
I’ve always curated my playlists to flow reasonably nicely from one song to the next, trying to keep both variety and cohesion. What I’ve always wanted is the phone to take that to the next level (because I am no DJ), and now it’s like a long-stuck splinter has been removed. I’m finally getting what I want; I don’t know how to feel.
Oh, wait, yes, I do: frustrated that AirPods still somehow don’t have a higher-quality Bluetooth connection.
@techradar
♬ original sound – TechRadar
Feeling Bluetooth
The only scab I have picked at as consistently as the AI DJ – excuse me, AutoMix – is the fact that AirPods only support AAC-quality Bluetooth audio, even though it is the year of our Hi-Res Audio Lord 2025. Here I am complaining about it back in 2022, and that’s only when I first started talking about it on TechRadar.
Apple Music supports beautiful lossless audio, but AirPods still don’t support anything beyond essentially the minimum of sound quality (okay, SBC is literally the minimum, but this is truly one step up).
Actually, that’s not quite true – the AirPods Pro 2 with USB-C are capable of higher-res audio when used with the Apple Vision Pro, so that’s nice for those few thousand people. The new AirPods Max with USB-C also support wired Hi-Res Audio, but so does anything with a 3.5mm jack, so I’m talking wireless here.
Fun fact: I bought my first Apple product in 2006, and it was a MacBook Pro that supported aptX! I don’t expect Apple to support aptX, of course – that system is owned by Qualcomm, and I’m not a maniac – but the world has moved on in terms of what wireless audio codecs are available to us.
Take, for example, Bluetooth LE Audio and the LC3 codec that powers it. This is a new wireless music encoder that’s adaptive, so when you have a strong connection to your phone, it can offer really high-resolution music streaming – but if you’re far away or there’s a lot of interference, it can lower the quality and still maintain consistent audio. And it can do this potentially using lower energy than older codecs, so it could extend battery life.
It’s available as part of the spec for Bluetooth 5.2, which is supported by many models of the best AirPods, as well as the best iPhones, for years.
Apple has chosen not to support it, and it’s driving me to distraction at this point. It seems like there must be a good reason, though Apple hasn’t revealed it. It appears that the company experimented with using it on the AirPods Max all the way back in 2022, but it hasn’t gone anywhere since then.
Given how talented the AirPods Pro 2 and AirPods Max are at music reproduction anyway, maybe Apple just feels that it’s unnecessary, but given that there’s an open standard Apple can use, and the tech to run it is built into Apple’s products already, maybe we could be the judges of that with an option to turn higher-res Bluetooth on or off?
Either way, with another WWDC event gone without mention of it, I expect that means at least another year without it – unless Apple surprises us at the expected launch of AirPods Pro 3 later this year.
I’ll live – I’m currently using a Fiio BTR17 and Sennheiser HD600 for my hi-res thrills, and having a lovely time, thank you very much. It’s just not a very pocketable solution.
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I feel strangely numb. For years now – and I mean years – I have been advocating for Apple Music to have some kind of auto DJ feature that can beat-match your songs in a playlist. This was my most recent excuse to harp on about it. I first heard…
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