logo
Amazon throws a rare Marshall Emberton II promo, knocking it under $100

Amazon throws a rare Marshall Emberton II promo, knocking it under $100

Phone Arena7 hours ago
Bluetooth speaker
Get the Marshall Emberton II for 44% off
$80 off (44%)
The Marshall Emberton II has dropped just under the $100 mark for the first time in 2025. The speaker has a rugged yet stylish build, gets plenty loud for its size, and sports a stunning 44% discount. The promo only applies to the Black & Steel model. Get yours at Amazon.
Buy at Amazon
Receive the latest mobile news
Subscribe
By subscribing you agree to our terms and conditions and privacy policy
Grab Surfshark VPN now at more than 50% off and with 3 extra months for free!
Secure your connection now at a bargain price!
We may earn a commission if you make a purchase
Check Out The Offer
The 4th of July celebrations might be winding down, but Amazon's still in a festive mood—offering a massive 44% discount on the Marshall Emberton II. That brings the small but mightyjust under $100 for the first time in 2025!Yep, this music companion dropped under $100 during last year's Black Friday and Cyber Monday sales, but it hasn't seen a major discount since. So, if you missed your chance to save all those months ago, now's the perfect time to grab it at its best price!Sure, there's a new Emberton III in town, but this one still hasn't received a significant discount. At best, Amazon has offered it for about $140, which isn't exactly as tempting as this killer Emberton II deal.But what's so good about this fella? Quite a lot, actually. First, it has a rugged design with an IP67 rating, and it's compact and light enough to carry around anywhere you go.Moreover, it offers rich and powerful 360-degree sound. It gets surprisingly loud for its size, particularly indoors. Just keep in mind that the audio might distort slightly at higher volumes. You can also pair it with other Emberton II speakers for a louder and more immersive soundstage.The device isn't half bad in terms of battery life, either. You can expect over 30 hours of music per charge, which is way more than what most other Bluetooth speakers on the market promise.Overall, the Marshall Emberton II is ideal for casual home use and small gatherings. It certainly won't rock your world like, say, a Boombox 3, but it still gives you loud and clear audio. Add Amazon's rare 44% discount, and you've got one of the best sub-$100 speakers money can buy right now. Hurry up and save while the promo lasts.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

I tried using China's best flagship phone this summer, but it fought me every step of the way
I tried using China's best flagship phone this summer, but it fought me every step of the way

Phone Arena

timean hour ago

  • Phone Arena

I tried using China's best flagship phone this summer, but it fought me every step of the way

I've been trying to land a new candy bar flagship phone to use as a daily driver since getting slightly bored with the otherwise exceptional Vivo X Fold 3 Pro, and my sights were set on a device I actually reviewed a few months ago but totally forgot about. However, as much as I wished to pop in my SIM card inside this device and call it a day for the rest of the summer, the gremlins associated with this otherwise awesome phone once again raised their heads. The phone in question is the Oppo Find X8 Ultra, and the reason for my woes is the Chinese version of the ColorOS software on board, and all the intricate issues that are associated with it. Okay, let me talk you through my thought process as to why the forbidden Oppo fruit appears to be so sweet but oh-so-high up the tree. When it comes to hardware, I stand by my words that no other phone is as well-endowed. It has the Snapdragon 8 Elite, which is among the best mobile chipsets right now, and it is an undisputable necessity when you want a proper flagship in 2025. Paired with 16GB of RAM and up to 12GB of virtual memory, this one is perfectly capable of meeting any multitasking needs. More importantly here, however, is the simply lovely camera setup at the rear. The Oppo Find X8 Ultra boasts quad 50MP cameras at the rear, with a short 3.0X telephoto and a longer 6.0X periscope zoom, but the key number here is the size of the sensor behind the main camera. It's an 1-inch sensor, which puts the phone in an exclusive club of phones with exceptionally large camera sensors. Obviously, a very appealing hardware feature that I'd certainly love to have on deck! Then, there's the extra-large 6,100mAh battery, which helps the Oppo Find X8 Ultra find itself in the top three in terms of battery life among all 2025 phones we've tested so far. With a nearly nine-hour battery estimate, it's pretty much ahead of its rivals in our custom tests, save from the Vivo X200 Ultra. Now, some may argue that the Vivo X200 Ultra is technically a superior device, and I'd definitely agree to a point, but the combination between awesome camera, battery life, and performance is admittedly superior on the Oppo Find X8 Ultra in our tests. This makes it the logical choice if you want to squeeze out the best value out of any 2025 Ultra flagship. And the rest of the package is excellent, too! We get extremely decent stereo speakers, a very bright OLED screen, precise and strong haptic feedback, IP69 water and dust resistance, and a capacitive camera button that's actually useful. However, this is where the hardware bliss ends and the software nightmare begins. The Oppo Find X8 Ultra has the best camera I've seen See, I really wanted to use the Oppo Find X8 Ultra. I thought I was perfectly aware of all the sacrifices I'd have to make when dealing with a phone intended for the internal Chinese market. I was ready to give up the Google Discover panel to the left of the home screen, I was okay with losing Circle to Search, and I was almost ready to part ways with Gemini as the default voice assistant. Likewise, I was also mentally prepared to debloat the interface by uninstalling whatever preinstalled Chinese apps I could. Then, I migrated all of my data with Oppo's handy PhoneClone app and went through the tedious process of setting up all accounts and apps, customizing the home screen layout and all other phone settings, and then the issues began. First things first, although there wasn't an obvious issue with my SIM card, the Oppo Find X8 Ultra would only receive half of all the messages I was supposed to receive. How do I know that? Well, I didn't receive 2FA for half of the apps I use, and the worst part is that those apps are banking and messaging ones, so absolutely crucial. Telegram, an essential app for me, doesn't let me log in because the SMS code I was supposed to receive never actually came through. And while Google Pay seemingly works fine on this phone, the app simply wouldn't let me add a specific credit card, which is another major deal-breaker. My unfortunate muscle memory always seemed to trigger the Breeno assistant on the phone with the power button. One could think that a possible workaround would be to download a button mapper and manually map Gemini to get enabled instead of the stock Chinese AI assistant with the power button, yet none of the apps I tried seemed to work reliably; the system just wouldn't let me do what I wanted. The same applies to the stock launcher. While Android launchers really fell off in the past few years with nothing exciting happening on the scene, I tried running the good ol' Nova Launcher on the Oppo Find X8 Ultra, and lo and behold, ColorOS would once again show its teeth and put a stick in my wheel. I had to go through some crazy hoops to be able to set a custom Android launcher as the default one, and every time I'd swipe up to get to the home screen, the phone would deliberately lag for two seconds. While I'm no quitter, the combination of all these software problems sadly sealed the fate of this phone as my daily driver. This is why I can't recommend the Oppo Find X8 Ultra, even though its hardware is pretty much perfect. You may have a good experience with phones intended for the internal Chinese market. Some of you definitely have the skills necessary to nullify all of these interface handicaps and turn a phone never destined to reach the Western markets into a perfectly usable and capable device. To my great ire, the Oppo Find X8 Ultra never got a global release, so whatever you, or I do, it will never work 100% as intended outside of China. Alternatives? Of all Ultra phones released so far in 2025, only the Xiaomi 15 Ultra got a global release, but it was ruined with a smaller battery, which isn't ideal when paired with HyperOS 2's awful battery optimization. The Vivo X200 Ultra is out of the question, as it's also a China-exclusive. What you're left with is the Galaxy S25 Ultra, which isn't bleeding-edge tech, and you also have to deal with the quirks of One UI 7. Secure your connection now at a bargain price! We may earn a commission if you make a purchase Check Out The Offer

If Samsung Foundry gets this job, the whole industry should be prepared for a major shakeup
If Samsung Foundry gets this job, the whole industry should be prepared for a major shakeup

Phone Arena

timean hour ago

  • Phone Arena

If Samsung Foundry gets this job, the whole industry should be prepared for a major shakeup

Last year, Samsung Foundry's inability to make enough Exynos 2500 APs due to Samsung Foundry's low yield cost Sammy a ton of money. The original plan was for Samsung to power the base Galaxy S25 and the Galaxy S25+ models in most markets with the homegrown Exynos 2500 AP. Unable to build as many Exynos 2500 SoCs as it needed, Samsung ended up using Qualcomm's Snapdragon 8 Elite for Galaxy APs on all models which cost Samsung an extra $400 million that it hadn't expected to need. Samsung faces a similar issue with next year's Galaxy S26 and Galaxy S26 + models. The difference this time is whether the company's foundry can manufacture enough Exynos 2600 chipsets. A foundry's yield is the percentage of chips manufactured from a silicon wafer that are defect-free and have passed Quality Control. Most foundries aim for a 70% yield before they start to mass produce a certain SoC. Low yields can lead to higher manufacturing costs and result in a customer paying higher prices for their chips. Leaker @Jukanlosreve says that Samsung Foundry is in line to get an important order for chips from Nvidia. | Image credit-X Samsung Foundry is trying to make a comeback. As we noted, it hopes to improve its 2nm yield fast enough to produce enough Exynos 2600 APs to power the Galaxy S26 and Galaxy S26 + in most markets except for the U.S., China, and Canada. That could make those phones the first to employ 2nm chipsets. A report out of South Korea today suggests that Samsung Foundry is hoping to get a contract from Nvidia to build its next-gen GPU (Graphics Processing Unit) using its 2nm process node. Because GPUs use parallel processing allowing them to perform many tasks simultaneously, they are more suitable for use as AI accelerators than CPUs (Central Processing Units) are. CPU's use sequential processing which make them less useful for AI. AI accelerators significantly speed up the processing of Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning workloads. The latest yield rate for Samsung Foundry's 2nm process node is 40% and by the end of the year, it is expected to hit the level that will allow the foundry to become a legitimate alternative to TSMC. Getting Nvidia's GPU business could help Samsung Foundry's reputation (which needs a shot in the arm) and its market share. At 7.7% during Q1 2025, Samsung Foundry is well behind TSMC's global market share of approximately 67.6%. Samsung Foundry might already be on the rise as it built the Nvidia designed Tegra T239 SoC that powers the popular Nintendo Switch 2 game console. The foundry used its mature 8nm Deep Ultraviolet (DUV) process node to manufacture the component taking the Tegra business away from TSMC. Secure your connection now at a bargain price! We may earn a commission if you make a purchase Check Out The Offer

With iPhone 17 and Galaxy S26, Apple and Samsung are diverging hardware strategies
With iPhone 17 and Galaxy S26, Apple and Samsung are diverging hardware strategies

Phone Arena

time4 hours ago

  • Phone Arena

With iPhone 17 and Galaxy S26, Apple and Samsung are diverging hardware strategies

Apple and Samsung smartphones have often been called identical in many ways, and to an extent that is very true: modern flagship phones don't differ much in power and cameras. However, two separate reports have come in from reputable sources about the Galaxy S26, and it seems that it will differ in one key aspect compared to the iPhone reports, courtesy of two reliable sources, pertain to both companies' upcoming flagship products: the Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra and the iPhone 17 Pro Max. While previous reports have alleged that the next Pro Max will increase in thickness, these new reports add on to that and reveal that the Ultra will be even slimmer. From what I can tell, Samsung is applying its design philosophy for the Galaxy S25 Edge to its top tier model, while Apple is opting for more battery space instead. If current rumors ( not confirmed reports ) are anything to go by, then the iPhone 17 Pro Max will come with a 5,000 mAh battery. However, so will the S26 Ultra , with some predicting that Samsung may finally use denser battery technology to achieve the same capacity in less space. The S25 Ultra continued Samsung's trend of 5,000 mAh batteries. | Video credit — Samsung According to the reports, the iPhone 17 Pro Max will be 8.76 mm thick, and the S26 Ultra will be less than 8 mm but over 7 mm. The current iPhone 16 Pro Max is 8.25 mm thick, which means that Apple is no longer trying to slim down its flagship model each year. If an Apple user wants a slimmer experience, they'll have to go for the iPhone 17 Air, which will only have a battery capacity of 2,800 is doing what I've been wanting phone companies to do for a long time: increasing battery capacity instead of slimming down an already very slim phone. And if Samsung really is continuing to slim down its phones, then the following few years will introduce a major difference between the iPhone and Galaxy phones. Chinese phones are hitting the limit of silicon batteries, with some phones even reaching 8,000 mAh capacities: like the Honor Power. While 5,000 mAh on the iPhone 17 Pro Max isn't much, it's still more than its predecessor. I'm glad that at least one of these two top dogs is moving in what I think is the right direction. Secure your connection now at a bargain price! We may earn a commission if you make a purchase Check Out The Offer

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store