How to bring listening pleasure to your desktop
BBC Music Magazine
|June 2025
Our expert Chris Haslam gives advice on buying the latest hi-fi equipment
-
The average UK employee will spend roughly 3,515 full days at work - that's 90,000 hours or one third of their time awake. What's more, around 63 per cent of us now work some of those long hours from home, which, by my loose calculations, means you owe it to yourself to upgrade the terrible speakers built into your laptop. In short, it's time to transform your home office listening with a pair of dedicated desktop speakers.
It's no surprise that ultra-thin laptops - just like the latest televisions - have poor audio. There's simply not enough space for proper speakers, and your enjoyment of audio, video, gaming and even Zoom calls suffers. A pair of stereo speakers, plugged into your laptop via USB, USB-C or 3.5mm headphone jack, or wirelessly using Bluetooth, will do wonderful things to the audio trapped in your computer. Even the cheapest design, such as the £30 Logitech Z150 and Creative Pebble V3, will be a serious improvement on the built-in speakers, but spend a little more and choose features that benefit how you work and listen to music, and you'll transform your home office into a personal listening room.
Bu hikaye BBC Music Magazine dergisinin June 2025 baskısından alınmıştır.
Binlerce özenle seçilmiş premium hikayeye ve 9.000'den fazla dergi ve gazeteye erişmek için Magzter GOLD'a abone olun.
Zaten abone misiniz? Oturum aç
BBC Music Magazine'den DAHA FAZLA HİKAYE
BBC Music Magazine
Thomas Søndergård Conductor
Danish conductor Thomas Søndergård is music director of the Minnesota Orchestra and Royal Scottish National Orchestra. He was a percussionist in the Royal Danish Orchestra, starting his conducting career with the premiere of Poul Ruders's opera Kafka's Trial, which opened the new Royal Danish Opera building. Music director of the BBC National Orchestra of Wales from 2012-18, Søndergård leads his second annual Nordic Soundscapes Festival in Minneapolis in January 2026.
3 mins
January 2026
BBC Music Magazine
A bold statement in the face of censorship
Erik Levi praises Hyeyoon Park's compelling pairing of two composers suppressed and stifled by political forces
2 mins
January 2026
BBC Music Magazine
Virtuosic, expressive and immersive pianism
Jessica Duchen is captured by Francesco Piemontesi's compelling interpretations of Brahms's piano works
1 mins
January 2026
BBC Music Magazine
The modern, affordable all-in-one CD player
UK CD sales peaked in 2001, when we bought 225.9 million discs worth £2.2 billion. Convenient, affordable and genuinely excellent in quality, the compact disc was, and remains, a format valued by listeners who want simplicity and reliability. These days, sales top out at 10.5 million, but there is renewed interest.
4 mins
January 2026
BBC Music Magazine
Johann Sebastian Bach Coffee Cantata
Paul Riley enjoys rich aromas aplenty as he filters through the tastiest recordings of Bach's comic take on an 18th-century caffeine obsession
6 mins
January 2026
BBC Music Magazine
Unboxed
This month's round-up celebrates Jodie Devos and dives deep into Schoenberg and Shostakovich
1 mins
January 2026
BBC Music Magazine
Delightful settings of English texts
Christopher Cook enjoys the debut album from well-matched musical partners
1 mins
January 2026
BBC Music Magazine
Thank you, Mr Holland...
As the Mr Holland's Opus Foundation approaches its 30th birthday, Michael Beek explores the charity's impact and the composer behind it
7 mins
January 2026
BBC Music Magazine
Morton Feldman
Ivan Hewett marks 100 years of an American modernist whose complex, sometimes lengthy scores ultimately reward those willing to listen
6 mins
January 2026
BBC Music Magazine
Keys to enlightenment
Once seen as an elite symbol of the West, the piano is today accessible to Indian people of all backgrounds, says Karishmeh Felfeli-Crawford
7 mins
January 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size

