…USB-A 2.0 5V.5W/2.5A supports keyboards, mice, gamepads etc. Optical Out AV in (RCA composite to 3.5mm) RF Antenna Missing: 3.5 headphone jack Gaming – Not Tested Gamers should fall over themselves to get a 50 or 55” with full 144Hz support at <$1000. It has a respectable 8.5ms Grey to…
…also has a built-in USB-C headphone DAC. Sound DA Smart Audio and Spatial Sound enabled Speakers Top forward, up-firing and bottom down-firing stereo. Tuning No AMP Qualcomm Snapdragon sound 2 x AW882 x 2W (THD 1% at maximum volume) Dolby Atmos decode Yes Hi-Res No 3.5mm No, but USB-C FSA…
…does not add 3D height or widen the sound stage. Read How to tell if you have good music (sound signature is the key – guide). Missing – not expected USB audio in – USB-C is only for charge 3.5mm 4-pole headphone/mic jack Aux in Mic/Voice Assistant Wi-Fi (it…
…but the sound signature remained essentially the same. DA via headphones is superb, and the inbuilt USB-C headphone DAC helps. Deep Bass 20-40Hz Nil Middle Bass 40-100Hz Nil High Bass 100-200Hz Slow linear climb to 1kHz Low Mid 200-400Hz Slow linear climb to 1kHz Mid 400-1000Hz Slow linear climb to…
…headphone TV antenna Wi-Fi 6 AX Bluetooth 5.0 SBC codec supports keyboard, mouse and gamepad and one BT stereo headphone or speaker. If you are going to stream digital content, you need to use Wi-Fi 5Ghz. It requires a relatively strong signal strength router within 10m and at least 50/20Mbps…
…for external SSD drives (exFat to 2TB tested) and perhaps digital cameras USB-A 2 5V/.5A/2.5W (for flash drives) Digital Audio out (Toslink) 3.5mm 3-pole AUX in (RCA stereo connector) Lan 10/100Mbps 3.5mm 3-pole (no mic) headphone TV antenna Wi-Fi 5 AC half-duplex 2.4 and 5Ghz (for 4K content). Note that…
…removing them easy. It is also touch-sensitive for controls. But what impressed me the most was the new JBL Headphone app, one of the most comprehensive I have ever seen. Forgive the following details as it does so much that may be handy for you. Codecs – Pass and Hi-Res…
…headphone/mic jack Aux in Mic/Voice Assistant Wi-Fi (it is not a smart speaker) CyberShack’s view – JBL Xtreme 4 carries on the JBL tradition Forgive me if I sound like a JBL groupie – I am – but only because any JBL speaker at any price point sounds consistently excellent….
…(10Gbps) eARC (really only for a soundbar) Ethernet 10/100Mbps and supports DLNA media servers 2 x USB 2.0 5V/.5A/2.5W (mouse/keyboard support) 1x USB 3.0 Wattage unknown, but assume 9W. Up to 4K@60Hz playback. 1x AV in Optical Out RF antenna Wi-Fi 6 AX 2×2 MIMO BT 5.2 Missing: 3.5mm headphone…
…to a compatible Sonos soundbar (HDMI eARC) using Sonos’s wireless network (similar to Wi-Fi), you get: TrueCinema technology that will precisely map your space and render a complete virtual surround sound system. Upmix 7.1.4, all from a 2.0 headphone! (coming soon). Dolby head tracking means that no matter where you…
…the cliff treble that gives music a harshness. Still using a cabled or BT headphone fixes that. Build – Exceed This is one well-built phone. It is solid, 225g (lighter than the S24U) and will last the distance. The key difference here is the 65W charger inbox. However, Samsung will…
…a fingerprint magnet), a decent, reasonably colour-accurate 720p screen, a 3.5mm headphone port, and a microSD slot. Above all, its phone reception strength is very good for the city, suburbs, and regional use. We won’t give it a rural use recommendation, but it is likely fine, too. I especially like…