Tech
The best headphone and earbud deals at Woot right now

JBL Live 460NC
(save $85)

Samsung Galaxy Buds FE
(save $53)

If you’re trying to find a good post-Prime Day deal on headphones or earbuds, you might want to check out what Woot has to offer right now. If the deals seem almost too good to be true, don't worry — Woot is an Amazon company. You can even log in with your Amazon account, and Prime members get free shipping on their orders. The only catch is that Woot's deals are extremely limited and sell out fast, so we're tracking the best discounts available right now.
Here are the best headphone and earbud deals at Woot as of Friday, July 18, 2025.
Best headphone deal
Why we like it
Right now, you can get a new pair of JBL Live 460NC wireless headphones at Woot for just $44.95. With an MSRP of $149.95, that's a 70% discount, saving you $105. In addition to the great price, these headphones come with a 1-year manufacturer warranty from JBL.
These headphones feature adaptive noise cancellation with Ambient Aware technology to let you hear your surroundings (when you want to) and a TalkThru feature that lowers music and amplifies speech so you can chat without taking them off. You get up to 50 hours of playtime (40 hours with ANC on), and a quick 10-minute charge gives you an extra four hours of listening time.
They're also equipped with 40mm drivers for JBL's Signature Sound and have built-in Google and Amazon Alexa for hands-free calls and music control.
More headphone deals
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JBL Tune 770NC (Refurbished) — $84.95 $129.95 (save $45)
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Beats Solo3 — $84.99 $199.95 (save $114.96)
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Sony WH-CH720N (Refurbished) — $84.99 $148 (save $63.01)
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Beats Studio Pro (Refurbished) — $139.99 $349.95 (save $209.96)
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Sony WH-1000XM5 (Refurbished) — $227.99 $398 (save $170.01)
Best earbud deal
Why we like it
If you’d rather have a pair of earbuds, Woot also has the Samsung Galaxy Buds FE on sale for $46.99. Again, this is the lowest price you’ll find these buds for right now (not even Amazon is matching this deal).
These buds feature active noise cancellation and an auto-switch function, allowing you to easily switch between Galaxy devices. The sound itself is also pretty impressive.
“Not only is the sound quality of the Samsung Galaxy Buds FE robust, crisp, and surprisingly bass-heavy, these tiny earbuds almost rivaled the sound quality of my beloved Bose QuietComfort 45s — something no earbud has ever done before,” Mashable’s RJ Andersen wrote in his review. “From podcasts to EDM, hip-hop, Top 40, and classical, the sound quality blew my AirPods Pro out of the water, so much so that I haven’t reached for my AirPods at all since that first day.”
The coolest feature, though, might be the Interpreter feature that offers real-time translation through your earbuds.
More earbud deals
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JLab Go Air — $16.99 $29.99 (save $13)
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Beats Fit Pro — $109.95 $199.95 (save $90)
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Beats Powerbeats Pro — $124.95 $249.95 (save $125)
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Beats Powerbeats Pro 2 — $164.99 $249.99 (save $85)
Tech
Stop your AI subscriptions and get an all-in-one tool for life

TL;DR: Access dozens of top AI tools in one platform — 1min.AI bundles content, chat, design, audio, video, PDF, and more under a single lifetime license for just $79.97.
One of the bigger annoyances of the digital age is the subscription model. Juggling a half-dozen AI tools, each with its own login credentials, pricing tiers, and learning curve, is exhausting. That’s why 1min.AI can be a helpful alternative to the usual chaos.
It’s like your favorite productivity cheat code — an all-in-one platform that brings together top-tier AI features for writing, design, video, audio, and more under a single dashboard. And you can get a lifetime subscription to the Advanced Business Plan for just $79.97 (down from the MSRP of $540) — with no recurring fees, ever.
Need blog posts written in your brand voice? Check. Want to generate YouTube thumbnails, edit PDFs with AI, or even clean up audio? Covered. From chatting with advanced models like GPT-4o and Claude 3 to turning PDFs into summaries, translating audio, or batch-generating marketing copy, 1min.AI does it fast — like, one-minute fast. That’s the whole point.
Whether you’re a solo creator or running a small team, 1min.AI simplifies your stack. You’ll have access to multiple flagship models like GPT, Claude, Gemini, and Llama, plus unlimited brand voice slots, unlimited prompt storage, and 4,000,000 credits/month to spend on whatever you want to make.
If you’re tired of managing a spreadsheet of AI tools (we’ve been there), this is your chance to condense it all into one slick, ever-evolving platform — without the subscription guilt of drain.
Get lifetime access to the 1min.AI Advanced Business Plan for just $79.97 while you can and streamline your digital tools forever.
StackSocial prices subject to change.
Tech
Anthropic reportedly cut OpenAI access to Claude

It seems OpenAI has been caught with its hands in the proverbial cookie jar. Anthropic has reportedly cut off OpenAI’s access to Anthropic’s APIs over what Anthropic is calling a terms of service breach.
As reported by Wired, multiple sources claim that OpenAI has been cut off from Anthropic’s APIs. Allegedly, OpenAI was using Anthropic’s Claude Code to assist in creating and testing OpenAI’s upcoming GPT-5, which is due to release in August.
According to these sources, OpenAI was plugging into Claude’s internal tools instead of using the chat interface. From there, they used the API to run tests against GPT-5 to check things like coding and creative writing against Claude to compare performance. OpenAI allegedly also tested safety prompts related to things like CSAM, self-harm, and defamation. This would give OpenAI data that it could then use to fine-tune GPT-5 to make it more competitive against Claude.
Unfortunately for OpenAI, this violates Anthropic’s commercial terms of service, which ban companies from using Anthropic’s tools to build competitor AI products.
“Customer may not and must not attempt to access the Services to build a competing product or service, including to train competing AI models or resell the Services except as expressly approved by Anthropic,” the terms read.
OpenAI responded by saying that what the company was doing was an industry standard, as all the AI companies test their models against the competing models. The company then went on to say that it respected Anthropic’s decision but expressed disappointment in having its API access shut off, especially considering that Anthropic’s access to OpenAI’s API remains open.
A spokesperson told Wired that OpenAI’s access would be reinstated for “benchmarking and safety evaluations.”
It’s not the first time this year that Anthropic has cut off API access. In June, the company cut off Windsurf’s API access after rumors that it was being sold to OpenAI. That deal ultimately fell through, but Anthropic’s cofounder, Jared Kaplan, told TechCrunch at the time that “it would be odd for us to be selling Claude to OpenAI.”
Anthropic has also tweaked its rate limits for Claude, which will take effect in late August, with one of the reasons being that a small number of users are violating the company’s policy by sharing and reselling accounts.
Disclosure: Ziff Davis, Mashable’s parent company, in April filed a lawsuit against OpenAI, alleging it infringed Ziff Davis copyrights in training and operating its AI systems.
Tech
Amazon is toying around with putting ads in Alexa+

It’s the end of another quarter, which means it’s time for yet another earnings call with concerning ideas for generating more revenue. This time around, it's Amazon CEO Andy Jassy, who told shareholders on Thursday that there’s “significant financial opportunity” in delivering ads through Alexa+, the company’s new AI-powered voice assistant.
“I think over time, there will be opportunities, you know, as people are engaging in more multi-turn conversations to have advertising play a role — to help people find discovery and also as a lever to drive revenue,” Jassy said, per the investor call transcript.
Since launching earlier this year, Alexa+ has reportedly reached millions of users. Unlike the original Alexa, which mostly turns off lights and sets timers, Alexa+ is designed to be more conversational, context-aware, and AI-driven. It can help you plan your date night, entertain your kids, and even dabble in basic image and video generation — all under the banner of your $14.99/month Prime subscription.
But so far, Amazon Alexa has been an ad-free experience. It's also more than 10 years old, and it doesn't make money; thus, it's been deemed a "colossal failure" by those within the company.
Of course, Amazon isn’t alone in trying to figure out how to make AI pay for itself. Both Google and OpenAI have explored ad integration in their AI products as a way to generate revenue. OpenAI CEO Sam Altman, in particular, has made a notable pivot: once firmly against advertising in his chatbot, he’s since reversed course, possibly opening the door for ads in future versions of ChatGPT.
Whatever the motivation, injecting ads into Alexa+ would mark a major shift in both user experience and Amazon’s strategy, especially given the assistant’s long history of being expensive to maintain and hard to monetize. Ad-supported Alexa+ could be Amazon’s attempt to finally turn its once-money-burning smart assistant into a revenue machine, without hiking the subscription fee (at least for now).
Alexa+ is still new, and what an ad-supported experience would actually look like remains unclear. According to Jassy, the idea is to frame ads as helpful, something to assist customers in discovering products they might be interested in buying.
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