![]() 'Gordon Lightfoot: If You Could Read My Mind' Is Affable Portrait Of Canada's "Poet Laureate" ![]() Jamie Foxx Remains Hospitalized After Mysterious Medical Scare, Won't Be Returning As Host For 'Beat Shazam' Season 6 Stream It Or Skip It: ‘Ed Sheeran: The Sum Of It All’ on Disney+, Where The Superstar Singer Takes Work And Life to The Nth Degree 'Liza With A Z' Showcases Liza Minnelli At The Peak Of Her '70s Star Power Stream It Or Skip It: 'King Charles, The Boy Who Walked Alone' on Paramount+, A Rebuttal To All the Pro-Diana Documentaries You've Seen Max's 'Bama Rush' Documentary Could Be "The End of Greek Life as We Know It," According to First TrailerĮmilo Estevez Claims Laurence Fishburne Saved Him From Drowning in Quicksand During Filming Of 'Apocalypse Now' Stream It or Skip It: 'When Love Springs' on Hallmark, Where a Gorgeous Lily Pond Steals the Whole Movie ![]() Stream It Or Skip It: ‘Both Sides of the Blade’ on Hulu, A Fiery French Love Triangle That Cuts And Draws Blood Stream It Or Skip It: 'Manifest West' on Hulu, a Thoughtful Dramatic Thriller About a Family Off the GridĬhris Pratt Shares "Interesting Fact" About Filming a Nude Scene on 'The O.C.' With Adam Brody Is ‘A Man Called Otto’ Based on a True Story? How Swedish Author Fredrik Backman Came Up With His Character Stream It Or Skip It: 'Bupkis' On Peacock, Where Pete Davidson Plays Himself In A Slightly Heightened Version Of His Life Stream It Or Skip It: 'Tommy Little: Pretty Fly For A Dickhead' On Prime Video, The Australian Comedian Takes Flight Stream It Or Skip It: 'A Man Called Otto' on Netflix, Starring Tom Hanks as a Stereotypical Grumpy Old Man Stream It or Skip It: 'Spring Breakthrough' on Hallmark Movies & Mysteries Proves We Need More Keesha Sharp Stream It Or Skip It: 'Tom Jones' On PBS, A Romance-Focused Adaptation Of Henry Fielding's Novel Is 'Love Again' Streaming on HBO Max or Netflix? While Creative Labs has expanded its product offerings into other arenas, the company has never waivered from its core competency: PC and home audio.Gwyneth Paltrow Recalls "British Press Being So Horrible" After Her 'Shakespeare in Love' Oscar Win: "Totally Overwhelming" The Sound Blaster maker has almost always offered speaker systems to pump out the audio from our favorite PC and console games. Today, that tradition lives on with Creative marketing a wide variety of discrete speaker systems and sound bars, at a wide variety of price points. The SBS E2900 2.1 speaker set we'll look at today sits well above the entry-level Pebble speakers, but a bit below the Sound BlasterX Katana sound bar. Creative primarily aims these speakers at gamers, but there's a whole lot of additionally functionality tucked into this package.Īt first glance, the SBS E2900 might look like a compact speaker system with tiny satellites and a small sub, but in person it's much bigger. Those satellites measure 4.13 x 3.94 x 6.7 inches (or 105 x 100 x 170 millimeters). That four inches in girth makes plenty of room for a pair of full-range 3" drivers. There's no dedicated tweeter in each satellite, which will make it difficult to articulate every little nuance in high-quality music files. We'll see if that matters in our listening tests. Meanwhile, the sub's 6.69 x 13.19 x 12.32 inch (170 x 335 x 313 mm) footprint would rival a small micro ATX tower in size. The subwoofer's cone only measures 5.25", it fires forward and has a side port on the right. Overall the system is rated for a peak power output of 120 Watts, or 60 Watts RMS sustained. That's divided up as 15 Watts RMS for each satellite and 30 Watts for the sub. It should get pretty loud.Ĭonnectivity is where Creative Labs knocked it out of the park on the SBS E2900. To start with, there's the expected 1/8" aux input jack, which will connect to any sound card or built-in audio solution on just about every PC on the planet with the included 1/8" stereo cable. ![]() However, Creative also outfitted the system with an FM antenna, Bluetooth 4.0 audio, an SD card slot, and a USB port. While the FM tuner might seem like an odd inclusion, the combination of media and radio means that the SBS E2900 could be a standalone music system of sorts. To control the speakers, Creative put some basic controls on the front of the sub that includes a jog wheel for volume and basic play, pause, and navigation buttons for media controls. For anything more advanced, including the built-in EQ, we had to use the included remote control. A bit bigger than a typical Roku remote, the unit mirrors the same controls, along with FM tuner controls, input selection, number buttons for direct input, and LED toggle for the sub's built-in lighting. For those not interested in LEDs, the lighting can be disabled. There's also a Tone button to walk through the E2900's two-band tone control equalizer.īoth the SD and USB ports are used for media playback.
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