The MikMe Pocket Is a Solid Little Voice Recorder for Your Phone

The MikMe Pocket Is a Solid Little Voice Recorder for Your Phone

The MikMe Pocket is something you don’t know you need until you try it. Created by a hardware startup in Vienna, Austria, this pocket-sized audio record is the second product in the MikMe line and, arguably, and it makes it easy to record meetings, vocals, and video soundtracks with a box the size of a pack of cigarettes. No fancy audio interfaces, no big microphones that only work with your phone. No juggling of multiple apps. Just a small box the size of a battery pack that lets you immediately mic up and start recording directly to your phone.

The device is a 2.68 by 2.795 by 0.94 inches metal box with one bold recording button on top and controls for levels on the side. A small wire hook lets you attach it to your pocket or belt as you would a battery pack for a microphone, which makes sense because and it includes a small lav mic with a windscreen on a 47-inch long cable. It attaches via Mini XLR, which means you can switch the mic out in the future for other Mini XLR devices, or replace it if it ever gets.

MikMe Pocket

MikMe Pocket

What is it?

A pocket microphone for video professionals and influencers.

MSRP

About $604

Like

A great, compact recorder with a lot of features.

Not Like

It's expensive for its audience although it could be valuable to video professionals.

The MikMe is an audio recorder aimed at journalists, videographers, and influencers. Unlike the other recorders on the market, the product is dead simple: you turn it on and press record. A huge red light tells you when it’s recording and you can easily sync the audio to your phone for editing. The app can connect to three units at a time, allowing you to create multitrack projects on your phone, and it offers 24-bit audio recording at up to 96 kHz. The included app also has a video mode that lets you record audio and video simultaneously, ensuring that you never accidentally start recording with the wrong device and lose the audio for a shoot. Further, the app ensures your audio is synced to your video, a problem that crops up when using the standard video gear popular with photographers.

One amazing feature? You can’t turn off the MikMe when it’s recording, ensuring you won’t accidentally sit on your mic pack and destroy the shot. It also has a low-latency headphone port so you can monitor as you record.

Photo: John Biggs/Gizmodo
Photo: John Biggs/Gizmodo

If none of these features sound particularly interesting then this $604 recorder probably isn’t for you. There are plenty of low-quality, low-cost recorders out there, including the F2 from Zoom. The premise behind this device, however, is that it’s an all-in-one solution that lets you record video on your phone and audio using the lavalier mic included with the MikMe. The result is going to be superior to anything you get out of a lower cost unit while still offering similar quality to the traditional Sennheiser lav mics popular with video professionals (but none of the complexities of figuring out an audio interface solution). Because it’s completely phone-based you don’t have to worry about turning on receivers, pairing transmitters, or swapping out batteries – the MikMe lasts about an hour on one full charge, by the way, and can hold eight hours of audio.

I tested the MikMe over a long weekend of recording and the resulting audio was clear and crisp. In the test above the gain is set at default levels so it sounds a little low but because the audio is cleaner than normal you can ramp it up slightly without destroying the track.

I also tried the MikMe in the worst possible configuration with the lav mic about three inches from my mouth. There were plenty of popped Ps and breath noise, but the audio was clear and usable.

MikMe also included a demo track that sounds far better and is far peppier. With a bit of editing, you can feasibly get similar sounding audio.

Again, if you’re looking for something that will let you record on-camera interviews or high-end audio, the MikMe is a great choice. While there are a number of similar and cheaper recorders out there, the MikMe’s phone integration is unparalleled. That said, if you’re used to dedicated audio devices that connect directly to your DSLR or video camera, this is definitely not the package for you.

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The MikMe ensures that your TikToks, Instagram videos, and YouTube reviews won’t sound awful. It doesn’t do much more than that but, in many cases, that is more than enough. Sometimes $US450 ($604) to escape all the hassle of managing interfaces is worth it.

README

  • A small, simple voice recorder for video creators.
  • The usability and price hovers on the border between pro and consumer but leans towards professional video performers.
  • Press a button to record, press it again to stop. Doesn’t get much simpler.

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