![]() DST switch: Ever get tired of having to waste time resetting your clocks for Daylight Savings Time? On the back of the iP88 is a switch that allows you to easily bump the current time forward or backward one hour.Three alarms: This may not sound terribly special at first, but the sheer variety of settings on this unit make for a nice change from your standard clock radio.Makes me wish that every other device I own with a built-in clock could do the same thing. Press and hold the Time Sync button on the back of the unit, and the iP88 will synchronize its time to that on the first docked iPhone that it finds. iPhone time sync: To be honest, this is probably the coolest feature on this device.Looks like iHome is betting on the iPod Classic disappearing in the near future. It’s a good thing, too… iHome includes six inserts in the box, but they are in matched pairs: two each for the iPhone 3G/3GS, the iPod Touch, and the iPod Nano 4G/5G. Dual Universal iPod/iPhone docks: That’s right, the iP88 has two universal docks for charging your devices, and they accept standard Apple universal dock inserts.Instead, let’s focus on the things that make the iP88 a little different. I’ll not waste your time going over the obvious features here we all know what a clock radio is and what it does. Just looking at it, you know that this thing is substantive and solid long before you ever put your hands on it. It’s a very modern (if stark) design, and whereas some of iHome’s previous products have had a sort of toylike appearance, this is anything but. Gone are the rounded corners and the plethora of colors the iP88 instead flaunts hard corners and few right-angles, and a single gunmetal color, offset by shiny faux-brushed-aluminum dials on the top and a white-on-black LCD display set right in the center of the front speaker mesh. The designers at iHome must have gotten tired of mimicking Apple, however, because the iP88 fully abandons the styling of the previous models, presenting instead a design that is decidedly un-Apple, but also complementary to Apple’s latest products. The descendents of the iH5 have continued in that vein for the most part, maintaining styling similar to the iPod, and becoming available in additional colors to keep up with the ever-expanding rainbow of iPods. The lines of the iH5 were evocative of the iPods and first-party accessories of 2005, down to the fact that the iH5 was available only in white. Designįrom the beginning, it was clear that iHome was designing their iPod-compatible clock radios to mimic the styling of the iPod itself. Does iHome’s latest entry into the market, the dual-dock-wielding iP88 stand out enough? Find out after the jump. This being the case, iHome has not had an easy time distancing themselves from the crowd after all, there’s only so much a company can do to further clock radio technology. Name a company that makes clock radios, home theater speakers, or other home audio equipment, and odds are that they’ve tried their hand at making a clock radio to work with your iDevice. ![]() It’s strange to think that it was only four years ago that iHome released the iH5, the first clock radio ever to feature an iPod dock, because these days iPod/iPhone-compatible clock radios are everywhere. If you buy something through the links on this page, we may earn a commission at no cost to you.
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