LaCie FireWire Speakers
Designed by Neil Poulton, LaCie's FireWire speakers
look as though they might have been inspired by a trip on a cruise liner, so
closely do they resemble ships' funnels. Then again, they could just as easily
have taken their cues from the Teletubbies' Moo Moo.
However they came about, these speakers look much more
attractive than your average computer speaker assembly. They connect to your Mac
using a FireWire 400 port, rather than the more usual 3.5mm jack. This has two
advantages: it means the signal passed from your Mac is data that's only decoded
when it gets to the speaker, which should result in a better sound, and it means
you don't need to plug the speakers into mains power, as they get all they need
over the FireWire bus. Should you connect them to a device without a FireWire
port - an iPod, say - there's a 3.5mm input jack and a DC power input (you'll
need your own adaptor).
Setup was fairly straightforward, with one unnerving
caveat: having plugged the speakers in, connected them together, and made the
relevant settings adjustment in the Sound pane of System Preferences, pressing
play in iTunes resulted in Camera Obscura's Hey Lloyd, I'm ready to be
Heartbroken being played at several times its normal speed.
The fault turned out to be an incorrect setting in the
Audio Midi Setup utility, a bug affecting PowerPC-based Macs and these speakers.
With that sorted, sound quality was excellent. Deep bass, crisp treble, and
plenty in the mid range. At € 99,- they're not cheap, but these LaCie
FireWire speakers are elegant, save on cable clutter and sound
great.
By Kenny Hemph (MacUser)
Posted: Wed - February 28, 2007 at 10:11 PM