360 - S -35 Satellite
People will always look for ways to hide their speakers. As much as we love to have our speakers on display as some kind of sonic work of art, many others believe that no speaker could ever be considered anything other than an eyesore. There are two solutions to this view. First, the speakers can be designed to be hidden. In-wall or in-ceiling designs, in-wall speakers or just really small speakers, aim for this. With the smallest speakers, they end up on top of entertainment systems (usually pushed back and out of sight) or behind plants. The second solution is to make speakers that are so unique that they start to become a design choice. Often this is at the expense of sound quality. With a company like Jamo, that's unlikely to be the case. The new 360 series of satellite speakers are designed to turn heads and ears. Uniquely designed and sonically functional, these speakers are more like small sculptures than speakers. The main speaker cabinet is essentially a sphere with a cutout that can be covered with a metal grill. At the top of the cutout is a downward-firing tweeter with the bottom of the cutout sporting a firing midrange driver. Jamo has coined this design "Omnipolar" referring to how sound is distributed from the speaker rather than towards the front baffle . PZA. more features