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Tampilkan postingan dengan label sound system. Tampilkan semua postingan

Senin, 12 September 2011

Logitech x-230 2.1 2-Piece Dual Drive Speakers with Ported Subwoofer Review

Logitech x-230 2.1 2-Piece Dual Drive Speakers with Ported Subwoofer
Average Reviews:

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These little speakers rock! The sound is very clean and full, with a signal to noise ration >96dB.

The bass is very solid and deep for such a small driver, with a slightly noticeable peak in frequency response around 80Hz or so, depending on what you are listening to. I personally have to turn the volume of the sub to it's lowest level, or the bass overwhelms everything else. I think the greatest thing about these speakers is that even at a low overall volume level the sound is very full with plenty of deep bass (very similar to sound you get from a pair of large element headphones). A lot of speakers sound very thin at low volume levels as the bass rolls off, but not these, the little sub box just keeps thumping. One word of warning: The sub unit is NOT video shielded! Do not place it anywhere near your monitor, or you will ruin it, place it in the floor under your desk as recomended.

These speakers will bring the life back to your MP3 collection, and I won't even mention video games. Buy and enjoy!

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Product Description:
Package Contents: X-230 Speaker System (2 satellites, 1 subwoofer), color-coded audio cables, user manual, 2-year limited warranty. Crank up the audio on your PC with the Logitech X-230 Speaker System. It delivers clean, crisp, consistent sound from your games, music, and more. Two wall-mountable satellite speakers use Logitech's patented FDD2 technology to eliminate uneven sound response. The result is a clear, uniform sound field without the "hot spots" and inconsistency of other dual-driver satellites. Master volume and subwoofer level controls placed for quick, convenient access. Satellite speaker stands rotate for easy wall-mounting. Enhance your listening experience. Black finish. Signal-to-noise ratio - >96dB Speaker Dimensions(HxWxD) - 8 x 2.5 x 3 (Satellites); 9 x 6 x 9.25 (Subwoofer)

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Senin, 29 Agustus 2011

Creative Labs PlayWorks 5.1 DTT2500 Digital Gaming Speakers for the PC and PlayStation2 Review

Creative Labs PlayWorks 5.1 DTT2500 Digital Gaming Speakers for the PC and PlayStation2
Average Reviews:

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The Playworks DTT2500 is an awesome deal for the current 5.1 surround systems available. Its easy to use control box allows you to switch from 4 point to 5.1 surround easily, and the cables that are included are long enough so that you can put the fronts and rears virtually anywhere. You'll also get a Digital DIN cable, which you can use if you have an SBLive! and would like all digital sound. Even though this is a small system, it is still able to pack a punch. Music sounds great on this system, clarity from the satellites with powerful bass from the subwoofer. Sound is very realistic as you move around in games. A realistic feel. As for movies, the DTT2500 system incorporates the 5.1 dolby digital sound, setting it apart from old technology such as pro logic. Movies, Games, Music: all sound great on this system...A real treat for anyone.

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Product Description:
The PlayWorks 5.1 DTT2500 Digital is a powerful surround speaker system for the PC. With four front and rear satellite speakers plus a center-channel speaker, decoder amplifier, and a subwoofer in wood fiber finishing, it accepts S/PDIF and analog stereo inputs and configurations for either two-channel (stereo) or multichannel (Dolby Digital, Dolby Surroundwith Pro Logic, Creative Multi Speaker Surround) playback. Supplied with 9- and 16-foot wires, the speakers can be placed in room corners or wall mounted. Magnetically-shield satellite and center speakers allow placement close to monitors.
The Dolby Digital decoder amplifier with a built-in 24-bit digital-to-analog converter enables you to enjoy home theater-quality audio without purchasing an expensive Dolby Digital receiver. You can also experience multichannel Dolby Digital movie sound with a PC-DVD or any set-top DVD player. The amplifier houses controls for master, center, bass, and rear volume as well as surround field adjustment and modes for Dolby Digital, stereo, and four-point. It also provides all the outputs for each speaker as well as supporting both digital and analog sound card ports.
Creative Labs provides a one-year limited parts-and-labor warranty on the DTT2500 speaker system.

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Selasa, 14 Juni 2011

Bose Companion 5 Multimedia Speaker System Review

Bose Companion 5 Multimedia Speaker System
Average Reviews:

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There's good and bad about the Companion 5, and most of the bad is just the nature of technology today.

The good is that the sound coming from two speakers and an "Acoustimass module" (read, "subwoofer with circuitry") is remarkably close to the sound you would get from 5 speakers and a subwoofer.The Bose system really does know how to 'fake' an acoustic space, and the circuitry somehow manages to figure out how to split out sound ranges:voices sound clear and crisp and seem to come from out of thin air in the dead center of your screen, ancillary sounds move all around the room through the left and right channels, and low-end whump is modulated well so that low notes don't all sound exactly the same.I've read that the lower-end 'Companion' series lack this degree of sophistication, so keep that in mind if you're comparing models.

The bad is that when it comes to computer speaker systems, you really don't have a whole lot of choices.Not many high-end manufacturers (that I have come across) go to the trouble of making a sound system that's geared towards a computer:top-tier quality in multi-speaker systems is left to the home theater crowd.While I'd hoped to see easy-to-find entries from Definitive, Yamaha, or Infinity, the computer scene seemed entirely populated by Creative and Logitech.Oh, and by the way, Bose makes a few choices.

Still, what an excellent choice the Companion 5 has turned out to be!I set this up on a laptop with integrated sound.It's in a corner that has a window behind the desk, a wall to the right, a larger window, and then the left is a wide-open entryway and there's about 15 feet of open space behind the chair.You'd think that would automatically foul the acoustics but somehow the Companion 5 keeps things balanced in this unbalanced environment.It was amazing to have a second person enter the room and not impact the spatial feel of watching a movie in Dolby Digital.Even sitting behind the user, your ears will get clean separation of sound (though not all the positional feel of someone in the front seat).Windows 7 has the ability to tune the acoustics of a room using the speakers and a microphone, but it turns out this is not only unnecessary, it tends to make things worse:all it seemed to do was crank up the right channel and almost completely mute the left.

Which brings us to perhaps the most important thing to know about the Companion 5:like any computer accessory, you need to fiddle with it to get it to work the way you want it to.Bose's manual seems to carry you just as far as getting everything connected (and their support FAQs seem to avoid doing more than regurgitate pages of the manual at you), so here's what you'll want to do to really get the most out of this system.

Regardless of whether you have a sound card or onboard audio, don't bother trying to use "environmental effects" or "audio enhancements" in your software.The Bose speakers don't connect to your sound card at all:rather than a typical speaker audio plug, they connect to your computer solely via a USB cable.This means that Windows and Mac both see the speakers as an "audio device"--as if the Companion 5 was its own sound card.If you see features in the Device Manager (or Control Panel, or audio software) such as "Bass Management", "Room Enhancement", or "Surround Simulation", don't enable or configure them:the Companion 5 takes the incoming signal and does all this for you, and changing the settings in Windows only gets in the way--we discovered the mid and high ranges were wiped out when these features were on and everything sounded muffled and cheap.

In Windows Vista and Windows 7, all of your "audio devices" are visible via the Control Panel ("Hardware and Sound" --> "Audio Devices").Use this interface to specify the Bose Companion 5 as the default output device on your computer (right-click "Bose USB Audio" and choose "Set as Default Device").This doesn't mean any speaker or headphone jacks don't work any more:because the Companion 5 is a USB device, removing it will automatically cause Windows to fall back on the next audio device in line.Though I have to say you probably won't ever want to disconnect the Companion 5:the controller knob comes with line in and headphone jacks, which means you can still use a headset whenever you want and get the quality sound processing of the Bose Acoustimass technology.

Now for the final tweaks:whenever you have a software package you use for playback (such as Media Monkey, PowerDVD, etc.), you'll want to pick a favorite song, play it, and tweak the software's equalizer to get the sound the way you like it.This sounds tedious, but it's not that difficult:dragging sliders for a couple of minutes gives you a pretty good feel for what sounds good and what doesn't.And once you save those settings, the player sounds just right, every time.If you're a Windows user, I also recommend you take the time to configure Windows Media Player's equalizer, even if you don't use Windows Media Player or Windows Media Center:something tells me that browser-embedded audio and video will benefit from these tweaks thanks to the Windows Media Player's kudzu-like infestation of the OS.

Physically, the Companion 5 is nice:the speakers are a bit dense, but stylish looking:they sit on sturdy posts and have a small enough profile to make them easy to ignore.The Acoustimass module is pretty heavy, but also fairly compact:about a few inches bigger than the Logitech Z530's control unit.Best of all, the controller for the speakers is a very classy-looking little wheel, about the diameter of a soda can.Volume is smooth and responsive with a light spin of the outer edge of the unit, turning on and muting is as easy as tapping the center, and the controller has two jacks(headphone and line in) for connecting a headset.The only real complaints about the Companion 5's form are:

a) the bass dial for the subwoofer is on the back of the Acoustimass module, which means lowering the bass will involve crawling on the floor; and
b) there is no "Off" switch:the Companion 5 will power itself down after "several minutes of inactivity", but there isn't any simple way to save energy by, say, tapping the controller.

If you love spending a lot of time in front of your computer watching movies, listening to music, or gaming, the Companion 5 makes a crowning touch to the experience.The Acoustimass technology really does manage sound smartly without the need for multiple speakers tucked away around your desk, and the setup is fairly simple (I'll gladly answer questions & offer help in the Comments section here).The documentation and support could have been a lot better, but with a little bit of first-time adjustment, this system will reward your efforts with excellent sound and minimal crowding of your desk.

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