Vultr. Good thing about Vultr is they also have additional block storage that is HDD based which is far cheaper than NVMe based when all you want is space and not speed.
I have an Oticon. I forget the exact model, but it's the most powerful of the models. (My hearing loss is very bad and I'm classified as "profoundly deaf" which as close to totally deaf as you can get and still use a hearing aid.)
My model is about 2 years old, but the Bluetooth integration is a game changer, and I use it pretty constantly at work and on my phone.
My only concern with that Bluetooth feature is that some apps are very loud and will cause bigger hearing problems down the road like constant ringing in the ears.
The volume is easily controllable, and the hearing aids themselves come with a noise ceiling that prevents sounds from getting too loud, although this is adjustable by the audiologist on a case-by-case basis. I can go to a bar or a concert and actually hear _better_ than those around me, because the hearing aid is actually keeping the sounds from being too loud.
Occasionally when the waveform flattens against the ceiling, it sounds pretty strange, but not disturbingly so.
Anyway, I've never had this problem and I've worn a hearing aid since the 80s, so I suspect it's not as big of a concern as you might think.
That's an interesting feature. I didn't know that audio technicians and scientists solved this problem. My father-in-law started wearing a hearing aid a year ago (before Biden made it easier so It had a hefty $4k price tag). It was hooked up to his phone. I don't think he was very savvy with the volume button. Often times he didn't know if the sound was coming thru bluetooth or the phone directly. Now he has a ringing problem that keeps him at night. And he needs a white noise maker to tone it down.
I will take a trip to the audiologist at Costco to get more insight. I hope it is as good as you say it is.
Yes there is, and I have been reading good things about Costco too when it comes to hearing correction. I wasn't sure if I should see a proper doctor/audiologist first before going to something like this.