Creative Labs has a strong and well-known history in audio excellence, setting the early standard for PC-based sound cards. Its three products in the work-from-home kit build on its audio engineering excellence.
The three products in Creative's work-from-home kit include
This is a great bundle, providing you the flexibility to work how you want, and with confidence that your picture and sound are equally crisp, and distracting noises are reduced.
The two-way noise-cancellation features are novel. While active noise canceling is standard with nearly all modern headsets, this only helps keep out the noise in your environment. You can still hear all the horrible noises where your other party is calling in from. With two-way noise-cancellation, your Creative devices will actively reduce the interference coming your way.
All three of these devices are compatible with Creative’s SmartComms Kit which provides Windows-based computers a set of software tools to automatically mute and unmute your microphone as well as provide noise cleansing features for both your voice and that of the people you are speaking with. Download the Creative app to your PC, and you will receive the benefits of VoiceDetect, NoiseClean-in, and NoiseClean-out.
These similarly offer you auto-mute and unmute via VoiceDetect, and noise-canceling, both inbound and outbound via the other two features. However, you also gain a high degree of control through built-in advanced configuration items. You can adjust the delay timing on VoiceDetect as well as loudly you need to speak for it to kick in - thus avoiding it unmuting you while you are softly singing along to a song - and you can adjust the background noise levels to be filtered out. Whether you are working in a quiet office, or in a server room that sounds like jet engines, or even if somebody is blow-drying their hair behind you, you can tune the noise cancellation to suit.
However you choose to work, Creative has you covered so your work from home experience is the best and the frustration of “can you hear me” is a thing of the past.