This was posted 4 years 8 months 29 days ago, and might be an out-dated deal.

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Sony Extra Bass Portable Bluetooth Speaker (SRSXB32) $149 (Was $229) @ Myer

200

Take the party with you, with the SRSXB32 wireless speaker.

This powerful speaker features two large full-range drivers and two passive-radiators to deliver deep, punchy bass. A new water and dust resistant design lets you enjoy music anywhere.

Party lights, including strobe lights, Wireless Party Chain, LIVE sound mode,Party Booster and music playback controls are also featured, for an even better wireless party experience.

The SRSXB32 also offers easy Bluetooth pairing with NFC, speaker-phone function and 24 hour battery stamina. This powerful speaker is your ideal Smartphone party companion.

https://www.myer.com.au/search?pageNumber=1&query=sony+bluet…

Extra Bass Portable Bluetooth Speaker Black XB22 price $99.00
Extra Bass Portable Bluetooth Speaker Black XB32 price was $229.00 Now $149.00
Ultimate Bluetooth Speaker Blue SRSXB41 price was $269.00 Now $199.00

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  • +3

    Bought this a few months ago, battery died after a few uses. Even though it's nice looking, would not recommend this for its reliability

    • +3

      I've bought a few 32's for home and work, and haven't had any issues.

    • Is it made in Japan? If not, it won't last 20 years plus. Only buy Made in Japan if you want quality electronics for your house.

      • Seriously, who keeps electronics for 20yrs?

        • Wasteful generation.

          • -2

            @dreamscene: No, your plain silly and delusional if you actually think electronics will last 20 years. In 20 years almost all modern day technology will be redundant and be replaced with newer and cheaper product

            • +1

              @BrokeB-tch: Even if it's obsolete, there is no reason consumer electronics like this should not be built to last 20 years.

            • +2

              @BrokeB-tch:

              No, your plain silly and delusional if you actually think electronics will last 20 years. In 20 years almost all modern day technology will be redundant and be replaced with newer and cheaper product

              Speak for yourself.

              I have two (made in Japan) Plasma TVs from 2008/2010, two (made in Japan) Mini Hi-Fi systems from 2001/2003, a (made in Japan) Blu-Ray player from 2011, two PCs from roughly a decade ago and a laptop from 2013. All are in excellent working order and only the PCs have required some minor upgrades (new GPUs and SSDs) to stay competitive in terms of performance.

              I'll take the picture quality of my Plasmas over 90% of the garbage LCD TVs on offer today (and paired with a HiMedia Q10 media player, they become far more fully-featured than any so-called "Smart TV") and the sound quality of my Mini Hi-Fi systems is unbelievably better than anything I've heard in the last 2 decades from products that cost around the same money I paid for those systems (I have bought and either returned or resold so many speakers, headphones and audio products in the last decade that it's not funny, simply because they all sound like utter garbage).

              Planned obsolescence and rampant cost-cutting has meant even newer-generation technology is still hampered by significant QC issues, even when brand-new and often represents a regression in overall user experience (2 steps forward, 3 steps backward seems to be the design and engineering mantra these days).

              At work I installed three 75" Sony Bravia LCDs, each being around $6000 when new, and within the first 3 years of their lifespans one of them suffered two main board failures (caused by a known manufacturing fault affecting these models) and all of them are unbelievably sluggish when booting, navigating menus and loading built-in apps, thanks to the completely underpowered internals used in them. I keep comparing them to any mid-range Plasma that starts in a few seconds, never has to reboot to install Android updates, doesn't have inexplicable delays when performing simple operations and still has better blacks and contrast.

              A few years ago I installed a $33,000 wide-format plotter as well that suffered so many failures within the first year of ownership that the cost of the parts replaced nearly equalled the value of the unit. The older wide-format plotters it replaced might have been slower when printing but they operated for over a decade with minimal parts replacement.

              Some of the most-prized audiophile gear on the resale market today are "vintage" amps, receivers and tallboy/bookshelf speakers from the 1980s/1990s, because they sound a million times better than the over-heating, inconsistently out-of-spec and cheaply-made crap that's pumped out today. Fundamentally, receivers, amps and speakers have not changed much since the 1980s, save for the inputs, outputs and encoding used, and the basic physics of sound in relation to human hearing can only advance so far.

              Newer is not always better and the myth of linear societal progress is what causes many people to be so close-minded and ignorant these days.

              • +2

                @Miami Mall Alien: These kids grew up on MP3 quality noise, they wouldn't know what high quality music sounds like. My 90's JVC full stack stereo blows people away with it's sound quality and they wake up to the rubbish that is manufactured now.

      • I seriously doubt you could find any “portable” electronic with battery in them that will last 10 years, even “Made in Japan” one.

  • Thanks op got one

  • Is this comparable to a Megaboom? Mine just died, and having trouble justifying another 200.

    • +1

      I think spec wise it sits just below the megaboom

      this is because sony has another model that sits above the megaboom xb42

  • I got one from a Hardly Normal deal a while back.No issues for me and a surprisingly good sound.
    Hit it!

  • Owned a couple for a few years.. It's cool how you can connect 2 or more at once. Only issue with one of them is it doesn't quite sound as loud as the other

  • Same deal at JB HiFi until 31/5.

    XB32 $149
    XB41 $199

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