Say „Bose" and you think psychoacoustics — the science of how we actually hear sound, not just how we measure it. The story starts in 1956, when a young Amar Bose, then an electrical engineering doctoral student at MIT, bought an expensive stereo system and was disappointed: the specs were impressive, but nothing about it sounded like a live concert. Instead of shrugging it off, Bose spent years studying how sound reflects inside a concert hall — and found that roughly 80% of the sound an audience hears arrives indirectly, bouncing off walls and ceilings, rather than coming straight from the instruments. In 1964 he founded Bose Corporation in Framingham, Massachusetts, and years of research culminated in the breakthrough 901 Direct/Reflecting speaker of 1968 — a design that aimed most of its sound at the walls rather than the listener, recreating concert-hall acoustics in a living room.
That same philosophy — listen the way a person hears, not the way an oscilloscope measures — led to the company's next breakthrough. In 1978, during a long flight, Bose began sketching the concept of active noise reduction (ANR), which after more than a decade of research resulted in the world's first commercial noise-cancelling headset in 1989. The company remains privately held to this day — Amar Bose deliberately never took it public, so it could fund long-term, high-risk research without investor pressure, and in 2011 he donated the majority of the company to MIT, the place where it all began.
At Wired Tunes we carry a wide range of Bose products — from the iconic QuietComfort noise-cancelling headphones, to home speaker systems, to home-theater soundbars. It's a brand for people who value comfort and polished, out-of-the-box sound without fiddling with settings — an engineering philosophy built around what a person actually hears.

