Ah okay. Yeah that means there's less. Quite a bit less. That's too bad.
On 3/20/2017 8:22 AM, Dane Trethowan wrote:
The difference is noticeablethat's about the only way I can describe it.
On the other end of the spectrum - if you're on a budget and you're
looking for a good Bluetooth speaker - the Amazon Echo Tap in my view
certainly ticks many boxes.
Sound isn't the quality of what we're talking about here but no one
can deny that it sounds incredible for what it is and certainly has
the functionality to back it up.
On 20/03/2017 2:21 PM, Hamit Campos wrote:
So how mucch of the origenal bass did Bose cut from the 2? Cause the
origenal Mini which I have has pretty cinimatic bass for something so
small like Dane said.
On 3/19/2017 8:03 PM, Anders Holmberg wrote:
Hi!
Well i have this little beast.
Its really great for that size.
/AD
19 mars 2017 kl. 10:55 skrev Dane Trethowan
<grtd...@internode.on.net>:
Hi!
I saw the Bose Soundlink Mini II for the first time today and I
came away satisfied with what I'd heard.
I owned the original Bose Soundlink Mini speaker which I thought to
be very good, a little bass heavy - as Bose products are - but an
incredibly powerful sounding unit for the size.
The Soundlink Mini II sounds very similar though the mid range
seems to have a little more presence which adds to the subtlety and
the charm of the sound.
Its worth noting the differences between the original Soundlink
Mini and newer model.
The Soundlink Mini didn't have a TTS - Text To Speech - module
built-in whereas the Soundlink Mini II does and one of the nice
features here is that - when powered up - the soundlink Mini II
tells you what device it has paired with, something that no other
Bluetooth speaker I've ever owned has done - I don't think even the
Jawbone Jambox did that - so a very nice touch particularly if you
plan to use the Mini II with multiple speakers.
The Mini II can be charged from a USB power source - whether that
be a power adapter or powerbank - whereas the original Bose
Soundlink Mini could not, you had to carry about the 12 volt AC
adapter.
Build quality is about the same, the nice rugged alaminium body
though I'd still recommend a carry case or rubber sleeve if you
plan to carry this beast about.
The original Mini had a dedicated Aux-In source button whereas the
button has disappeared on the newer model, connecting a patch cord
to the Aux-In socket automatically switches the source to that mode.
The Mini II has a microphone so can be used as a convenient hands
free speakerphone with your paired device, unfortunately I wasn't
in a position to try out this feature.
The Bose Soundlink Mini II still comes at a premium price of nearly
300 Australian dollars but you certainly get what you pay for with
this little mite if you're wanting a powerful sound.
I still have a few gripes with Bose and one of the main being the
decision by Bose not to use AptX decoding on any of their speakers,
something that IOS users probably won't bother about but Android
users are probably used to by now, having AptX makes all the
difference if your passion is to listen to music with all its
detail and perhaps the thought from Bose is that - with such a
speaker as this - you can't hear all the detail?
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