
Good to Great and Built to Last (Jim Collins)
Frequently Asked Questions
Are AirPods good for listening to audiobooks?
AirPods and wireless earbuds are excellent for audiobooks due to their convenience and decent audio quality for voice content. Spatial audio features are largely unnecessary for spoken word. What matters most is battery life, comfort for long listening sessions, and noise isolation in loud environments. Any comfortable wireless earbuds work well.
Are audiobooks good for long commutes?
Audiobooks are ideal for long commutes — they transform otherwise unproductive transit time into reading time. Many listeners credit their commute as the primary driver for finishing books they'd never get through otherwise. Longer books and serialized series work especially well for commuters since you'll have consistent daily listening sessions to look forward to.
Are audiobooks good for falling asleep?
Many people use audiobooks as sleep aids. Most apps including Audible and Libby have a sleep timer that pauses playback after a set interval. Fiction — particularly slow-paced literary fiction or familiar re-reads — works better for sleep listening than dense nonfiction. The downside is you may miss content and need to rewind the next morning.
Are audiobooks good for people with dyslexia?
Audiobooks are widely recommended for people with dyslexia as they bypass the visual processing challenges associated with reading text. Major platforms work seamlessly with accessibility features. Many people with dyslexia describe audiobooks as transformative, giving them access to books they couldn't comfortably read visually, and reigniting a love of stories.
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