DJI Mic Mini 2 review: The tiny wireless mic is colorful and much cheaper

Not long ago, high-quality wireless mic systems cost over $500 and required a bulky transmitter and lav mic wire tucked under the subject’s shirt. DJI’s Mic Mini showed how unnecessary all of that was, combining mic and transmitter into a 0.35-ounce device that delivered high quality sound for under $100.

Now, DJI has released the Mic Mini 2 (around $100) as a mild update to the original at a much lower price. It’s more fashion forward thanks to the colorful new magnetic covers and offers an audio upgrade via new voice tone presets. Those changes make it the best budget wireless mic for new buyers, but it’s not worth the upgrade if you already have a Mic Mini — and DJI’s flagship Mic 3 is better if you can afford it. However, beware that the Mic Mini 2 isn’t currently on sale in the US as it hasn’t yet been certified by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC).

The Mic Mini 2 now comes in two packages for smartphone and camera users. One includes a receiver with a 3.5mm mic output for mirrorless cameras, while the other offers a mobile receiver with a USB-C port for smartphones. Both kits include a charging case, one or two transmitters (mics) and a receiver. You also get a magnetic mount, clip mount, black and white magnetic front covers and a windscreen for each mic. The camera kit includes a smartphone adapter as well.

The camera kit contains 10 mic covers in a rainbow of hues that look like they were borrowed from ‘90s iMacs, letting you match a subject’s clothing or add a pop of color. They all have a huge, distracting DJI logo, though, so many creators may want to cover it with a piece of tape. DJI also has optional designer front covers with four very ‘90s looking abstract patterns in several pastel shades, available for around $45.

DJI Mic Mini 2 review: The tiny wireless mic is now colorful and much cheaper
Steve Dent for Engadget

DJI has changed the transmitter design slightly from the previous model's faceted shape to a flatter design to better accommodate the new magnetic covers. The mic portion also weighs slightly more at 0.39 ounces. Though tiny, each mic is rated to run up to 11.5 hours on a charge, and the receiver is supposed to go for about 10.5 hours with noise cancellation disabled. In my own testing (recording continuously with a looped video as an audio source), I was even able to slightly exceed these times, so you could easily use it for a full shooting day. This is better than nearly all rivals including the Rode Wireless Go III, which is rated for seven hours on a charge. Another wireless mic in this price range, the Hollyland Lark M2, has a stated runtime of 10 hours between charges.

As before, the transmitters and receiver snap into the charging case magnetically. The mobile charging case is small enough to slide into a pants pocket, while the larger camera version fits into a jacket pocket or a bag. On top of being a convenient way to store the transmitters and receiver, they can charge the mics and receiver 3.6 times, giving you 48 hours of use even without a wall plug in sight. It took me about two hours to charge all three devices in the camera case and about an hour to charge the smaller receiver and single transmitter with the mobile case.

The Mic Mini 2 transmitters can be paired directly with smartphones via Bluetooth or you can connect them to DJI cameras like the Osmo Action 6, Osmo 360 and Osmo Pocket 4 via DJI’s OsmoAudio system.

To use the Mic Mini 2, just affix the mics (transmitters) to your subject, either via the clip or magnetic attachment, and turn them on. Then, power up the receiver and connect it to your camera via a 3.5mm cable or plug it into your smartphone’s USB-C port. Everything pairs automatically, and the final step is to adjust the level between -12 db and +12 db using the dial on the side (camera receiver only). Noise reduction is set via a switch on the mobile receiver, or the Mimo app for the camera receiver.

There are a few major differences between DJI’s Mic Mini 2 and the more expensive flagship Mic 3 when it comes to audio specs. The biggest is that the Mic 3 supports 32-bit float internal recording (with 32GB of storage) that eliminates clipping in most situations, even if your levels are too high. It also comes with dynamic gain control to balance volume if your subject tends to lower or raise their voice a lot.

DJI Mic Mini 2 review: The tiny wireless mic is now colorful and much cheaper
Steve Dent for Engadget

In comparison, the Mic Mini 2 only offers automatic limiting, which does prevent clipping but can reduce audio quality. It also offers no internal recording so you won’t have a backup if your camera or smartphone recording fails. The Mic Mini 2 also lacks an audio level display like the Mic 3.

Despite those limitations, the 48Khz, 24-bit audio quality on the Mic Mini 2 is excellent. I recorded my voice using all three voice tone presets, and found that I could use the “rich” mode (which emphasizes low tones) without the need to do equalization in post. The “regular” setting offers neutral and balanced sound, while the “bright” mode adds clarity in noisy situations. If you prefer doing EQ yourself, the regular mode is best.

A good test of a microphone is to record your voice and then max out EQ levels in a narrow band across a range of frequencies. A mediocre mic will distort audio in more than one range, reducing sound quality. DJI’s Mic Mini 2 performed well here, showing minor distortion for my voice only at one frequency. When I reduced the gain at that range, my voiceovers sounded clear and full.

Another key feature is noise cancellation. DJI’s Mic Mini 2 offers two levels of AI-powered cancellation depending on the amount of background noise. At the low setting, it reduced background noise but produced some distortion. However, the high level noise cancellation distorts audio considerably, so you should only use it in a pinch when noise is excessive. I also tested the Mic Mini 2’s wireless range and was able to record audio at 450 yards away from the receiver as DJI claims, though the device disconnected once at that distance.

The Mic Mini 2 retains other functions from the original Mini like automatic limiting to prevent clipping. It supports two mics at once, and when used in Stereo mode, lets you capture each mic to a separate channel so you can mix them later on. To set those functions, you need to use DJI’s Mimo smartphone app.

DJI Mic Mini 2 review: The tiny wireless mic is now colorful and much cheaper
Steve Dent for Engadget

The Mic Mini 2 is now available in Europe and elsewhere but not yet the US due to lack of certification. It costs almost half as much as the Mic Mini did at launch, just €89/£89 for the camera kit with two transmitters and a receiver, or €49/£54 for the mobile kit with one transmitter and a receiver.

Given the features and price, the Mic Mini 2 doesn’t have a lot of competition. One of its main rivals is the Rode Wireless Go III, but that model is double the price and lacks noise cancellation. It does have slightly better audio quality, though. Other options in the same price range from Hollyland, Boya and others either can’t connect to both a camera and smartphone or don’t stack up in terms of sound quality and features.

Overall the Mic Mini 2 offers a great combination of range, audio quality and noise cancellation. It’s not worth an upgrade from the Mic Mini, but if you’re buying your first wireless mic and don’t want to spend a bundle, it’s a great option. 

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/audio/dji-mic-mini-2-review-the-tiny-wireless-mic-is-colorful-and-much-cheaper-120046171.html?src=rss

The BEST iPhone Widgets for 2026 (That Aren’t a Waste of Space!)

The BEST iPhone Widgets for 2026 (That Aren’t a Waste of Space!) Featured image for The BEST iPhone Widgets You Will Actually USE !

iPhone widgets have redefined how you interact with your device, offering practical tools that simplify tasks, enhance productivity, and provide instant access to essential information. By integrating widgets into your home screen, you can create a more personalized and efficient user experience. Below, we explore some of the most useful and user-friendly widgets, highlighting their […]

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AI Filmmakers Are Blending Real Footage with AI : Here’s How It Works

AI Filmmakers Are Blending Real Footage with AI : Here’s How It Works Split screen demonstrating an actor transformed into an AI character.

Artificial intelligence is changing how filmmakers approach their craft, combining real footage with AI-driven methods to enhance both visual and narrative elements. Dan Kieft examines how techniques like motion transfer and relighting allow creators to adjust movement and lighting with accuracy, often bypassing the need for costly equipment or time-intensive reshoots. For instance, motion transfer […]

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5 Brilliant Mother’s Day Gifts From Sons Who Know Better Than to Bring Flowers Again

Sometimes sons have to learn, usually the hard way, that flowers are a placeholder. They wilt. They sit in a vase she’ll move twice and quietly toss out by Thursday. What your mom actually wants is something she’d never buy for herself — something with real thought behind it, personality baked in, and a story worth telling when a friend stops to ask where she got it.

These five gifts check all of those boxes. They’re objects designed with the kind of intention that lingers well past the occasion — each one worth keeping long after the wrapping is gone. None of them needs a card that says “Hope your day is blooming.” Each one arrives with a distinct personality, a function, and the quiet confidence of someone who actually stopped to think it all the way through.

1. Side A Cassette Speaker

For the mom who made you mixtapes before Spotify existed

There’s something quietly emotional about a gift that references a time before streaming, before algorithms, before a machine decided what she should listen to next. The Side A Cassette Speaker is built to look, feel, and nearly sound like a real mixtape — transparent shell, side A label, and that satisfying analog weight in your hand. It’s a faithful recreation that doubles as a Bluetooth 5.3 speaker with microSD playback. At under $50, it earns a permanent spot on the shelf rather than a junk drawer.

What makes it work as a gift isn’t just the nostalgia — it’s the warmth. The audio is tuned to echo tape playback: soft, rich, and surprisingly full for its compact size. It runs six hours at max volume and recharges in two, with a clear case that doubles as a display stand. Whether she keeps it on a desk, a kitchen counter, or a bedside table, the Side A sits somewhere between speaker and shelf object. That combination is genuinely rare at this price point.

Click Here to Buy Now: $49.00

What We Like

  • Cassette-accurate design makes it display-worthy on any shelf, functioning as both a working speaker and a nostalgic art object that earns its footprint
  • The sub-$50 price punches well above its weight in character, making it one of the most considered value plays on this entire list

What We Dislike

  • Six-hour battery life means it won’t carry an all-day outdoor gathering without a recharge somewhere in the middle
  • microSD playback supports MP3 only, which may frustrate anyone working from a library of lossless or alternative audio formats

2. Lumio Lito Classic Book Lamp

For the mom whose bedside table deserves something worth looking at

At first glance, it’s a hardcover book. Open it, and it becomes a lamp — warm, sculptural, and quietly brilliant. The Lito Classic by Lumio earned its Red Dot and Good Design awards not through a spec sheet, but through the kind of elegant problem-solving that makes you wonder why all lamps don’t work this way. It’s portable, runs eight hours on a single charge, and now comes in British Racing Green, Navy Blue, and Vibrant Red. Each colorway is finished to let the natural wood grain breathe through in a way that photographs simply don’t fully capture.

The New York Times called it “a gift that amazes,” and for once, the blurb earns its space. For any mom who hosts dinners, reads late, or simply has an eye for objects that justify their presence, the Lito is the kind of lamp she’ll reach for constantly without quite being able to explain why. It works on a dining table as naturally as a nightstand, indoors as naturally as a patio. It’s the rare gift that doesn’t just land well on the day — it earns its place over months of use.

What We Like

  • Holds genuine design credentials: the Red Dot and Good Design awards reflect real craft and thoughtfulness, not just clever marketing
  • Eight-hour battery life and full portability make it equally at home on a nightstand, a dinner table, or a porch on a warm evening

What We Dislike

  • The price puts it firmly in the intentional-gift category, so it works best when chosen deliberately rather than grabbed as a last-minute solution
  • The book disguise, while clever, may confuse first-time guests until they reach for it, which is either a feature or a flaw, depending entirely on your mom

3. Miniature Bonfire Wood Diffuser Set

For the mom who calls the outdoors her reset button

This is the gift that earns confused looks at first and genuine smiles thirty seconds later. The Miniature Bonfire Wood Diffuser Set is a scaled-down campfire — built from rust-resistant stainless steel, bundled with miniature firewood tied with a knot, and paired with an essential oil that captures the scent of Mt. Hakusan. It works as a desk object, a shelf centerpiece, and a calming aromatherapy piece all at once. It’s the kind of gift that’s nearly impossible to describe without showing it to someone in person.

What pushes it past novelty is the trivet function. Those small supports transform the diffuser into a pocket stove, meaning she can actually warm something small over it — an unexpectedly practical feature that gives it a second life beyond fragrance. For the mom who loves the outdoors but doesn’t always have the bandwidth to get there, this delivers a small, precise version of that feeling on demand. The combination of scent, handcrafted miniature detail, and real utility makes it one of the more quietly special things on this list.

Click Here to Buy Now: $99.00

What We Like

  • Rust-resistant stainless steel construction gives it the durability to become a permanent fixture on her desk or shelf for years rather than seasons
  • The trivet conversion adds genuine utility, transforming a beautiful scent object into a working pocket stove with no additional tools or effort

What We Dislike

  • The Mt. Hakusan essential oil scent is specific enough that it may not resonate with every nose, particularly for those who prefer lighter or floral fragrance profiles
  • Its miniature scale works beautifully as an accent diffuser, but won’t meaningfully fill a larger room with fragrance on its own

4. Tetra Puzzle

For the mom who says she doesn’t need anything but secretly loves a real challenge

Four identical stainless steel pieces. One puzzle. Deceptively simple from across the room and completely absorbing the moment it’s in your hands. The Tetra Puzzle from Craig Hill is the kind of object that sits quietly on a desk and demands attention without asking for it — activating spatial reasoning and manual dexterity in a way that feels less like a game and more like a slow, meditative practice. It looks effortless. It isn’t, and that gap between what it appears to be and what it actually demands is precisely what makes it compelling.

What makes it a strong Mother’s Day gift is how well it plays socially. She can work through it alone as a personal challenge, or bring it out when people come over and watch a room collectively lose twenty minutes to four pieces of metal. The Tetra earns its place long after the day itself — not through sentiment, but through persistence. It remains genuinely, stubbornly interesting every single time it gets picked up. That kind of lasting relevance is a harder quality to find in a gift than most people realize.

What We Like

  • Stainless steel construction gives it a premium weight and tactile quality that communicates real value the moment it’s handled for the first time
  • Scales naturally from a solitary meditative challenge to a shared social object that pulls everyone in a room into the same conversation

What We Dislike

  • The intentional absence of instructions is a deliberate design choice, but it may push frustration ahead of satisfaction for those who prefer a structured path to solving
  • The difficulty curve skews steep, which may make it feel more like a test than a relaxing gift, depending entirely on the recipient’s temperament

5. Oku Knife

For the mom who sets a beautiful table and believes every object on it should earn its place

Most table knives spend the meal lying flat, blade pressed against the surface, waiting to be picked up. The Oku Knife by Scottish artist and metalworker Kathleen Reilly doesn’t do that. Its handle is folded 90 degrees from the blade — drawn from the Japanese practice of chopstick rests, which lift chopstick tips off surfaces to prevent contamination. The result is a knife that rests on its folded handle with the blade sitting cleanly perpendicular, never touching the table at all.

Named after the Japanese word for “to place,” Oku was designed by Reilly — shaped by a western upbringing and years spent living in Japan — to rethink the table knife without sacrificing function. It hooks onto a plate rim, rests along the edge of a cutting board, or simply sits with its blade elevated off the surface. For a mom who cares how a table looks and feels, this is the most intentional piece of cutlery she’s never thought to buy.

What We Like

  • The 90-degree folded handle is a genuine design innovation — borrowing from Japanese dining culture to solve a hygiene problem that western cutlery has never bothered to address
  • Its ability to hook onto a plate rim or rest along a cutting board edge makes it interactive with tableware in a way no conventional knife comes close to replicating

What We Dislike

  • The unconventional shape takes a brief adjustment period before it feels natural in the hand, particularly for anyone accustomed to a traditional straight-handled knife
  • As a concept-forward design piece, it works best in a considered table setting — everyday casual use may not fully honor what makes it so special

The Bar Is Higher Than a Bouquet

The flowers conversation isn’t going anywhere, but the standard for what counts as a truly thoughtful gift has quietly shifted. These five designs — a cassette speaker, a book lamp, a bonfire diffuser, a metal puzzle, and a knife that rethinks where a blade rests— share something that goes well beyond just their function. Each one was designed with care, built to last, and chosen for someone whose daily life actually gets better because it’s there.

Mother’s Day lands on one day, but the best gifts never really know that. They show up on a Wednesday morning when she needs the lamp, or on a Sunday afternoon when the puzzle comes out again. The point isn’t the occasion — it’s the quality of the decision. Pick one of these, and she’ll know immediately that you didn’t just get her something. You got her exactly the right thing.

The post 5 Brilliant Mother’s Day Gifts From Sons Who Know Better Than to Bring Flowers Again first appeared on Yanko Design.

New Valve Steam Controller Tested by Gamers Nexus : Here’s What They Found

New Valve Steam Controller Tested by Gamers Nexus : Here’s What They Found The new Valve Steam Controller resting next to a Steam Deck in a living room PC gaming setup.

Valve’s new Steam Controller, launching May 4, 2026, builds on its 2015 predecessor with a focus on precision, customization and repairability. Below the awesome team at Gamers Nexus highlights standout features such as TMR analog sticks, which reduce dead zones for competitive gaming and haptic trackpads that mimic PC-style controls for nuanced input. The controller […]

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iPhone Ultra Leak: Apple Finally Solved the Foldable Crease Problem

iPhone Ultra Leak: Apple Finally Solved the Foldable Crease Problem Side-by-side render comparing iPhone 18 Pro and iPhone 17 Pro with nearly matching frames.

Apple is reportedly preparing to make its debut in the foldable device market with the highly anticipated iPhone Ultra, also referred to as the iPhone Fold. This development signals a significant evolution in Apple’s design philosophy, focusing on a tablet-first experience rather than the traditional smartphone form factor. By prioritizing usability in its expanded mode, […]

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Why Xbox’s Radical Project Helix Shift Changes Console Gaming Forever

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Asha Sharma’s leadership at Xbox is already making waves just two months into her tenure. With a clear focus on revitalizing the brand, she has implemented key changes such as rebranding from “Microsoft Gaming” back to “Xbox Gaming,” signaling a return to the company’s roots. One of the standout initiatives under her guidance is Project […]

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Magic: The Gathering Arena developers intend to form a union with the CWA

Magic: The Gathering Arena developers at Hasbro subsidiary Wizards of the Coast are set to join the Communications Workers of America (CWA), the union announced. The CWA says it has secured a "supermajority" among workers in favor of unionization for the chapter, called United Wizards of the Coast (UWOTC-CWA). The CWA has filed for a formal election with the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB), but that will be withdrawn if Hasbro voluntarily recognizes the union by May 1st.

"At Wizards, we’re organizing for a say in layoffs, accountability that runs up and down the chain, and a living wage that actually lets people build a life," said UWOTC-CWA member and senior software engineer Damien Wilson. "I’m hopeful about what we can build here and being clear-eyed about why it’s necessary."

Workers have outlined several areas of concern including protections over layoffs and remote work, generative AI guardrails and mandatory crunch time, along with "increased transparency and equity" in the workplace. "This isn’t just something that affects Wizards of the Coast; it’s how most American workplaces are set up," Wilson added. "Unions are the missing counterweight to protect our craft."

The push to unionize was triggered back in 2023 following mass Hasbro layoffs that affected nearly 2,000 workers, software engineers told Kotaku. Developers were also concerned about issues like remote work, saying that Hasbro and Wizards of the Coast decisions "have not aligned with the values of their employees." 

The CWA has been involved in recent unionization drives across the games industry, with workers from Blizzard and ID Software, along with indie devs from publishers including Heart Machine recently joining. Over 4,000 workers have organized across the industry as part of CWA's CODE (Campaign to Organize Digital Employees), according to the union. "Every worker deserves job security, fair compensation, and a seat at the table," said CWA District 7 VP Susie McAllister. 

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/gaming/magic-the-gathering-arena-developers-intend-to-form-a-union-with-the-cwa-104438341.html?src=rss

Did Dreame Just Build a Rocket Car?

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At its San Francisco launch, Dreame showed how far it’s willing to stretch the definition of a consumer tech company. At the opening day of its DREAME NEXT event in San Francisco, the tech company introduced the Nebula NEXT 01 JET Edition, a rocket-powered electric vehicle that claims a 0-to-100 km/h time of just 0.9 […]

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Inside OpenAI’s $6 Billion Plan to Build the Ultimate AI Phone

Inside OpenAI’s $6 Billion Plan to Build the Ultimate AI Phone Concept render of the rumored OpenAI smartphone with a minimalist interface.

OpenAI is reportedly working on an AI-first smartphone, a device that aims to integrate artificial intelligence directly into its hardware rather than relying on conventional app-based systems. According to AI Grid, one notable detail is OpenAI’s 2025 acquisition of a hardware startup co-founded by Jony Ive, the designer behind the iPhone. This move suggests a […]

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