Transparent presented the “brutal” speaker Brutalist, weighing 12 kg and priced at $4000

Transparent from Sweden introduced the $4,000 Brutalist wireless speaker, the design of which is radically different from the transparent glass speakers with which the brand began its journey. Powerful sound and modern technology are hidden behind a stark, geometric aluminum façade. Brutalist is about 58 cm high and resembles a miniature skyscraper in the Brutalist architectural style, characteristic of Britain, the USSR and other countries in the second half of the last century.

Image Source: Transparent

Inside the Brutalist are two three-inch tweeters positioned at 90 degrees to each other, and a 6.5-inch subwoofer on the opposite side. The speaker supports high resolution audio (up to 192 kHz/24 bit) and works with popular formats (MP3, FLAC, WAV). The company recommends placing the speaker in the corner of the room so that the sound bounces off the walls and fills the space as much as possible. However, as The Verge writes, the Brutalist does not have a built-in battery and operates from a wall outlet. Weighing in at 26.5 pounds, the device won’t be easy to move around and it’s worth thinking about its placement in advance.

Image Source: Transparent

Despite the fact that the speaker carries the aesthetics of the brutalist style and is reminiscent of the 1950s, its functions are fully consistent with the latest technological trends. Brutalist supports audio streaming via Bluetooth 5.2, Wi-Fi, Apple AirPlay 2, Tidal Connect, Spotify Connect and Amazon Music. Two 3.5mm inputs allow you to connect other audio sources via cable. However, despite being compatible with Amazon Alexa, the speaker does not have its own microphone, which limits voice assistant integration.

Image source: transpa.rent

It is noted that the development took Transparent three years. One of the main challenges was the use of 70% recycled aluminum. “Of course, we spent a lot of time in production to get all the modules perfectly aligned and deliver great sound, but actually sourcing recycled aluminum for the cabinet was a challenge,” Transparent design director Per Brickstad told Wired. The result is a speaker with a unique design and modern functionality.

Image Source: Transparent

admin

Share
Published by
admin

Recent Posts

Battle Shapers – fear of ambition. Review

Not defined Roguelikes with a first-person perspective are a fairly niche genre segment, but they…

3 hours ago

ASRock introduced industrial mini-PCs and motherboards based on Intel Arrow Lake-H and AMD Ryzen 300 AI

ASRock Industrial, according to the CNX-Software resource, presented industrial computers of a small form factor…

4 hours ago

The potential US Secretary of Transportation promised to deal with SpaceX fines and eliminate the space bureaucracy

This week, Congress held confirmation hearings for new ministers nominated by new US President Donald…

5 hours ago

Vast Space has built the world’s first private space station; it will go into orbit this year

California-based startup Vast Space has announced the completion of the world's first commercial space station,…

5 hours ago

Qualcomm began releasing defective Snapdragon 8 Elite

In October, Qualcomm introduced the flagship processor Snapdragon 8 Elite, which received two powerful cores…

9 hours ago

Samsung TVs will receive useful AI functions thanks to integration with OpenAI neural networks

Samsung has previously announced the development of functions based on Vision AI artificial intelligence that…

9 hours ago