Basically I find the box super practical. The sound is emitted in all directions, you can not define where the front and back, or left and right, because the sound is emitted to all sides anyway, or predominantly to the top where apparently is the tweeter. For that reason, you can see the box somewhere stand in the middle of an illustrious party round, and yet all are adequately sonicated. The possibility of two of them to a stereo system wireless coupling is great and Nokia were probably the first to have such a chance ever offered. Battery life is exemplary, but where it is rather disappointed the sound. The speaker has a volume of about one liter, but what comes out there, makes just an average kitchen radio competition. The maximum volume is high, but what use is this to me, when the sound of a whole remains center-weighted and hollow. At maximum volume of the speakers distorted even quite strong. Bass is only guessed at, when you press your ear to the bass reflex port, but even then the resonance frequency is chosen unfavorably and the deep tones sound more wummig, have no power. The sound has a topfig-grumpy character. A Bose SoundLink has roughly the same housing volume as the Nokia, but plays the sound significantly larger boom box on the wall. The Nokia utilizes the potential just is not and it makes me personally not so fun to listen to music. Many will certainly counter that the SoundLink plays in a different price league, but even a Logitech S125i, which you already get a fraction, does not sound worse than this part. A Logitech Wireless Boombox costs comparable to much and blows the Nokia even when significantly weaker battery off the table. From the idea, design and of the possibilities (stereo coupling NFC etc) definitely 2 stars, even when the battery is exchanged, I see positive, but sonically not worth mentioning. Also somewhat questionable, the size, or shape. To pack away and take away the Nokia is no longer quite so small, unless you hang him actually in the supplied bag carabiner somewhere. A SoundLink example is much easier to stow away thanks to its flat form of a book, and above all is to come really "fat" sound out.