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Just A Peek - Sonos: Time To Get A Bigger House

I really do enjoy my iPods (I have 3: a 30GB black iPod Video, a 4GB first gen nano, and a second gen shuffle). They each have a place in my life as I listen to music almost every chance I get.

There is one place where listening to my music collection should be the easiest, yet it is the toughest for me: in my home. I have a decent sound setup and music played through it is wonderful. The only way I could play music stored in iTunes, however, was to either sync it to one of my iPods and use the AUX input on my receiver, or burn a CD and play it through my DVD player.

Neither solution was adequately geeky enough for me. I mean, come on, I'm a tech-guy; I should have some cool high-tech way of getting my tunes from iTunes to my family room without having to sneaker-net it over.

Yes, of course, I could simply buy Apple TV and the problem would be solved. But what if I wanted music to play in my bedroom, out on the deck, or in the living room? Apple TV just won't cut much mustard it this case and I have to look elsewhere for a solution, and that elsewhere is Sonos.


Sonos has been around for some time now, offering the means to play the music stored in your computer in any room in your home.

"So what," you say. "Big deal. There lots of systems that play music in any room in your home."

True enough. I have an old NuTone system in my house with tinny sounding speakers in every room and the ability to play FM. Newer systems let you play CDs and in stereo. I could also put one of those neat little desktop stereos in every room I want to hear music in, but doing so only increases the size of my sneaker-net, and none of these solutions are a match for Sonos.


Sonos ZP80 Bundle

You see, with Sonos, not only can you play music is rich stereo, using any type of speakers you want, in any room in your home, you can play different tunes in each room if you wanted to, up to 32 rooms, and control it all no matter where you are in your home.

Play Sting's It's Probably Me in the master bath, Chris Isaak's Wicked Game in the bedroom, Michael Jackson's Thriller on the patio, and Fifth Dimension's Aquarius/Let The Sun Shine In out by the pool. It's all wireless, all fed from your computer or a network drive, and all controlled from a cool RF remote.

Generally, Sonos works like this: You get software, the Sonos Desktop Controller, (Mac or PC) that lets Sonos sync with your music library and control the entire system from a simple user interface.

The software allows you to set up music zones, which can be controlled separately from or in unison with other zones.


My Precious Sonos

Each zone has to have a Zone Player, which is a wireless node to which you can attach speakers or plug it into your home hi-fi set up. At least one Zone Player has to be plugged into your home network, that player acts as the hub for your Sonos system and connects the system to your music repository.

Last, but certainly not least is the Sonos Controller which lets you control all the zones in your home as well as review your music library. The Controller has big, colorful 3.5-inch LCD display on which you can view album cover art and scan through you entire music collection. It also has a very iPod-esque scroll-wheel, so iPod users will feel right at home using the Sonos Controller.

The software on your computer does not have to be running for Sonos to access your library - in fact, if you have you library stored on a network drive your computer doesn't have to be on. The Controller serves as your interface into your music.

Set up is falling-off-a-log simple; load up the software, set up your zones, plug in your Zone Players and Controller, then wait for everything to sync up. After that you are good to go. The Zone Players find each other and the Controller using a proprietary encrypted wireless mesh network. So you won't get interference from the neighbor's ham radio set.


Zone Player setup with One Controller to Rule Them All

I'm not going to go deeply into all the technical hows because all you probably want to know is if, and how well, it works. After playing with Sonos for a month I can tell you emphatically that it works and works wonderfully.

Most of my iTunes library sounds great coming out on my receiver, as do net radio stations and podcasts. What doesn't sound so great are tunes I purchased from the iTunes Store. They don't sound good because I can't hear them; Sonos can't play DRM encrypted music; they don't even show up on the Sonos library listing. Of course, you can do the DRM Two-Step (record you DRM tunes onto a CD or DVD then rip them back into iTunes), but when Apple starts selling DRM-free tunes from EMI and, eventually, others record companies this problem will be remedied.

That Sonos is not Apple-DRM compatible doesn't mean you are stuck with your current music library, Sonos lets you subscribe to Rhapsody and eMusic. Sonos comes with a 30-day free trial of Rhapsody so you can listen to new music right away. And eMusic lets you download up to 90 tunes a month in MP3 format, and they are yours to keep.

If audiobooks are an interest to you then you are in luck as well; you can subscribe to Audible Listener and hear audiobook and periodicals like the Wall Street Journal. Imagine waking up (using the Sonos built-in alarm function) fresh news or music that can be heard anywhere in your home.

Sonos also does not do video, however, though that can't be long in coming. What Sonos will do is let you set up playlists on the fly. In fact, creating a playlist on the Controller is actually enjoyable; when you select a song to include you have the option of playing it now, appending it to the end of your list, or play it next, which is really handy. Of course you can rearrange the order of tunes in your list at anytime, either through the software on your computer or through the Controller.

Did I mention how easy the Controller is to use? OK, I won't mention it again, but you should know that the Controller is every bit as useable as an iPod.

There is nothing cheap about any of the Sonos components; the Controller is a weighty piece of technology that feels like it can be handled roughly without flinching, and the Zone Players are designed to be inconspicuous, even out in the open. The Sonos system is a class act.

Bottom Line: I have the basic ZP80 Bundle, which consists of 2 ZP80 Zone Players and a Controller. After using it for just a little while I found myself wishing I had a bigger house so that I can put Zone Players in more rooms, it's just that cool.

At US$999 for the basic 2-node plus controller system, the Sonos will leave your wallet somewhat lighter, but it is my humble opinion that it is well worth every cent. You can have your Sonos system out of the box and playing music in about 15 minutes, with no tools or heavy lifting required.

Folks with apartments or smaller homes might do better to buy an AppleTV, but if you have a home that is large enough for at least 2 music zones then I think you'll find buying a Sonos system a worthy investment.

The iPod has made music take-anywhere fun again, but in your home it's Sonos that can truly liberate your music.

I highly recommend the Sonos ZP80 system.

Review Item Sonos Wireless Music System
Manufacturer Sonos
Price

US$999 (ZP80 Bundle)
Other bundles and individual components available separately
Minimum
Requirements
OS X version 10.3 or above
Any G3 or better Mac
(Versions available for older Macs including those running OS 9)


Vern Seward is a writer who currently lives in Orlando, FL. He's been a Mac fan since Atari Computers folded, but has worked with computers of nearly every type for 20 years.

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A guest said: (hide)

I like to listen to my iTunes library all through the house also, but I use a pair of wireless RCA speakers connected to the headphone jack of my iMac.

http://www.amazon.com/RCA-WSP150-900-Wireless-Speakers/dp/B00000J0D8/ref=sr_1_1/103-9491910-7738225?ie=UTF8&s=electronics&qid=1179755650&sr=8-1

Works like a charm, and I can just move the speakers to whatever room I'm in, or out on the deck or yard. It's not fancy, but it works.

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macbones said:

member since 15 Jun 2004 with 23 posts, unranked, send him a message or view his profile

seems kind of pricey to do what Airport express does for $99. And Airport express plays my DRM tracks.

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A guest said: (hide)

Quote
macbones wrote:
seems kind of pricey to do what Airport express does for $99. And Airport express plays my DRM tracks.

Airport Express won't let you play music in multiple rooms at the same time. Only one Airport at a time...

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macbones said:

member since 15 Jun 2004 with 23 posts, unranked, send him a message or view his profile

Quote
Guest wrote:
Quote
macbones wrote:

Airport Express won't let you play music in multiple rooms at the same time. Only one Airport at a time...

Not quite true.

Actually, I use 4 Aiport expresses trhough the house simultaneously. Plus a nice set of speakers on the computer make 5 sets of speakers going at once. Works great. I bought by Expresses from the Apple refurb store for like $79- each. Kind of hard to beat that. Granted, the Sonos system is pretty slick. But I have a lot of DRM tracks, plus the expresses are "slick enough."

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VSeward said:

member since 28 Jun 2001 with 971 posts, TMO Staff, send him a message or view his profile

On every solution you folks have listed, even the multi-Express setup.

Sonos lets you play DIFFERENT music in each zone at the same time accessing the same music DB. Also you can control the entire setup from the Controller from anywhere in the house.

You can do this without having your Mac online, so laptop users won't take the tunes with them when they leave if you have a network storage device. In face, with net sotrage drive, once you set up and sync your Sonos you don't need the computer at all. You can do everything you need to from the Controller, even add new zones.

Further, to even approach the functionality of being able to control your music from anywhere in the house you need to get some sort of remote, preferrably a RF remote. But let's just say you use the Keyspan Remote Express, which is IR, but works. At $60 a on top of the $100 for Expess, 2 if you don't have built-in WiFi in your computer. So for $160 you get music to one room with maybe half the functionality of AppleTV, which will let you see what you are playing on your TV at least.

Basically, with Express and/or AppleTV you wind up with a shadow of what you'd have with Sonos.

Now please don't get me wrong; AppleTV and Express both have uses and are very good at what they do, but Sonos is a well planned, well executed system that's easy to set up and use.

Yes, it is a pricey sucker, and they would do well to come out with a less costly solution, but there really is no comparison between an Express-based system and Sonos. It's like comparing a MacBook Pro running Parallels, OS X and XP to a Dell laptop, any Dell laptop; Yes, the MBP will cost more, but the darn thing works. Period.

Still, as I said in my article, if all you want to do is get a wireless connection to your home stereo, then get AppleTV. If you are doing multiple rooms (and can afford it) get Sonos. It really is that good.

Vern Seward

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