This is the 3rd atrial I test on my galaxy note 3. After a Sennheiser CX 300-II very good but without remote control (the version with remote trouble walking on Samsung parait'il) but by far the most balanced, and AKG K350 rather unsuited to note3 for delivering a high-pitched sound with a predominance the trebles (cymbals effect) very unpleasant (the plug must be calibrated for Iphones), I found this Philips headset. Unlike the AKG, basses are predominant, very strong, too see listening in a quiet environment. By cons, this low prevalence is ideal for outdoor areas or public transport (this is my main use) because it is always the basess frequencies that disappear first when external noise is too far. With this headset, it was just a sound rebalancing and paradoxically, the other frequencies are there and then return to the front. Very good helmet, very powerful. He like many on the ears. Finally, the remote works very well as soon as one was programmed with the app to download. In this regard, it is the fault of Google who voluntarily refused Android manages multi-button remote controls to avoid a trial with Apple that filed the patent (this is really small from them). By default, no neck, which earned me several times to hang one of which was fatal to my note3. and when you type the string, there is a resonant sound that goes but nothing insurmountable.