The G4 Cube comes with a pair of crystal-clear, eyeball-shaped
speakers created by Harman Kardon and Apple. They belt out 20
fair-sounding watts (10 per channel) of sonic force between the
frequencies of 80Hz and 20KHz -- all through the power of the Cube's
USB port. They are able to achieve this wattage from the USB bus
because of the efficiency of the digital amplifier found in a box along
the USB cable. The amp even has an analog headphone jack -- great
because the Cube itself has no I/O for speakers or microphones (other
than via USB add-ons). The Cube Speakers require "special" 10-watt USB
ports to work at full volume. The Cube has these ports, as do all Apple
ADC monitors. These special USB ports are sometimes called 20-watt
ports by Apple, because the two ports share a single 20-watt supply of
power, however, the Cube Speakers only use 10 watts per channel.
Regular USB ports only supply 2.5 watts - so don't bother trying to run
your original Cube speakers off your USB hubs or keyboards.
Although you may think the bowling-ball hole grills that cover the Cube
speakers are attractive, Apple actually intended them to be removed for
better sound quality, so go ahead and take them off! The digital
amplifier module includes locking loop for theft prevention and
miniplug for connecting stereo headphones
The Apple Pro Speakers,
which look identical to the Cube's USB orb speakers, use a proprietary
digital audio connector rather than USB; this connector is found only
on G4 towers (not Cubes) made January 2001 and later. In other words...
no, they are not interchangeable.
Can I use an iSub subwoofer
with my Cube speakers?
Yes you can, but only if you are running OS X 10.1 or later. As
overheard in the Forums: " I have my iSub connected via a
bus-powered hub off the Cube and it works just fine with the stock ball
speakers that came with the Cube. The separate volume control sliders
and mute checkboxes make it easy to set the sound balance between the
two speaker systems. About the only problem I've found is that the Mute
button on the Apple Pro Keyboard (it would be numbered 'F18' - right
next to the Eject button) only mutes the main speakers — the iSub keeps
on thumping!" Mac OS 9.x does not allow use of the USB-based Cube
speakers and the iSub at the same time. OS 9 does not have the
capability to utilize multiple audio-out USB connections at the same
time, so you can use one or the other, but not both.
How about
SoundSticks?
If the bundled speakers don't muster up enough
juice for you -- i.e. you want better, richer sound -- you may want to
check out Harman Kardon's SoundSticks. Based on the original design of
the iSub , the powered, 3-amplifier subwoofer doles out power to two
10-watt totem-like satellites, each with four 1-inch transducers for a
total of 40 watts of sweet noise. As if H/K and Apple hadn't confused
us already by making the Cube's USB speakers and the digital audio
Apple Pro speakers look identical, they made the iSub and the subwoofer
for the SoundSticks look identical too. Again... they are not
interchangeable.
What other speakers can I attach and
how?
A few recommendations...
The Griffin
Technology iMic USB Audio Interface: The iMic™ universal audio
adapter is a USB device that adds a stereo input and output to your
Cube. This allows the connection of virtually any microphone or sound
input device. The iMic supports both line and Mic level
input as well as line level output for any USB capable
computer. Although in principle the iMic can record and emit sounds at
24-bit resolution, Apple's audio manager limits it to just 16-bit
resolution.
Installing the iMic is trivial - plug it into a USB
port and Apple's built-in audio driver takes over. Once your Mac has
recognized the iMic, you'll see new audio input and output sources in
the Sound control panel. Select a source, and you can immediately
record sounds from anything plugged into the microphone port or listen
to headphones or speakers plugged into the output port (depending upon
which port you've selected).
For $35 of ease of use, you won't find a better solution; but for
professional use, you may want to take a look at the Griffin
Powerwave USB Audio Interface & Amplifier, which has stereo RCA
jacks and minijack ports and includes the cables necessary to connect
the unit to your stereo or iPod.
The ONKYO MSE-U33HB USB
Digital Audio Processor or the ONKYO SE-U55 External
USB Digital Audio Processor ( PC / Mac ) will allow you to use your
favorite analog speakers with the Cube, as well as provide a versatile
input interface.
Other speakers to consider for your Cube
include the Monsoon iM-700 Flat Panel Audio System, which is
compatible with USB computers! The renowned iM-700 is now USB
enabled through an "ice" colored in-line cable attachment
that converts the digital USB output to an analog 1/8" plug. This
allows the iM-700s to be both digital and analog capable so the system
can be connected to a sound card using a 1/8" headphone jack
connector or the USB port. The iM-700 USB system with PFT Planar
Focus Technology produces crystal clear highs, powerful lows and the
incredible imaging that is ideal for sound FX editing, commercial audio
production as well as personal and professional multimedia use. The
system comes with integrated amplifier/subwoofer, 2 PFT satellite
speakers, and a remote volume puck.
If you need more features
such as digital or optical inputs/outputs, Dolby Digital, MP3 servers,
etc...there is a wide selection of such products on the market. Check
out some of them below:
ONKYO MSE-U33HB USB
Digital Audio Processor
ONKYO SE-U55 External
USB Digital Audio Processor ( PC / Mac )
http://www.media-assistance.com/
http://www.edirol.com
http://www.emagic.de/english/products/hardware/emi26.
html
http://www.stereo-link.com/
http://www.midiman.net/products/consumer/sonica_page1.
php
http://www.slimdevices.com/
http://www.xitel.com/