Skullcandy Air Raid Bluetooth Speaker

Skullcandy Air Raid Bluetooth SpeakerAnother day, another Bluetooth speaker is introduced to the fold of ever growing products and devices, and this time around, we have Skullcandy that has just recently announced their Air Raid Bluetooth speaker. Skullcandy has been around for quite some time already, being famous for rolling out audio gear such as headphones and earbuds that ooze with quality, so a slight departure from their bread and butter to a Bluetooth speaker is definitely more than welcome.

The Skullcandy Air Raid Bluetooth speaker will come in the form of a ruggedized box which will be fitted with a couple of 50mm drivers, where it will also be accompanied by a battery that is capable of holding a charge for up to 14 hours. In fact, it has been described to be “built like a tank and loud as hell.” Skullcandy is more than happy to announce that their new Air Raid happens to be a whole lot louder than the competition, who claims that it is 200% and 33% noisier compared to its rivals, the Jambox and Beats Pill, respectively.

The asking price for this particular puppy? $150 a pop, so if you have the faith (and the money, of course) to drop such an amount of coin, do let us know how the experience is.

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  • Skullcandy Air Raid Bluetooth Speaker original content from Ubergizmo.

        



    Complete Copy of Atari 2600 Air Raid for Sale: Duck and Cover Your Wallet

    If a vintage video game is rare enough, it can sell for huge money. Back in 2010, a copy of the Atari 2600 game Air Raid sold for $31,600. The reason is because it was the only known copy with a box. Now another copy of Air Raid has shown up with both the box and instruction manual. That makes this the only known complete copy in existence. As of now it is up to nearly $18,000 on an online auction.

    air raid

    This complete copy of Air Raid was discovered by a family in Southern California. Their father was given the game by a sales rep for the company Men-A-Vision while he tended to a game retail space in a local drug store.

    atari 2600 air raid box

    After the store closed he was given the video game stock and the Atari display kiosk, where these games have been stored for about thirty years.

    atari 2600 game display

    They read about the selling price of the first one and of course liked what they heard. I wonder how high it will go before the auction ends on November 4th.

    [via Geekosystem]