If you're looking for a simple iPod dock, you should probably look elsewhere. But if you're looking for a way to put audio wherever you want, this may be just the thing.It plays and charges your iPod. You can string up to four rCubes wirelessly together f...
Abstract: I really enjoyed the time I spent with the rCube, and if you're looking for a dead-simple, all-in-one solution for streaming audio from that's also portable — you should probably give this thing a listen. The big question for most consumers considering ...
Abstract: British audio specialty manufacturer Arcam invites you to take their act on the road with the r-Cube, mobile, wireless all-in-one audio system. Weighing only eleven pounds and including a rechargeable battery, the portable r-Cube can be used outdoors i...
Was this review helpful?
-
Published: 2010-11-18, Author: Nick , review by: techworld.com
The design is intuitive, and the controls simple enough for any hi-fi novice to get the most out of their money....
Abstract: Arcam's most obvious superpower over the other docks here is its portability — you can slip your hand behind the top-mounted dock-flap into a hidden grab handle, and off you go, taking 5kg of Arcam hi-fi performance on the trot. You shouldn't do this with...
Abstract: Portable players (there I go again) are, by and large, not a hugely evolved breed. They usually sound a bit tinny (or muffled) – or need plugging into the mains, which somewhat defeats the object. Even the greatest one-box stereo music player of all, the ...
Was this review helpful?
-
Published: 2011-11-25, Author: Simon , review by: macworld.co.uk
Superb acoustic fidelity; recent price drop; connect up to eight rCubes
rWave and rWand+ cost extra; remote must be aimed at a strict angle
It's hard to put into words just how good the Arcam rCube sounds – with pretty much any genre of music. It's a cliché to say the sound has to be heard to be believed, but we really weren't expecting the superb level of acoustic. At £500 it was a luxury pu...