Thursday, September 19, 2013

Jabra Sp700 Bluetooth Speakerphone

Jabra Sp700 Bluetooth Speakerphone

Jabra SP700 Bluetooth Speakerphone
From Jabra / GN Netcom

List Price: $99.99
Price: $54.99
Sale Price : Get Lowest Price ?

Product Description

The Smart Way to Drive - Jabra offers the latest in speakerphone technology ¿ the SP700. This stylish, versatile new speakerphone can be used on its own or to transmit the calls to your car¿s audio system with no installation necessary. What¿s more, this compact device can also be used to stream music stored on your mobile phone through your car stereo speakers, allowing you to enjoy your favorite track while driving. Driver friendly - the Jabra SP700 offers a new level of usability and safety for Bluetooth speakerphones. Intuitive voice announcements give you the speakerphone¿s status so you can keep your eyes on the road. Plus, excellent audio quality is guaranteed thanks to the advanced DSP noise reduction & echo cancellation that insure crystal clear sound quality on both sides of the call. The SP700 keeps up Jabra¿s speakerphone design heritage, offering a sleek slim-line design that easily blends in with your car¿s interior. Pair SP700 with your mobile phone and place it on your car¿s sun visor ¿ it¿s really that simple. Not keen on traditional headsets? With an intuitive `voice¿ feature, an FM transmitter and amazing sound quality, the Jabra SP700 is a stylish alternative for those who want to stay on the right side of law while taking calls at the wheel.

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #100777 in Cell Phone Accessories
  • Brand: Jabra / GN Netcom
  • Model: SP700
  • Original language:English
  • Dimensions: .26 pounds

Features

  • Play calls and music from your mobile phone on your car stereo via FM and Bluetooth transmission
  • Advanced DSP noise reduction and echo cancellation
  • Voice announcements so you can keep your eyes on the road
  • Use the supplied clip to attach the SP700 to your car's sun visor
  • Up to 14 hours of talk time, up to 255 hours of standby time

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Most helpful customer reviews

74 of 74 people found the following review helpful.This is a really cool device.I got one for my wife so she could answer and talk on the phone without looking for her headset and turning it on.Product works as advertised, and in fact has a number of novel features.The only "Con" is that it does not support a 2 phone household. It can only be paired to a single phone. It does not support multipoint or dual pairing like some other prodicts (the Jawbone headset). This means that to reconnect it to the secondary phone you must pair it again.Other than that:1) It's very loud. easy to hear2) uses standard USB to charge3) The FM feature allows you to listen to the caller through your car stereo4) the caller ID of the caller is spoken to you and broadast on your radio using RDS (so you can see the text of the phone number). Very nead.5) it announced when it has turned on, off, paired, enabled FM. It's fantastic to get this audible feedback so you know it's working.I highly reccomned this to anyone who needs a speakerphone for their car. My only caveat is that if you plan to share a car with 2 people it's not so great unless one person only uses the SP700. I would have given it 5 stars if it supported dual pairing.

42 of 43 people found the following review helpful.Pros:1. Easy to pair2. Very long lasting battery: went all week without charging3. Allows voice dialing if your phone supports that feature: press the unit until it beeps (about 2 seconds), the phone goes into listen-for-command voice dial mode; speak into SP700 the name you want to call as it appears in your phone's list (i.e., "Home"); the phone makes the call (I'm using a Nokia 6555--not all phones have the voice dialing function) UPDATE: works even better with iPhone 4.4. Compact.5. Easy to charge via its USB port6. Clear communication: both parties hear clearly (this is, after all, the main goal) with virtually no background interference or feedback7. Announces its state: electronic voice says, "Connected," "Power off," "Incoming call from xxx-xxx-xxxx," "Call ended"8. Automatically turns itself off 10 minutes after phone is out of range (30 feet9. Can play music or podcasts through it if you want--assuming you have a decent player on the phone; many don't10. Portable: it would work as a desktop speaker phone if you want and easily moves from vehicle to vehicle.11. Easy to travel with: especially useful with rental cars.Cons:1. Can only pair with one phone at a time--if you have a personal and a work phone it's one or the other2. Can be too loud--it defaults to a very loud initial volume (perfect if you have earphones jammed in your ears--you can still hear everything); it's almost painfully loud3. You have to turn it on when you get in the car. It would be nice if it sensed the phone and turned itself on.4. FM transmission to 88.1 or the other freqs is difficult in Los Angeles. The spectrum is so full it's almost impossible to find a clear open channel. This is hardly necessary because the built in speaker is so effective. If you really want to use your car stereo it probably can be fiddled with until it works, but why bother?5. The control buttons (volume, FM) are poorly marked6. Because the whole thing is a giant button (like an Apple mouse) the unit turns on easily when you put it in your briefcase.6a. It needs a lockout lever or a hard case to stop it from being activated when you carry it.Bottom line: it really works for both ends of the call, it's not expensive, it's portable, battery life is very long.

52 of 60 people found the following review helpful.I purchased this device so that I could listen to my music from my Blackberry Pearl on my car stereo. The concept for the device is good. It's sleek and fits well on the visor. My phone recognized the device and they paired right away. I had the device for 2 weeks and used it almost everyday before I returned it.The device has two modes: speaker and FM transmitter. In speaker mode, the device works just like a speakerphone for phone calls or like a speaker for music. In FM mode, it retransmits everything it receives on its bluetooth interface to an FM channel. I thought the device was a bargain selling for a street price of ~$70 when compared to an FM transmitter alone or a speakerphone alone (~$50). Boy was I completely wrong!!The major problem with the device is that the FM mode doesn't work as advertised.The Good:The speaker mode worked great with my phone. I was able to make/receive calls with no issues. It would cancel out the road noise and background music. The battery lasts for a long time on one recharge -- upto 18 hours (manufacture claim).The Bad:The device would stop transmitting in the FM mode every 10 minutes or so and I would have re-activate it. The logic on the device used to determine if the phone is streaming music is faulty. I tried emailing Jabra technical support, but never received a response.In either mode (speaker or FM), the device would auto-adjust the volume down when it thought there was no music being played, even though it was connected to the phone and streaming music. Every minute or so, the device would automatically adjust the volume down so low that I couldn't hear the music on the FM radio any more. This was especially true on podcasts or interview type programs. Then, all of a sudden, it would re-adjust itself and transmit at full volume again for sometime until it would start adjusting the volume down again. It didn't matter what volume setting I used on the phone. There is no way to adjust the volume on the Jabra device when it is in FM mode. It was rather annoying to adjust the volume on the FM radio every minute to try to match what the device was doing.I wasn't able to stream music from my phone to the device with the standard Blackberry music/media engine application, though it did work with the Mobiola xPlayer music/media player application. I think this is more a function of the Blackberry standard software than it is a problem with the Jabra device.The device uses a micro-USB connector for power. My phone uses a mini-USB connector. The cigarette lighter attachment provides a standard USB interface. Since I couldn't plug the micro-USB into my phone, I needed to carry two cables for power.The user-interface needs some work. The on/off/pair/answer functions are all combined onto one button. Jabra would have done better to put the on/off function onto its own button or use a switch.The FM mode is not strong and distant FM stations on the same channel do intermittently interfere with the device FM signal.The FM mode has a very low treble and very high bass response. The music actually sounds more balanced coming out of the tiny speaker than the FM stereo.I returned the device as the main reason I bought the device was to listen to music from my phone on the car stereo. I am buying a Motorola MOTOROKR T505 instead.Pros:* sleek look; attaches to visor* two modes -- speaker and FM* Speakerphone is loud; can be heard clearly over background noise* Microphone picks up voice over moderate background noise; Works well to cancel noise when having a phone conversation* Bluetooth paired right away; no need to re-pair each time you get into the car* Long battery lifeCons:* FM Mode is terrible and needs a lot of work* FM Mode stops transmitting every 10 minutes* Intermittent interference in FM mode* Terrible music response in FM mode* non-standard micro-USB connector for power* User interface poor - each button has too many functions* Jabra does not have a North America support team. They do not respond to email inquiries.

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