The Good: Tiny and portable; great battery life with removable rechargeable cell; good screen and backlight; easy to use; phenomenal sound. The Bad: Uninspired carrying case; can only be charged ...
Charlotte Maracina is a New York native now residing in London in pursuit of her master's of journalism at the University of the Arts. After graduating from Belmont University in 2022 with a degree in ...
Creative’s handsome, IPX7 water-resistant Muvo Go Bluetooth speaker renders the top end with unusual clarity and volume, but it’s lacking in thump and doesn’t offer increasingly common features such ...
There have been a lot of advances in the world of mobile technology over the years, and while speaker quality has improved greatly, there’s the simple hurdle that tiny speakers can only do so much.
The T200 has basic controls, a tiny screen and can also tune into FM radio as well as record sounds through its built in microphone. It'll also double as a USB storage device for documents and any ...
Early MP3 players like the Diamond Rio were bulky affairs with poor battery life and a capacity of about half an hour of music. How things have changed. In just a few years, prices have crashed along ...
Bluetooth speakers are useful for a number of purposes. Portability is everything. Being able to take your speaker to the beach is as valuable as being able to take it from room to room, ensuring you ...
The Creative Muvo Mini contains every desirable feature you seek out in a Bluetooth speaker: full sound, attractive design, long battery life – and the cherry on top, weatherproofing. For under 100 ...
So last week while I was enjoying myself at ATi's Radeon 9700 event my man at Creative stopped by the IGN Bunker. I returned and found a couple of manic voicemails about him driving over for an ...
We've gotta give props to Creative here. Not only are they gutsy enough to release such a minimal update to a fairly ancient form factor, but they're even taking their product numbering "backwards" ...
I've been a tech journalist for almost 25 years and started Pocket-lint in 2003. Over the years I've questioned or interviewed leading tech industry figures from Steve Jobs, Steve Ballmer, Mark ...