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Tag: i-pod

Arcam rCube, the Audiophile I-Pod Dock

  The portable Arcam rCube is powerful enough for a party, but engineered to deliver exceptional clarity at low volume. It has the cutting-edge technology and manufacturing excellence you expect from arcam. You can carry your Arcam rCube with you from room to room – music that follows you wherever you want to go. Hear your favourite radio station in hi-fidelity sound, listen to your music or radio while cooking, lolling in your armchair, or relaxing in the bath in the house, in the office, outside in the garden, even on a picnic. The rCube’s powerful battery eliminates the need for messy wires – it’s as easy a mobile phone to recharge. You can connect the Arcam rCube to an extra audio source via the aux input and output video from files stored on your iPod or iPhone when it is docked.   Features Cube to cube streaming Integral carry handle Charging dock Full remote control Long playing rechargeable battery Multiple steaming (up to 8 cubes) PC streaming (RWave dongle required) iPod streaming (RWand dongle required) Video connection (accessory cable required)  

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The 10 Greatest Music Gadgets ever.

What are the greatest music gadgets ever invented? Find out which 10 important pieces of music-making kit changed everything for the better. As Friedrich Nietzsche once said: “Life without music would be a mistake.” 1. Dansette (1952)   Selling one million units in the 50s and 60s, Dansette became a household name in post-war Britain just as the music industry blossomed with first The Shadows and subsequently The Beatles. Made in London, the Dansette was an integrated player, complete with built-in amp and speaker. It set the look for turntables of the era and, more importantly, provided the soundtrack to My Generation, baby. Original price: 33 Guineas | Used by: The Beatles | Dansette.co.uk 2. Regency TR-1 Transistor (1954)   Built by Texas Instruments and I.D.E.A., this coupled the former’s transistors with the latter’s antenna nous to produce the first widely successful portable radio. Now a design icon, the TR-1 – or, more accurately, its cheaper successors – changed the world by allowing suburban kids to hear the “race” (ie: black) music that became known as rock and roll. Step aside Eddie Izzard: THIS was the first world-famous trannie. Original price: $50 | Used by: Chuck Berry | Regencytr1.com 3. Fender Stratocaster (1954)   The iconic ‘Strat’ is still the most recognisable electric guitar in the world. Selling in the millions even today, the classic features a solid body, three single-coil pick-ups and a double cutaway design that allows easy access to the higher octaves. Widely mimicked, but rarely bettered, it’s been used by everyone from punks to bluesmen to progressive noodlers such as Mike Oldfield.   Original price: $250 | Used by: Jimi Hendrix | Fender.com 4. Minimoog (1970)   The monophonic Minimoog revolutionised music one note at a time, putting the alien sounds of hitherto room-sized, wallet-busting synths into a more portable and affordable package. Synthesized bloops and squawks began to creep into the repertoire of everyone from Floyd to Zeppelin, then the proto-electro of Kraftwerk and Tangerine Dream. According to no less an authority than Rick Wakeman, the Minimoog “absolutely changed the face of music”. Original price: $1,495 | Used by: Kraftwerk | Moogmusic.com 5. Linn Sondek LP12 (1972)   The LP12 is the world’s best-known hi-fi turntable. Made in Glasgow, the deck has cult status in audiophile circles, dominated the scene in the 70s and 80s and is used by many an audio reviewer as a reference. The deck has countless after-market modification kits available, but its fundamental design remains unchanged from the 1972 original.   The Linn Sondek is available to buy at Rococo Systems & Design now. Grab yours here and receive fantastic savings! Original price: £80 | Used by: Rolling Stones | Linn.co.uk 6. Technics SL-1210 (1972)   Originally produced as a hi-fi consumer unit, and put out under a Panasonic offshoot brand, the SL-1210 and its very near cousin the SL-1200 have been synonymous with DJ setups since 1978. Rock solid in its build and reliability, and durable enough to withstand the worst the DMC World DJ Championship can throw at it, these are the original “wheels of steel”.   Original price: £120 | Used by: Every DJ in the history of dance music up to about 2008 | Panasonic.co.uk 7. Sony Walkman TPS-L2 (1979)     A portable cassette player with lightweight headphones, the Walkman kick-started the MTV age. It was high-tech, miniature Japanese engineering at its finest and became an icon. Which is why Sony still clings to the brand to this very day.     Original price: $200 | Used by: Michael Jackson | Sony.com 8. Roland TR-808 (1980)   One of the first cheap drum machines, the 808 was originally built as a studio tool to help create demos, but its “unrealistic”, clonking sound soon found favour with hip-hop artists. Used on more hit records than any other drum machine, it also powered the dance music revolution of the late 80s, along with Roland’s TB-303 “acid machine”.   Original price: $1,195 | Used by: Beastie Boys | Roland.co.uk 9. Korg M1 (1988)     More than just a keyboard, the M1 was a full-on workstation: a MIDI sequencer with a bank of sounds that went on to become the best-selling digital synthesiser of all time. Ahead of its time, the M1 had a 4MB capacity – hey, that was tonnes in ’88 – expansion slots and an LCD display.   Original price: $2,166 | Used by: Pet Shop Boys | Korg.co.uk 10. Apple iPod (2001)   Jobs and Ive’s thin white juke has done as much for music appreciation as any device, putting “1,000 songs in your pocket” at launch. Since then it’s caused the demise of the high-street music shop, replaced albums with playlists and turned Apple into a behemoth. Yet with iOS switching its iPod app to Music and the Classic’s design gathering dust, is the end almost nigh?   Original price: $400 for 5GB model | Used by: Coldplay | Apple.com/uk

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Linn Kinsky – now available for iPad and iPhone!

Linn’s own DS control app, Kinsky, is now available as a free download from the AppStore. Get wireless control of your Linn DS player from your iPad, iPhone or iPod touch. Browse your music collection by album artwork, select albums, artists or songs and change volume, all with your fingertips. Discover new music from a wide selection of internet radio streams and podcasts. Create playlists to suit your mood or for special events.   Go Multiroom with Songcast Take advantage of the latest Songcast feature to stream music from one Linn DS to another, sharing whatever you’re listening to across your home. You can even use Songcast to stream vinyl or tv – anything you have connected to a Majik DS-I or Sekrit DS-I can be shared.     Get Kinsky Kinsky is compatible with all Linn DS players running the latest software (Davaar) and can be used alongside any other desktop or third party control apps. Download directly from the AppStore now!  

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