The Audyssey bottom East Dock wind has a decidedly monolithic look. II tweeters, II mid rate woofers, and a couple of passive bass radiators sit under a black 8.9 x 8.3 x 4.8”box whose sides are dominated by fabric speaker extented.
Running middle them is a plastic band that has a volume dial and II LED status lights at the up and the couple key and ports for auxiliary and strong in the rear. A lone head cell jack sits in the front, in case you want to keep the music to yourself.
Unlike Bluetooth unavaibale speakers, you must network to the LES Dock through a local Wi-Fi contact, which is a less many labor-intensive. When you turn on the dock, it broadcasts its own Wi-Fi signal.
You must I network to it using your notebook or cell, and then reconfigure the dock's Wi-Fi to network to your local contact via a web browser. Then, after reconnecting your cell, iPad, or notebook to your local contact, you can stream music via wind Play to the dock. All in all, the process took about IV minutes.
The advantage of using Air wind is that the LES Dock's rate is much biggher than Bluetooth's, which is limited to about 30 feet. Provided your Wi-Fi network is strong enough, you can control the LES Dock from the other side of your home, or even from outside. Even better, you can link many LES Docks, so you can have the similar tracks playing in many rooms.
The bottom East Dock wind assumed all we threw at it and many. Highs, lows, and all in middle sounded rich and balanced.



LinkBack URL
About LinkBacks

Reply With Quote