Gadgets Market 24: best speaker
Showing posts with label best speaker. Show all posts
Showing posts with label best speaker. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 14, 2018

Best Bluetooth Speaker Apple HomePod review: fantastic audio, cool looks, bit of a dimwit
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Apple's Siri-powered speaker is an impressive technical achievement and sounds the business, but Alexa is not exactly going to be quivering in her boots



VERDICT

HomePod is the best-sounding smart speaker we've heard so far, and feels worth its serious price tag. But no multi-room at launch and Siri limitations compared to Alexa mean it may be one for committed Apple fans only

REASONS TO BUY
  • +
    Sounds excellent
  • +
    Siri commands seem to work well
  • +
    Small and smart

REASONS TO AVOID

  • -
    Limited use for those not fully immersed in Apple's universe
  • -
    Siri doesn't match Google Assistant or Alexa for versatility
  • -
    Multi-room via your laptop only, as AirPlay 2 mystifyingly not included at launch

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Let’s start with a simple truth about the HomePod: if you’re aren’t an iOS device owner and user of Apple Music or iTunes Match, it isn’t for you. Unlike the Amazon Echo, Google Home or Sonos One, it’s entirely reliant on you having an Apple device to make it function AT ALL, let alone play music.
But if your household is kitted out with iPhones, and you’re into music (and Music) and in the market for a speaker that sounds fantastic and has a few voice-controlled extras to boot, then it could be that the HomePod extremely IS for you.

APPLE HOMEPOD: SETUP IS A CINCH

At just seven inches tall, the HomePod isn’t overbearing at all. Its black or white mesh outside is nondescript, and it doesn’t offer the design flourish of the fabric or wood veneer coating of the likes of the second-gen Echo. 
It does show that you don’t really need those extras to fit in well in a home, though – it’s probably the smart speaker that looks least like a tech item despite its classic Apple whiteness. In fact, it has more in common with the Sonos One, but with more sensuous curves.
It’s really easy to set up: just plug it in, then place your iPhone near it. Your HomePod can then pull everything from your Wi-Fi password to your iCloud details from your phone directly. 
A few seconds later, Siri is suggesting that you tell it to play some music…
The top of the HomePod has a hazy dot of light that swirls in multicolours to indicate Siri is active, like HAL took the weekend off for Mardi Gras. When it’s playing music, plus and minus signs appear for manually changing the volume. 
You can tap the centre to pause and play, hold to invoke Siri, and triple tap to skip a track. It’s less overtly futuristic than the Echo’s circling light and rotating top, but we like both approaches.

APPLE HOMEPOD: AUDIO IS AWESOME


That HomePod starts off by taking you into music is smart, because sound quality is absolutely its stand-out feature. Apple says the engineering has been years in the making, and it was worth it for this result.
The HomePod’s musical showpiece is its knack for detail. With vocals, acoustic guitar, cymbals and similar elements that have a lot of fidelity to lose or gain depending on the quality of your speaker, it’s almost untouchable compared to similar gear.
This may well be down to Apple's vaunted 'room-sensing' tech. Sound reflections can create a kind of cross-talk when you’re listening to music, muddying the finest detail in a recording. Good compensation should bring that back out, and the HomePod’s room compensation is very good indeed.
It’s not all about those higher-end acoustic acrobatics, though. The HomePod is solid through the mid-range for its size, and impresses when it comes to bass. The small size of the speaker puts a certain limit on how much bass there can be, but the upward-firing woofer isn’t afraid to let you know it’s there. 
You won’t feel the vibrations in your chair the way you might from a bigger speaker, but that it puts out a sound as full as it does is kind of astonishing.
HomePod comfortably bests the other smart speakers of its size for sound quality, but then it does cost a lot more than them, so you’d hope so. We put it against a Libratone Zipp, too, which is close in price and size, and actually comes close to the HomePod for a vibrant top end, but completely fails to match it for mid-range and bass.
We tried it against a Naim Mu-so Qb next, which is one of the best Wi-Fi speakers on the market. The Mu-so Qb is bigger, and so takes the HomePod to school when it comes to impact, poise and fullness across the bass and mid-range, but actually the HomePod still has it beaten for clarity and offers a sweeter high end. Which you prefer would probably come down to the kind of music you like, so we’d call it a draw between them. But the Naim costs around double what the HomePod does – that’s how good Apple’s little speaker is.
Having two HomePods on each side of the room working in stereo would be even better, but this, along with multi-room AirPlay 2 support, isn’t present at launch. Apple has demoed it to us, though, and it’s ridiculously powerful.
So yes, at launch the HomePod is firmly mono, though its ability to diffuse sound evenly throughout a room is impressive.

APPLE HOMEPOD: NON APPLE FANS NEED NOT APPLY


While the HomePod will sound sweet to everyone, only those in Apple’s ecosystem can easily play music to it. With no Bluetooth or line in, there are two ways to get your musical choices on it: ask Siri, or stream music to it over AirPlay.
Siri will pull music from your Apple Music subscription, if you have one, your iTunes Match account, if you have one, and also anything you've ever bought from the iTunes Store. 
Airplay is Apple’s proprietary local streaming protocol and is available on iOS mobile devices. You can use AirPlay from iTunes on a Mac or Windows PC, but clearly that is not a mainstream way of listening to tunes these days.
There are certain unofficial ways to get AirPlay on other devices, such as DoubleTwist on Android, but Apple's tendency to constantly tweak its apps will break this support every so often.
With an iPhone or iPad you can play absolutely anything to the HomePod via AirPlay, making it more flexible than a lot of other Wi-Fi speakers. So if your family is all Apple, great. If you have an iPhone, but your other half doesn’t, that’s a bit more awkward. 
Of course, Apple's preferred solution is that you subscribe to Apple Music, and then control it via Siri. Users of Spotify, Amazon Music et al cannot do the same.
Still, if you are all Appled up, the HomePod is as slick to use as you’d hope. AirPlay is quick to respond and more reliable than in a lot of third-party speakers, and even if you’ve used Siri to play music, its playback can then be remote controlled from an iPhone from the ‘Now Playing’ Control Centre widget, letting you adjust the volume, pause and skip tracks.
That volume control is handy because while you can tweak the volume on the unit, asking Siri remotely to set the volume to a certain percentage is a bit of a crapshoot if you don’t know what percentage it’s already at. The volume slider offers context. 
You can also ask Siri to just turn it up or down, which is what we settled into using mostly.

APPLE HOMEPOD: SIRI IS… A MIXED BAG


The technical portion of Siri is really solid – its ability to pick up your voice over music or other noise is top-notch. It’s done a good job of understanding our commands during our time with it, too – no major idiocy in the requests so far. But then, that might be because it’s quite limited, and so we’ve only been asking it limited things.
Siri’s main function is as a ‘musicologist’, theoretically able to respond not just to simple requests for an album, but to broader commands like “Play me some ‘90s pop” (it responded with the New Radicals – nice work), and even answer questions such as, “Who played the bass in this track?”
In practice, you may find some of these abilities a bit hit and miss. When I asked it for a station tuned to my tastes, it gave me New Order and The Cure who I've literally never listened to on Apple Music – nor any of their obvious contemporaries. So where that was coming from, who knows? 
I do listen to ’80s-inspired electro-pop from current artists a lot, but I'd really expect more of that from new bands, rather than leaping back to the actual ’80s.
We tried asking it to play some Nirvana, and it led with School, which is not exactly the instant, recognisable hit one might expect. Asked for “popular Nirvana songs”, Siri played Love Buzz. Truly, the 
popular Nirvana hit we were all expecting.
So we just went simple and asked for Nirvana’s MTV Unplugged album, which is on Apple Music. Siri gave us Now That’s What I Call Music 98. 
Okay, most other things we asked for, whether individual songs or albums, Siri delivered but clearly it's not flawless at present.
Apple Music also has a huge library of podcasts available to it, but if you don’t use Apple’s Podcasts app, its lack of syncing with what you’ve heard before can be a bit of a pain. If you’re up to date, being able to just ask for the latest episode of something is nice, though.
Siri has other problems. It can read your unread text messages out, send messages you’ve dictated, set timers and alarms, and create reminders… but these all have one flaw or another.
The messages feature is bizarrely privacy-compromised for a company that prides itself on being a leader in this area. If you’re at home with your phone, anyone can ask to hear the messages, or dictate a new one. And remember, Siri is very good at picking up voices, so don’t expect walls to protect you if they’re thin. You can of course just take the nuclear option and turn this feature off, but that also turns off the reminders and lists option.
Maybe that’s not a big loss, though, as these suffer from the fact that HomePod only recognises one iCloud account. It desperately needs multi-user support, or at least voice recognition to limit someone who’s not you messing with your stuff. It won’t let anyone use these features if you’re away from home with your iPhone, but if your iPhone is on the same network, it’s a free for all.
Considering that Apple already has voice security built into the ‘Hey Siri’ feature on iPhones, its omission here is just strange.
The timer's function has its own problem: you can only set a single timer on it. Okay most of the time, but really it should have the ability to set multiple timers, ideally that you can name, as on Amazon Echo. 
Siri can also tell you measurement conversions. If Apple sorts out the timers and adds some kind of recipe support in the future, Siri could be a handy kitchen companion.
You can also ask Siri for weather and sports scores/schedules – standard stuff it can do on the iPhone, and of course, it'll handle smart home control, acting as a HomeKit hub so you can control compatible devices even when away from home – this worked really well, although the choice of HomeKit devices is a bit sparse so far, compared to Amazon Echo.
One thing you can’t ask Siri to do is to phone someone, oddly – it will work as a handsfree speaker only if you choose that as an option from a call you’ve already made.
As good as its voice recognition is, it’s a long way from the flexibility Alexa offers through Skills. Clunky as they can be to trigger, they mean Echos can do almost anything. Siri feels limited by comparison.

APPLE HOMEPOD: T3'S VERDICT

The Apple HomePod is among the best music speakers you can get, so long as you have an iPhone and, ideally, Apple Music. When it gets the ability to do multi-room and stereo pairing – and we can't imagine that will take long – it'll be even better.
If you think of it as a music speaker, with a smart assistant who’s handy for certain things chucked in as a bonus, it is an excellent deal at its launch price. 
Obviously, if you're an Android user, forget it. If you're in the market for a voice-controlled AI assistant and are not overly fussed about music playback and gleaming audio quality, it's also not for you.
And the mid-sized sub-set of iOS-toting people that leaves? We think they'll be more than happy with the HomePod.  
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Tuesday, January 16, 2018

Best Soundbar Sonos One review
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Smart speakers are coming of age and if you want the best sound quality then look no further than the Sonos One.


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SONOS ONE REVIEW

Smart speakers are the must have gadget this year but many don’t offer the kind of high quality sound you might want for your home. This is the main but not only reason to go with Sonos against rivals. Here’s our Sonos One review.
Amazon might have kicked off the smart speaker era with the Echo but now everyone wants a piece of the pie. It’s easy enough to add smarts to a device but getting it to sound great appears to be a lot harder – the Echo 2, for example, sounds worse than the original.
PRICE AND AVAILABILITY
The Sonos One is available direct from Sonos in the UK and here in the US. For other countries visit the Sonos Shop.

It’s no surprise that the Sonos One costs a lot more than some rivals in the smart speaker market - especially the Amazon Echo 2 and Google Home. It’s £199 or US$199 which is the same price as the Play:1 before its recent price cut. You are paying for the superior audio quality.
Check out deals on Amazon (at the time of writing in the UK it was just £179) and the Sonos Shop. For example we found a £50-off Sonos One deal (valid till January 7, 2018) when you buy two at the same time - either for multi room or to make a stereo pair. And Amazon.com had two for $349.
Alternatives from Sony and Panasonic are much more able to compete on sound quality (based on some hands-on time) so are similarly priced.
Apple's forthcoming HomePod will likely cost much more at £349/$349, so it will be interesting to see how the Sonos One's audio quality measures up against what Apple has in store.
DESIGN AND BUILD
As expected, the Sonos One is essentially a Play:1 but with new controls and features. Build quality, as we’re accustomed to with Sonos, is exceptional.
The Play:1 is Sonos’ smallest speaker and the One looks just like it on the whole. The classy design features smooth and clean curves and will fit it with modern décor. As usual you can choose from black or white colours.
It’s bigger than the likes of the Google Home but compact enough to fit into small spaces like kitchen worktops and bedside tables.
The obvious difference between the One and the Play:1 is the control panel on the top which is flat rather than dipped.
Like new-generation Play:5, it’s got touch sensitive buttons for playback and also a set of 6 microphones for that all-important interaction with the smart assistant - a quick tap will mute the mics for privacy or to stop accidental triggers.

SOUND QUALITY AND FEATURES

One of the main reasons to get the One over rival smart speakers is the sound quality on offer. Cheaper ones might be more affordable but you’re getting much poorer sound.
It’s no surprise that the One sounds the same as the Play:1 with room filling sound that’s rich and detailed. Like previous Sonos devices, the bass is powerful and tight but doesn’t overpower the remainder of the frequency response.
The mid-range is solid so vocals and key instruments are given an appropriate level of importance in the mix. Thanks to a tweeter inside the One, high-end isn’t forgotten and provides brightness resulting into a well-rounded mix that works for a wide range of music.
It’ impressive how good the sound is from such a small speakers and the way it doesn’t sound better when directly in-front. The sound isn’t 360 but it’s close and you can make use of Trueplay to tune the device to the room it’s in. You can also link two into a stereo pair.
So you could buy the Play:1 for less money but this won’t give you all the benefits of a digital assistant. Having Amazon’s Alexa built-in is a real boon, although it’s not perfect.
For starters, setting up the speaker is more complex due to needing to sign in and connect both Sonos and Amazon accounts. We seemed to need to do it all twice before it worked.
Once you’re up and running you can use Alexa to do all sorts of things, include control various smart home products you may have around or plan to get. These include light bulbs, heating systems and more.
You’ll mainly want to use it for music so you can get Alexa to play music and also use your voice to change the volume, skip tracks and the like. You’ll need to be signed up to Amazon Prime Music to play anything that isn’t in your library.
The speaker didn’t launch with support for Spotify voice control but that’s been remedied now. You can also use it for services like TuneIn radio but not Google Play Music.
As well as those basic music playback controls you can also do some clever things if you have multiple Sonos speakers in different rooms. You can get Alexa to do things in specific rooms by using the right name - living room, for example.The Alexa skill for Sonos is still quite limited for now, though. We hoped we could group rooms together or the reverse but you can’t do anything like that at the moment which is a shame. It can only do speakers already grouped.
Despite these niggles, the One is still brilliant and will get better over time. We’re sure Sonos and Amazon will add more commands such as the ones we mentioned above.
The speaker is set to get even better in 2018 when Sonos will add Google Assistant support. Being able to choose which digital assistant you want will be brilliant.

Sonos One: Specs

  • Alexa-enabled
  • 6x far-field mics
  • 3.5in mid-woofer
  • Tweeter
  • Two Class-D amplifiers
  • Touch controls
  • Wi-Fi
  • Ethernet port
  • 161x120x120mm
  • 1.85kg

SHOULD I BUY SONOS ONE?

There are a few niggles, such as some Sonos specific voice commands we’d like, but we’re hopeful and expectant that some updated will improve things. Even so, the Sonos One is the best smart speaker we’ve tested.
It’s more expensive than rivals but really is worth the extra for a huge difference in sound quality - not forgetting about design and build, too. Things will get even better when Google Assistant comes along.
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Friday, January 12, 2018

Best Bluetooth Speaker UE Megablast review
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Is hands-free Amazon Alexa support good enough to justify the £269.99 price tag of UE's latest speaker? Here's our UE Megablast review.

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UE MEGABLAST REVIEW

UE is infamous for its range of Bluetooth speakers, from the UE Boom to the Roll 2 to the Wonderboom, not only because of impressive audio quality but also because UE looks after its customers. You see, UE speaker owners will continue to receive new features via software updates for quite some time after release.
But even though they are adored, UE’s speaker range needs something new. And with 2017 being the year of virtual assistants, it seems only fitting to build one of the best virtual assistants into one of the best Bluetooth speakers. The UE Blast and Megablast offer the same high-end audio experience as their predecessors along with Amazon Alexa support, offering a world of possibilities for those that use them.
The question is, is the UE Megablast worth the expensive price tag? Or should you invest in an Amazon Echo Dot and a cheaper Bluetooth speaker? We’ve spent some time with the UE Megablast, and here’s our review.  

UK PRICING AND AVAILABILITY
Before we get too far into the review, let’s quickly discuss the pricing and availability of UE’s latest speaker, the Megablast. Admittedly it’s not cheap at £269.99, making it more expensive than Amazon’s own Alexa-enabled Echo speaker, but we believe that the functionality, design and sound quality of the UE Megablast make it worth that much money.
If you’re interested in picking up the UE Megablast, it’s available in a variety of colour options from UE, Amazon, John Lewis and more for £269.99.

DESIGN AND BUILD
Despite the unique look when compared to other high-end Bluetooth speakers, you’d be forgiven for mistaking the UE Megablast with its predecessor, the Megaboom. After all, the two speakers generally sport the same cylindrical design and weaved mesh speaker grille, but there are subtle differences between the two that make all the difference.
First up, the UE Megablast is the largest speaker in the Ultimate Ears range, measuring in at 237 x 88 x 88mm. It’s slightly larger than the Megaboom but with so many new and improved features, it’s a sacrifice we’re happy to live with. It’s only the largest by a few millimetres anyway!
The Megablast, like the Megaboom, wasn’t designed to be as portable as the waterbottle-shaped UE Boom, but it’s far from a desktop-only solution. Despite the large build, it’s still easy and light enough to fit in rucksacks or suitcases for those impromptu day trips to the beach.
Yes, we said beach because like others in the UE Range, the Megablast is made from a soft-to-touch but durable material that should protect it not only from bumps and scratches but dust and other small particles too. Besides providing dust resistance, it also adds a really nice feel to the speaker and makes it easier to grip when carrying it too.
Worried about getting it wet? You shouldn’t be, as the Megablast offers IP67 water resistance alongside dust resistance, meaning it should survive a dunk in 1m of water for up to 30 minutes.
However, it’s the water- and dust resistance that brings us to our least-favourite design choice when it comes to the UE Megablast. Like most Bluetooth speakers, the UE Megablast relies on a microUSB port for charging, and thanks to the waterproofing, it’s hidden beneath a waterproof seal. That’s fine, that makes perfect sense.
What doesn’t make sense, however, is the positioning of the charging port, and it’s an issue we’ve had with many UE speakers over the years. It’s on the bottom of the speaker, meaning it can’t be stood upright and charged at the same time.
The company must’ve taken the design cue from Apple’s Magic Mouse 2, with an equally frustratingly-placed charging port!
Admittedly, you can flip the speaker on its head when charging to stand it upright, but it blocks the view of the LED power button – something you need to be able to see when interacting with Alexa, as it lights up to indicate that it’s listening/performing an action. The problem can also be remedied by the optional UE Power Up wireless charging pad for the Megablast, but we’ll go into a little more detail about that below.
Before we delve into the features of the Megablast, let’s first talk about colour options – because there are quite a few. Like other UE speakers, the Megablast comes in a range of stunning colour options. The colour combinations are a little more toned down than those available on earlier UE speakers, but we love the new shades of colour available.
You’ve got standard options like Blue Steel (Blue), Graphite (Grey) and Blizzard (White) alongside more unique colours like Lemonade (Yellow), Mojito (Lime Green) and Merlot (Purple). With so many colour options available, we’re confident that you’ll be able to find one that matches your style and taste.

FEATURES AND SPEC
So, what makes the UE Megablast one of the best Bluetooth speakers on the market? The fact that it isn’t just a Bluetooth speaker. For one, it has built-in dual-band 802.11 a/b/g/n Wi-Fi support alongside Bluetooth connectivity. Why? Because it’s one of a handful of third-party speakers to offer support for Alexa, Amazon’s connected smart assistant.
The UE Megablast offers full Alexa support, meaning that the virtual assistant can do everything that it can in Amazon’s official Echo speaker range (apart from the Echo Show because, well, duh). That means that Alexa can stream music from TuneIn, Amazon Music and more, along with the ability to answer questions, control your smart home accessories and give you the latest news, all by asking.
It doesn’t need an Echo or Dot to pair with, nor does it need to be connected to a smartphone to answer queries. After setup, it should automatically connect to your home Wi-Fi whenever it’s switched on. Simple. It provides a new way to use Bluetooth speakers; rather than connecting your iPhone or Android, loading up your playlist and pressing play, you can simply say “Alexa, play music I might like” and it’ll play music based on your listening history.
It’s quick, it’s simple and it’s much more natural, all made possible by the always-on Alexa detection and built-in far field voice tech. Admittedly it has a little trouble detecting the activation word at high volume, but we’ve found the Alexa activation and query handling to be on a par with official Echo products.
And unlike with other Alexa-enabled Bluetooth speakers that require you to push a button before giving your command, the UE Megablast is always listening for hands-free activation and commands. It’s everything you’d want in a portable Alexa-enabled speaker.
If you’re worried about the far field microphone technology killing the battery life of the UE Megablast, you’d be wrong. Even with Alexa ready to go at a second’s notice, the Megablast can last up to 16 hours on a single charge. It’s impressive, and even more impressive when you consider the fact that the speaker also has to power four active drivers and two passive radiators for the impressive, room-filling sound quality it provides.
But what if you want Alexa to be always on, much like the standard Amazon Echo (which requires a constant power supply)? Thankfully, there’s a way to enable it on the UE Megablast, but you’ll have to part with even more cash to do so.
The solution comes in the form of the Power Up, an optional £34.99 accessory for the UE Megablast that provides wireless charging functionality. Simply pop your Megablast onto the wireless charging base, swap the D-Ring for the special inducting D-Ring provided with the Power Up and place it down to provide charge.
As well as providing quick and easy access to your speaker whenever you need it, you can also leave the speaker on for longer periods without having to worry about battery life. You may need to turn it back on after periods of disuse, but it doesn’t go into standby straight away.


AUDIO QUALITY

Below the tightly-packed speaker mesh of the UE Megablast you’ll find two 25mm tweeters, two 55mm active drivers alongside two 85 x 50mm passive radiators, offering a maximum output of an incredible 93db according to UE. While we can’t test the maximum volume of the speaker, we can confirm that the array of speakers featured provide incredible sound quality.
The vocals are crisp, the bass is warm and powerful without drowning out the mid-range and the 360-degree design of the speaker really does provide room-filling audio. It’s essentially as at home playing Big Shaq as it is playing Adventure Club or Adele, excelling in both vocal and instrument reproduction.
The speaker is incredibly loud – it’s not called the Megablast for nothing – and for the most part, the audio quality is unaffected. No matter how loud it goes, the audio doesn’t become harsh or distorted, although the bass starts to lose some of its presence at around 80% volume.
It’s when you creep nearer to 90-95% volume that the audio starts to become harsh, but we don’t think that many people will experience it at such a high volume. In our opinion, the room-filling audio means that you’ll rarely need to turn it up beyond 50-60 percent volume.

SHOULD I BUY UE MEGABLAST?
If you’re looking for a high-end Alexa-enabled speaker, you won’t find much better than the UE Megablast. It is expensive, though, so make sure you check out the Sonos One as a non-portable rival.
Besides the vibrant, unique design, the water- and dustproof Megablast combines the best of Alexa with the best of the portable listening experience, offering a premium Alexa experience (with far-field tech and always-on Alexa), incredible sound quality and long-lasting battery life in a single device.
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Monday, January 8, 2018

Best Wireless Speakers 6 best portable waterproof speakers 2018
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Waterproof and water resistant Bluetooth speakers for taking the par-tay outdoors, pool-side and everywhere else


Please note these Bluetooth speakers are not all fully waterproof. 

There aren't enough good enough quality, fully waterproof speakers to make a list worthwhile.
We've noted which ones you can chuck in the pool, and which ones will just stand up to a bit of summer showering. So what I'm saying is, don't come crying to us if you get them mixed up and you end up with a dead speaker, or badly electrocuted house guests.
There's one time when Bluetooth speakers that are battery-powered, rugged and water-resistant enough to resist horseplay come into their own: summer time.
Now, as the weather gets warmer, our thoughts turn once again to al fresco partying, perhaps around the pool, or maybe whilst burning a sausage on a barbecue as a light drizzle starts, and your parasol blows over.
There are plenty of candidates, but the best Bluetooth speaker for outdoor partying is almost certainly made by Logitech offshoot Ultimate Ears.
The UE Boom 2 and Megaboom are great speakers that are equally happy indoors as out. However, for our money – and it's not a lot of money, for once – best of all is the UE Wonderboom.
This little sonic orb is under 90 quid (OK, it's £89.99 RRP), comes in a range of dope colours, puts out massive volume for its size and can easily be paired with a second Wonderboom. 
It's waterproof, it's shockproof, it looks like a hand grenade, and it's the bomb.

HOW TO BUY THE BEST BATTERY-POWERED BLUETOOTH SPEAKER FOR OUTDOORS

Bluetooth speakers can receive music from just about any phone, tablet or laptop in existence, and although the audio may not be lossless, the best ones do deliver decent sonics, as well as portability, versatility and toughness.
Ideally, you want Apt-X support for better audio but to be honest, outdoor sounds are generally more about volume than refinement, and any kind of Bluetooth delivers perfectly adequate audio for that. 
Now scroll through that and the rest of our favourite battery-powered Bluetooth speakers, ranked in order of preference.

OUR PICK OF THE BEST OUTDOOR SPEAKERS TO BUY TODAY


1. UE WONDERBOOM

Best waterproof speaker

SPECIFICATIONS               
Weight: 0.43kg
Battery life: 10 hours
Waterproof: Yes
NFC: No
Aux-in: No **USB charging:** Yes (Micro-USB)

REASONS TO BUY          +   Awesome 360 degree audio
                                               +Waterproof                                               +Extremely rugged
REASONS TO AVOID           -App is needed to control more than one at once

TODAY'S BEST DEALS                       Buy From Amazon

While the UE Boom 2 is undeniably a very strong product, it requires an app to use more than one of them at once, and is a little less portable than this cheap and loud, sonic hand grenade.

The 360 degree audio is better than it has any right to be at the price, especially with EDM, bro rock and other Spring Break, outdoor party-friendly sounds.

The Wonderboom doesn't really try to straddle home and outdoors: it's clearly meant to be taken to wherever the party is. It's fully waterproof – in fact not only does it also float, but if you push it under the water for whatever reason, it'll even survive that as it's IPX7 rated. 

As well as trying to drown the Wonderboom, you can also chuck it at the wall if you like. It'll survive that too.

With up to 10 hours of battery life, a 100m Bluetooth range, and the ability to pair a second Wonderboom with just the press of a button (and a bit of an awkward pause while it does its thing, but it gets there eventually), the Wonderboom is the current state of the art in outdoor party speakers.

2. UE BOOM 2

Very few parties are going to outlive this one

PECIFICATIONS            
Weight: 0.54kg
Battery life: 15 hours
Waterproof: Yes
NFC: Yes
Aux-in: No **USB charging:** Yes (Micro-USB)

REASONS TO BUY             +    You can link tons of them together
                                                  +15 hours of battery life
REASONS TO AVOID              -   Pricier than the Wonderboom
                                                               -Best when the party is indoors
TODAY'S BEST DEALS            Buy From Amazon

The Boom 2 is a little more refined than the Wonderboom, a little pricier, and you'd be a little more worried if you broke or lost it.


As such, I prefer the Wonder for outdoor use. However the Boom 2 is more suited to being taken indoors, and via the UE app you can link together dozens of them, if you wish – although that is not a process I'd ever want to have to go through again, having tried it once. It's okay for pairing two, though.
More usefully, you can also link multiple mobile devices to the Boom 2, for total DJ wars. It's a great, waterproof speaker, with 15 hours of battery life.

3. LIBRATONE ONE CLICK

Best water-resistant speaker

SPECIFICATIONS               
Weight: 0.14kg
Battery life: 12 hours
Waterproof: Splash resistant
NFC: No
Aux-in: Yes **USB charging:** Yes

REASONS TO BUY            +    You can hang this thing anywhere
                                                 +NFC pairing                                                 +Splash proof

REASONS TO AVOID           -Doesn't sound as good as the Beoplay A1

TODAY'S BEST DEALS             Buy From Amazon

There is only one name that everyone knows when it comes to Danish hi-fi products with an effortlessly chic, Scandiwegian-style vibe. And that name is not Libratone.

However, while the One Click is inferior to Bang & Olufsen's Beoplay A1 sonically, that's not by a huge margin.

And arguably it's the match of its more glamorous blonde cousin in terms of look, plus being more practical to carry around and hang on things, thanks to its brace of interchangeable handles. It's also cheaper, and for a speaker you're going to be taking into the wild, that's indubitably better.
We admit we may have been slightly swayed, as well as the VFM, by the extreme good-lookingness of the models Libratone has employed to artfully photograph lounging langorously in the vicinity of its speaker.

As well as that, the addition of NFC pairing, the abliity to have two phones connected to it at once - bring the soundclash! - a 3.5mm jack for whatever people use that for, splash proofing sufficient to survive the rain and a choice of three colours, this is a textbook portable speaker.
Now Libratone has sorted its damn app out, you can also pair two One Clicks in stereo. Bonus.

4. MONSTER SUPERSTAR BLASTER

Best high-volume party speaker

SPECIFICATIONS                 
Weight: 7.65kg
Battery life: 8 hours
Waterproof: Splash resistant
NFC: Yes
Aux-in: Yes **USB charging:** No

REASONS TO BUY                  +   It's powerful, very powerful
                                                      +Eight hours of house shaking bass battery                                                      +NFC pairing

REASONS TO AVOID               -Outdoor mode is pointless

TODAY'S BEST DEALS               Buy From Amazon

Powerful enough to shake the foundations of your shed, yet refined enough to be sold by John Lewis, Monster's latest is the 80s 'ghetto blaster' reimagined for the 2016. All that's missing is a big button marked 'Bass BOOST'.
To be frank, no such button is required, given the brutal bottom-end assault that fires from this thing when you push the volume up. Look how enthused these guys are!
Actually, there is one button that has no apparent purpose. You can switch between 'indoor' and 'outdoor' modes, but the latter just appears to add volume at the expense of greater distortion and less tight bass. Possibly it helps the battery last longer – eight hours is the quoted duration.

With NFC for even easier pairing, the SuperStar Blaster also has a 3.5mm input for those who like to truly rock it old school. 
If you want party rocking rather than background music, this Monster throws down like an original bad bwoy and will leave its foes feeling bugged out by its electric boogaloo. Bring it.

5. BANG & OLUFSEN BEOPLAY A1

Sublime audio and design

SPECIFICATIONS                
Weight: 0.6kg
Battery life: 24 hours
Waterproof: No
NFC: No
Aux-in: No **USB charging:** Yes (USB-C)

REASONS TO BUY            +   Superb sound quality
                                                 +Laudable design                                                 +Incredibly lightweight

REASONS TO AVOID             -Leather strap for hanging isn't ideal

TODAY'S BEST DEALS             Buy From Amazon
You could argue that this looks like something you'd buy in an artisan gift shop in Chelsea, to hang from your shower rail, but you can't argue that this Bluetooth speaker doesn't sound superb, or justify its high-ish price.

The audio and style are unimpeachable, and you also get a lengthy, 'up to 24 hours' battery life, it's lightweight (600g) and compact enough to take anywhere, and while we wouldn't advise chucking it in a ravine, it will stand up to a bit of rain and moisture.
Clearly, a leather thong is not the most practical means of carrying a speaker around or attaching it to your hand-made, small-batch man-bag, but whatever. 
It also sounds and looks good enough to use indoors, in smaller rooms and at quieter volumes.

6. MARSHALL KILBURN

As always, Marshall doesn't disappoint

SPECIFICATIONS             
Weight: 3kg
Battery life: 20 hours
Waterproof: No
NFC: No
Aux-in: Yes **USB charging:** No

REASONS TO BUY          +    Awesome power and bass
                                               +Rock-like design                                               +20-hours of playback

REASONS TO AVOID           -Not waterproof 

TODAY'S BEST DEALS         Buy From Amazon

We can't really overstate what great performers Marshall's speakers and headphones are for the price. It obviously just buys the same Chinese components as everyone else, but it really does seem to applying some kind of expertise from its concert app range that means they real blast out music.
No, there's not a lot of finesse, but it's undeniably musical, and if you want to fill your garden or your 'squad''s area of the park with sound, that's a secondary consideration anyway.
So, if you're looking for something with oomph and snazz, the Marshall Kilburn produces a lot of power and bass for its compact dimensions, giving meaty results with rock and electronic sounds alike. It's probably less good if you like light classical (but Wagner should work).
The power is all the more impressive when you consider that on paper, it's only putting out 2x5W of mid and treble - it's the 15W sub that does the heavy lifting here, presumably.
Despite the authentically rockin' appearance of the Kilburn, we seriously doubt this is made in the same factories with the same components as Marshall's legendary concert amplifiers. However, it certainly doesn't disgrace the brand in terms of volume and fidelity. 
The rugged construction and 20-hour battery life make it hugely capable as an outdoor performer. Although as it's not waterproof, check the weather forecast, and please don't drop it in the pool, as people WILL die.
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