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Awake gently to great music from your iPhone or iPod, or get updated with news from the radio with the Philips DC290. Make your mornings brighter with crystal clear sound and add a dash of style to your bedroom with the aluminum cabinet..../ Philips DC290/37 Docking Clock Radio for iPod/iPhone (Aluminium) / remote control
Gently wake to your favorite iPod/iPhone tunes or FM radio, complete with separate weekday/weekend alarm times. Or simply enjoy your music with this docking clock radio from Philips. This stylish system is decked out in a sleek aluminum case, for looks to match any room.
A stylish iPod/iPhone docking clock radio in a sleek aluminum case. Click here for a larger image. |
Start the Day Your Way
Play and Charge Your iPhone/iPod
Enjoy your favorite tunes while your iPhone/iPod gets a charge. The dock fits most docking iPod/iPhones, and while you're listening, it provides a charge--no need to worry about your battery running out.
Dual alarm feature lets you set different alarm times for weekdays and weekends, or for you and a companion. |
Auxiliary input for connecting other MP3 players, non-docking iPods, etc. |
Digital FM Tuner
Tune in to FM radio to get your morning news, traffic reports, or other live broadcasts. Presets let you quickly access stored favorites.
Rich, Clear Sound
The DC290/37 packs 10 watts RMS total output power. The Dynamic Bass Boost feature maximizes your music enjoyment by enhancing the low end no matter the volume setting--this is similar to "loudness" features on other systems, allowing you to get consistent, full-range sound even at lower listening levels. Philips also lets you dial it in with "Digital Sound Control," or preset EQ curves for different musical styles (Jazz, Rock, Pop, and Classical), so you can get the most out of your music.
Dual Alarm Clock
Whatever your alarm needs, the DC290/37's ready. A dual alarm feature lets you set different alarm times for weekdays and weekends, or vary the alarm settings for you and a companion. Forget the hassle of fiddling with different alarm times every single night, and set it up for your lifestyle.
You can wake to an FM radio station or your favorite iPhone/iPod tunes from a docked device. A "gentle wake" feature gradually increases the alarm volume to wake you without jarring you out of sleep.
Auxiliary Input
Philips' "MP3 link" connection (a 3.5-mm auxiliary input) lets you plug in your other MP3 players, CD players, or pretty much anything with a line out. So if you have other devices besides iPods/iPhones, or non-docking iPods such as the shuffle models, you'll still get to enjoy it over the system's speakers.
What's in the Box
Philips DC290/37 docking clock radio, remote control, auxiliary audio cable, and documentation.
.../ Philips DC290/37 Docking Clock Radio for iPod/iPhone (Aluminium) / remote control- Compatibility: iPod mini; iPod nano 1G, 2G, 3G, 4G, 5G; iPod classic 5G, 5.5G, 6G; iPod touch 1G, 2G; iPhone, iPhone 3G/3GS
- Wake to iPod/iPhone or FM radio with dual alarms; separate weekday/weekend settings
- 10 watts (2 x 5) output power with Dynamic Bass Boost and selectable EQ curves
- Auxiliary input for connecting external audio devices
- Stylish aluminum design for durable good looks
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Product Brand : Philips | Model : DC290/37
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Philips DC290/37 Docking Clock Radio for iPod/iPhone (Aluminium)
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Perfect Compact iPod Speaker System : Philips DC290/37 Docking Clock Radio for iPod/iPhone (Aluminium)
As far as clock radios go, this is a nice device. It looks nice, sounds nice, and the clock display is easy to read. (I should mention that I haven't actually used the alarm function. I'm using it as an iPod dock that happens to have a built-in clock, rather than as an alarm clock.) The iPod doc connector also seems to work well, and it comes with a remote control. All good so far.
My one complaint is that they really screwed up the controls for playing music from the iPod, both on the unit itself and on the remote. For starters, they roughly mimicked the look of the iPod controls on the remote (having four buttons on a ring around a fifth button) which would be great if the layout of the individual buttons was actually the same as the iPod. Instead, everything is all shuffled around. For example, next and previous are the top and bottom buttons, not the right and left buttons. The menu button is actually elsewhere on the remote, and the left and right buttons are now fast-forward and rewind buttons.
So far this rearrangement is unnecessarily confusing verging on deceptive, but it's nothing compared to what they did to the middle button. The middle button is both the "OK" button (just like the middle button on the iPod) and the play/pause button (like the bottom button on the iPod). It's actually labelled in a way that indicates this triple meaning, but I was unable to figure out when it acts like "OK" and when it acts like play/pause without very carefully re-reading the manual. Apparently, which meaning the button has at any moment is based on whether or not any other button was pressed in the last 10 seconds. So to play an album or playlist using the clock or remote controls you have to navigate to it, WAIT 10 SECONDS for the OK button to silently start behaving like a play button, and then press OK/play/pause. If you're too fast it'll go into the album/playlist rather than playing it. There also doesn't seem to be any outward indication of when this magic timer has expired, so you're left guessing what the behavior of the button will be when you press it.
Because of the ridiculous controls it's usually much simpler to just use the iPod's own controls rather than those on the clock radio or the remote. This means the remote is next to useless.