This is not to say that the 900 won’t deliver highly immersive sound when using optical - it will still sound great thanks to the company’s TrueSpace technology - you just can’t get the full Atmos experience without HDMI. Atmos is simply too bandwidth-hungry for an optical connection - it requires the fatter pipe of HDMI. If you use the optical cable, you won’t be able to send a Dolby Atmos signal to the soundbar even if your TV supports it. You can connect the Smart Soundbar 900 to your TV with an HDMI cable or an optical cable, and Bose includes both in the box. One port too few Simon Cohen / Digital Trends In its black guise, the 900 pretty much disappears into the background, but if you want your soundbar to make a visual statement as well as an audible one, it’s also available in white. It needs to be out in the open to make the most of those up-firing drivers. So even though the 900 is impressively short (2.29 inches tall) and could easily sit under most big-screen TVs, don’t put it there. The drivers are angled upward so that they can bounce specific sounds off of your ceiling and back down to your listening position. Those openings are for the extra up-firing drivers, which help the soundbar deliver the height effects that have become synonymous with Dolby Atmos. The biggest difference is the matching set of racetrack-like oval holes on either end of the glass sheet. It’s a dead ringer for the Smart Soundbar 700, right down to the classy (yet easily smudged) glass top. If you think the Smart Soundbar 900 looks familiar, you’re not dreaming. Holes in the glass Simon Cohen / Digital Trends Nakamichi increases the price of its Dragon 11.4.6 soundbar Bose’s new flagship Dolby Atmos soundbar brings AI smarts to the dialogue problemĭTS Play-Fi wireless audio adds support for Dolby Atmos, DTS:X
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |