Poor | Average | Good | Excellent | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Weight | 500 g Best: Philips BT2650 Weight: 0.21 g |
Channels | 2.0 |
---|---|
Number of drivers | 2 |
Height | 2.56 in |
---|---|
Width | 7.32 in |
Depth | 5.0 in |
Weight | 17.64 oz |
Smart speaker (virtual assistant) | no |
---|---|
USB input port | yes |
Colour of product | Black,Red |
---|
AUX in | yes |
---|---|
Bluetooth | yes |
USB powered | yes |
---|---|
Battery type | Li-Ion |
Battery capacity | 1000.0 mAh |
Battery life (max) | 6.0 h |
So how exactly does a wireless speaker work without a Bluetooth or Wi-Fi connection? The Oaxis Bento uses electromagnetic induction tech to work its
Oaxis Bento Review: The Oaxis Bento is a unique speaker that uses close contact induction to play your phone's music. Read on to see how it performs!
The Oaxis Bento Close Contact Wireless Speaker is probably the most unique speaker I've ever used. Find out why in my review.
Close-Contact induction speakers are a great idea and a sleek new age concept, but can the speaker quality stand up to the task?
Oaxis Bento uses magnetic induction to amplify audio from source without wires or Bluetooth pairing. Here's a quick review and giveaway contest.
The Oaxis Bento speaker uses electromagnetic induction sensors to amplify your device's music wirelessly, but the technology could use some improvement.
ITB195B
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