Poor | Average | Good | Excellent | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Weight | 1360.78 g Best: Philips BT2650 Weight: 0.21 g |
Channels | 2.1 |
---|---|
Low frequency | 60.0 Hz |
High frequency | 18.0 kHz |
RMS | 13.0 W |
Height | 7.5 in |
---|---|
Width | 8.35 in |
Depth | 6.3 in |
Weight | 48.0 oz |
Smart speaker (virtual assistant) | yes |
---|---|
Streaming standards |
|
Colour of product | Black |
---|
AUX in | yes |
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Source of connection |
|
Aptx Support | no |
Bluetooth | no |
Wired inputs | 3.5mm |
Analogue 3.5mm input (Aux) | 1 |
Wireless network (Wi-Fi) | yes |
AirPlay | yes |
Electric (not USB) | yes |
---|
The GHI's Tried & Tested verdict of the Jam Rhythm
The Jam Rhythm speaker uses Wi-Fi to stream music and supports Amazon Alexa voice commands through an app. But it delivers subpar audio performance, even for the under-$100 price.
Jam Rhythm Review - Among decent wireless speakers under £200, most are based on Bluetooth and increasing numbers offer multi-room operation (whereby sound
When I checked out features of the new JAM Rhythm WiFi speaker, I was quite excited about its offerings. The speaker costs less than $100 and it has potentials to become a cheaper alternative to Sonos speakers. Let's check it out.
Jam Audio’s Rhythm Wi-Fi speaker is worth a serious look and listen. It connects to your Wi-Fi network instead of depending on an often-sketchy Bluetooth.
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