At Design (matter of taste) and workmanship there is nothing to criticize about our claims.
The sound is quite passable for the housing size. While bringing the compact receiver despite the bass reflex tube on the back is not the same sound volume into existence, such as its bigger brothers the series Evoke Mio (or its local analog predecessor Tivoli One), but thanks to the settings for treble and bass can be the sound at its taste a little tune. After a short acclimatization it is more than adequate for our kitchen needs.
The DAB reception performance despite sub-optimal reception conditions in our kitchen very well. (The wire antenna wire of Tivoli One must continue to do his service to the new radio, and ensures - a couple of times wrapped around the retracted antenna rod - that the Evoke D2 also fits into the kitchen shelf and there still the weak incident ensembles interference happens).
The FM reception seems to be okay, but is not required until further notice.
The usability is - what the pure radio operating terms - simple and almost self-explanatory. If you want to set a few more things (eg display brightness), it is a bit more complicated. In some places it is somewhat illogical, or seems to be the translation menu missraten the German somewhat.
The display is okay, the information sufficiently. Text and icons are perhaps a bit small - but it's also a small, chic design radio.
We are satisfied and happy with our new acquisition - and he must us (a little longer than its predecessor at the same place, the design icon Tivoli One with built-in durability and defects hoffrentlich) from now enrich our morning coffee with music and information.