My apartment is littered with speakers. They’re everywhere. I even have one in the shower. Some are connected to intricate multi-room setups, others are small battery-operated Bluetooth speakers, and a growing number of them will talk back to me with a voice assistant like Alexa, Google, or Cortana. I even have a robot that will soon play music.
Out of all these speakers, I’ve begun using JBL's new Link speakers the most. It's not because they sound the best—these JBLs are just so convenient. JBL didn't pull the multi-sized Link 10, Link 20, and Link 300 out of the oven with undercooked Google support and toss them up for sale. It went to great lengths to bake Google Assistant to deeply into them, and the attention to detail shows.
Like many JBL Bluetooth speakers, these look plain. If their design could talk, it would just loudly shout "Yeah, I'm a Bluetooth speaker" over and over. The Link 10 and 20 are shaped like soda cans (one 12 ounce, the other 24 ounce), and are covered in fabric with rubbery plastic caps on the top and bottom. The Link 300 is the same, just fatter than it is tall, with a somewhat ovular shape to it. It’s meant to look more like a speaker that ain't going anywhere, because, well, it isn't. Unlike its soda can-shaped siblings, the Link 300 has no battery so it's not meant to travel.

