Using the software disc that comes with the speakers (for Microsoft Windows only the speakers will still work with a Mac, but not all of the display features will), you can set which of the modes you want to display. The multiple display modes are probably the Z-10's coolest feature. Below the LCD screen is a set of numbers, 1 through 4, which can easily be assigned to favorite playlists or Internet radio stations, just like a memory preset on a car stereo-quite a handy option. Above this row lies another set of slick touch sensitive buttons: "display" (which switches through the four different display modes), skip backwards, play/pause, and skip forwards. The on-speaker control panel (all buttons are touch-sensitive, backlit with orange and flush against the surface of the speaker) is comprised of a power key, plus "mute", "level" (for controlling bass, treble, and volume), and up and down buttons. Both left and right units tilt upwards at a slight angle for desktop listening. Contained on right speaker is a backlit amber LCD display plus all the controls (the left side is blank). The look of the polished black Z-10s is modern spare, yet attractive. Though not without its flaws, the Z-10 is an attractive desktop sound system that pairs quality audio performance with a slick, interactive display. Logitech has always incorporated nice design into great-sounding computer speakers, so it was no surprise to me that the USB-connecting Z-10 Interactive 2.0 Speaker System was a joy to play with and listen to. Best Hosted Endpoint Protection and Security Software.