1) It's probably for a very very niche market. How many have 2 of these consoles? All 3? 2) Of the people who own 2 or 3, many of them are probably wealthy enough and gadget-loving enough to invest in a receiver, making this product moot. 3) As Goobers said, having a switch in the back of a cabinet would be terribly difficult to reach. -1 point for ease-of-use.
Maybe, niche market- I can see it being used tho, in homes where the kids have 2 consoles and the grown ups have the third... Putting the switch where the kiddos can see it makes life easier on all. We take turns on the big screen with the kids and the grands, so this makes great sense to us.
“An engineer explained to us that hundreds of ear impressions were gathered in the name of research, and while each one obviously boasted its own unique shape and size, one single characteristic remained uniform across the board: the entrance into the ear canal is not a perfect circle, it's an oval.”
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It's nice and all but:
1) It's probably for a very very niche market. How many have 2 of these consoles? All 3?
2) Of the people who own 2 or 3, many of them are probably wealthy enough and gadget-loving enough to invest in a receiver, making this product moot.
3) As Goobers said, having a switch in the back of a cabinet would be terribly difficult to reach. -1 point for ease-of-use.
Maybe, niche market- I can see it being used tho, in homes where the kids have 2 consoles and the grown ups have the third... Putting the switch where the kiddos can see it makes life easier on all. We take turns on the big screen with the kids and the grands, so this makes great sense to us.