Nobody likes to be subjected to other people over a music hot summer day when they are trying to enjoy a picnic. Whether young with music “blaring” in the tinny speakers on their mobile phones, crusties play acoustic guitar and bongos, or students with portable stereos, there is nothing worse than having your calm and disturbed.
The only way to fight is to take your own songs and drown everyone else. One way to do is take a set of speakers with you and to connect to an MP3 player. And if a loudspeaker Bluetooth whole, is even better for your picnic - no son means you do not have to leave your MP3 player drag Attached to the speakers, and there is less risk your drink-sodden latter trampling on the floor or tripping over the cable.

This is an area of the music industry laptop which was slowly and gradually more and more lately, and with many mobile phones equipped with AD2P Bluetooth-enabled, which should continue. Sony is the last manufacturer trying to get in on the act with its SRS-BTM30 speakers joining the likes of Gear4 and Blackbox Blackbox Mini speakers and Parrot’s Party.
In regards issues, these speakers make a good first impression. Form a small pair of bongos, the SRS-BTM30 are designed to be standing on their sides on the shelf use, or end placement on the ground, pulling up. They derive their power is the sector or three alkaline or rechargeable AA batteries, and if your mileage away from food vary, Sony listed 10 hours should see you through a couple of long afternoon lazy summer at least.
The main problem is that there is no “pair” button, or even a button with a logo on Bluetooth. Apart from the on / off button and volume buttons, all you get is a key, darkly, “defined ID.” Even if you imagine that this route is the button, you’ll be hard pushed to work exactly how l ‘use. Normally, you simply press the button for a few seconds, then enter a passkey standard, here you must first change the speakers off, then hold the ID for seven seconds before his entry mode liaison.

It is bad enough that Bluetooth is a stopgap user-friendly to begin with, but this is simply barmy; why manufacturers can not simply label carefully these buttons, I never know. And it is certainly not beyond the human spirit to simple instructions on a label whatever discreet: Turn off the device. Press and hold for seven seconds, until the lights flash paired with a new device. Enter 0000 on your MP3/player/phone if it asks for a passkey, not quite take a lot of space.
With the significant obstacle that twinning is handled, we must deal with the SRS-BTM30 rather average receipt Bluetooth. I tried liaison with three mobile and a laptop with Bluetooth technology and built just two metres away I had abandoned with each appliance. If you put your body in the way it is worse trouble, and once you experience a gap in music, speakers speed then the music in an attempt to catch up with the player instead of simply join the track at a later stage. There are at least a 3.5 mm audio input jack on the back - when you frustrated by the reception.

Unfortunately, the sound quality does not remedy any of this either. The SRS-BTM30 production May be clear and well balanced, moderate and volumes actually it seems pretty good - they are much better than the Gear4 BlackBox mode Bluetooth, for example. But the 3W per channel output simply can not cope when you pump the volume right: they begin to buzz and then distort rather worrying. Achieving high volume is categorically out of the question. On the other hand, there is no mute button anywhere on the loudspeakers. Instead, you simply turn it off if you want a moment of calm, but it then requires you to repeat the pairing process with the player once you turn the speakers back again.