What This Is
Treblab's HD 360 Pro Bluetooth speaker sells for $159 on Amazon. ZDNET's Jack Wallen calls it his favorite in this price range, citing "dynamic, spatial sound" and build quality. The device weighs more than it looks, gets loud without distortion, and emphasises bass.
The Enterprise Angle (Thin)
The original review mentions "hybrid work use" and "remote teams," but this is consumer hardware. No mention of IT management, device provisioning, security features, or bulk licensing. It's a Bluetooth speaker that pairs with phones - same as 200 competitors.
For context: enterprise audio typically means conference room systems with calendar integration, central management, and acoustic optimisation. A portable speaker with "plenty of bass" serves a different use case.
What We Know
- $159 retail, currently discounted on Amazon
- Bluetooth connectivity (no specifics on codec support or latency)
- Heavy build (actual weight not specified)
- Requires EQ mode switching between music genres
- No mention of battery life, charging time, or durability ratings
- No IP rating for water/dust resistance cited
The Trade-Offs
Users will need to adjust EQ settings for different content. That's fine for personal use. Less fine if you're speccing 50 units for hot-desk pods.
The "Lodge Solar Speaker 4" mentioned in background research is a different product entirely - appears someone mixed up product names. That model includes solar charging. This one doesn't.
Our Take
This is consumer audio getting light enterprise positioning. If your procurement question is "what Bluetooth speaker should we buy staff for home offices," fine - it's $159 and apparently sounds good. If your question is "what audio infrastructure supports our hybrid workplace strategy," this isn't the conversation.
The review process is solid - ZDNET's editorial independence is documented. But "fills a room with rich sound" isn't an enterprise requirement. "Integrates with Teams, provisioned via MDM, meets acoustic standards" would be.
Bottom line: Good consumer speaker. Unclear enterprise value proposition. The bass is probably excessive for video calls.