Sony’s new speaker is a soundbar with rear speakers for your phone or tablet

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It’s rare to arrive at a consumer audio product launch and exclaim, “Huh. OK, that product doesn’t currently exist”. But that is what happened when I saw Sony‘s new HT-AX7 (previously leaked by Slashleaks as the MagicBucket speaker).

It is a Bluetooth portable speaker with two moveable muffin-sized upward-firing satellite speakers resting on charging ports, on the top plate. It has been chiefly designed to act as a little soundbar (it’s roughly the size of the Roku Streambar) and rear speakers – but for your phone, tablet or laptop. It looks a lot like the concept Art TV and Soundbar TCL unveiled at Milan Design Week, but that idea needed power and really was meant for TVs. This isn’t, and doesn’t have to be. 

So, it’s a wireless speaker that uses your home wi-fi network? No, Bluetooth only – oh, and there are no physical connections other than the USB-C charging port. But it does include Sony’s proprietary 360 Spatial Sound Mapping, which is able to upconvert a stereo signal over Bluetooth in real-time. So, when those two upward-firing channels are placed 1m to 1.2m behind you, they become rear speakers and provide something resembling a Dolby Atmos setup. And I’ve heard it: it’s not about to get into our best Dolby Atmos soundbars guide only because it doesn’t actually support Dolby Atmos, but it’s good and immersive. 

Sony HT-AX7 close up of the Sound Field button

Sound Field on, or Sound Field off? Depends on how sociable you’re being (Image credit: Future)

There’s no actual room calibration tech either. The upconverting uses Sony’s monopolsynthesis technology but it assumes that you’ve place your rear speakers roughly a metre behind you and the main ‘bar in front of you, just below your ears on a coffee table or similar. And I think that’s quite refreshing. 

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#Sonys #speaker #soundbar #rear #speakers #phone #tablet

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