But the Rolly is not simply a portable speaker with an integrated music player--it's a party machine...and it likes to dance. It accomplishes this with a variety of characteristics. First are the two wheels that surround the body and allow the unit to roll around as well as wiggle and spin. Next to each wheel is an LED capable of displaying 700 shades of colors (best viewed in the dark). Then, there are the end flaps that are built on two rotating hinges. The flaps act a lot like hands and offer the most personality. (One fluttering motion is distinctly "jazz hands".) The Rolly can dance to any song loaded on the device based on song analysis, but this is a little underwhelming. By far the best and most amusing dances are those that are choreographed, and the unit comes with a few preloaded. You can also choreograph any of your songs using the included software, and you can share the motion files with others, who can then pair them to the specific songs for which they are made.
As far as usability goes, the Rolly is unsurprisingly atypical. The controls consist of the two wheels, a power/Bluetooth switch, and a play button on the top of the device. Once the device is on, you click play once to listen to music or twice quickly to activate the motion along with the audio playback. The wheels work differently depending on whether the Rolly is resting horizontally on a surface or held vertically in your hand (it utilizes Sony's G-Sensor technology to sense positioning). While it's on a surface, a quick roll forward or backward skips through tracks while a longer roll shuttles through folders. Folders can be designate in Windows Explorer, or if you use a program such as Rhapsody, they are automatically created and are sorted by artist. When you're holding the Rolly, the top ring skips tracks and folders while the bottom adjusts volume.
Finally, there's the matter of sound quality, an important consideration in any music device. The Rolly is a reasonable performer in this regard, though I have been thus far underwhelmed by the bass response. The built-in soft dome speakers feature neodymium magnets and this combined with the speaker flaps directs sound and conveys the shape of the sound by reflecting it from surfaces. Overall, music sounds pretty good but not great; the Rolly suffers like many other speakers of this size from shallow sounding audio. But then how many portable speaker/MP3 player/robotic eggs dance to your music?
What You'll Pay
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