Apple HomePod listening test: Why one may not be enough
An early listening session with Apple's upcoming HomePod wireless speaker
left me longing for not just one HomePod, but two.
January 27, 2018 7:00 AM PST
 
By James Martin/CNET 
Commentary 
 
Toward the end of my listening preview of Apple's HomePod ($349, £319,
AU$499; available for preorder now and shipping Feb. 9), Apple reps gave me
a little taste of a feature that won't be available at launch: two HomePods
linked together in a stereo pair. Then they cranked Portugal the Man's "Feel
It Still" track. 
I felt it. All $700 worth.
Until then we'd been listening to a single HomePod in a few different rooms,
each of varying dimensions. The company's first smart speaker is the new
home for its voice-activated Siri assistant, which you can ask about the
weather and use to control various HomeKit-enabled devices in your smart
home. But while Apple plays catch-up to Amazon and Google on that front --
both of which have a years-long head start and millions-strong install base
-- the focus is on HomePod's early strength: music and sound quality. 
Small size, solid sound 
Apple has ventured to create what it feels is the perfect-sized wireless
speaker. Compact enough to be placed anywhere in your home, kitchens and
bathrooms included, yet big enough to accommodate six microphones for Siri
to hear you from afar, along with a 4-inch "high-excursion" woofer, and
seven "beam-forming" tweeters in the base to disperse sound in just the
right way to overcome the problem all these compact wireless speakers have:
a lack of stereo separation. 
Powered by Apple's A8 processor (the same brains found in an iPhone 6),
there's also some sophisticated software that, teamed with those six
microphones, gives the HomePod "spatial awareness," allowing it to sense the
size and shape of the room it's in and optimize the sound for it. Walk
around the room and the sound will change, but it's supposed to sound good
wherever you're standing -- or sitting. The HomePod also works great as a
speakerphone, a selling point Apple hasn't touched upon much. 
Oh, and while there's no mute button, like on an Echo you can tell Siri to
stop listening at any point if you want privacy. 
Cutting to the chase, the HomePod seems very good for a small Wi-Fi speaker.
I hadn't seen it before so I wasn't quite sure how big it was. At almost 7
inches tall, it's a bit taller than the Alexa-enabled Sonos One (6.36 inches
tall) and a bit stouter. 

Prior to this month, the only public display of the HomePod's audio chops
was a listening test for journalists the day it was announced at WWDC back
in June. There a preproduction HomePod was compared to a first-generation
Amazon Echo and a Sonos Play:3. This time around, the final HomePod hardware
was put up against newer competitors: Amazon's second-gen $100, £90 and
AU$149 Echo speaker and the $399 Google Home Max. Google's speaker does not
have international pricing yet, but we expect it to be £399 and AU$599. 
You don't usually see Apple comparing products side-by-side so kudos to it
for running this type of demo. But some worthy products are missing from the
comparison, such as the JBL's Link 300 and 500 (which have Google Assistant
built in) and Bose's SoundLink Revolve speakers (which can be Alexa-enabled
when paired with an Echo Dot). 

What I did learn from the demos was that the HomePod is capable of playing
quite loud for its size, and it has a little more bass and a slightly more
defined overall sound than the Sonos One. It trounced the new, improved
Echo, which sounded recessed and off-key in comparison -- but considering
the Echo's cost, that was hardly a surprise. My gut reaction was that the
HomePod sounded more natural and tonally rich than the larger Google Home
Max. 

This was a controlled environment with carefully picked tracks and fixed
volume levels, to be clear. We heard Radiohead's "Fake Plastic Trees," Zero
7's "In the Waiting Line" and The Eagles' "Hotel California," an audiophile
favorite that I don't ever need to listen to again. 
Through it all, I didn't think the rooms we were listening in were ideal for
evaluating a speaker like the HomePod. The ceilings were very high and some
of the rooms were pretty cavernous. There were times I felt the HomePod
hadn't fooled me into thinking it was a big speaker and I only heard it
pushed up to higher volume levels a couple of times -- on one bass-heavy
Ariana Grande track, our host took it up to 90 percent volume and it held
together pretty well. Mostly I heard it at 65 percent or lower. That said,
the speaker did manage to produce a good amount of bass at lower volumes. 

Say hello to Apple's HomePod smart speaker

The HomePod is designed to sound good with all types of music (yes, we did
hear Disney's "Frozen") and I like the fact that there aren't EQ settings to
play around with. When you're dealing with a speaker this compact, it needs
all the help it can get from its software to smooth everything out and keep
from distorting. 

In reviewing these types of wireless speakers I've found that performance
can vary from track to track and when we get our own review sample, we'll
see what it can do with tracks we like to use and know well.  

Hey Siri: You sound pretty sweet 
It's also worth mentioning that the only music service you can control with
your voice is Apple Music. For Spotify and other services, you'll need to
use AirPlay from your iPhone to the speaker with your phone as a remote. And
of course we do mean iPhone or at least iPad; unlike an Apple TV, you'll
need an iOS device for setup.  

Ultimately, my initial impression is that the HomePod sounds very good for
the type of speaker it is and it certainly stacks up well against the
competition -- some of it less expensive, some of it more. But like all
speakers, it has its limitations and the HomePod left me wanting for true
stereo sound. Which is probably why the only time I got truly jazzed during
the demo was when they paired the two HomePods together and delivered some
real separation.  

And all that fancy spatial awareness and room optimization? I still found
the sweet spot was sitting in the middle of the couch 8 to 10 feet away, the
speakers at close to ear level -- just like regular stereo speakers. 

Of course, there are plenty of Apple HomeKit-based smart home features to
discuss, but we'll do that in our eventual full review.
Apple HomePod 
 
Apple HomePod
Read Review 
HomePod, Apple's $349 Siri-enabled speaker, hits Feb. 9: What you need to
know about Apple's answer to the Amazon Echo and Google Home. 
HomePod has one thing AirPods need next: Just take the HomePod's controls
and graft them on the AirPods, please. 
10 Comments 

Original Article at:
https://www.cnet.com/news/apple-homepod-listening-test-one-may-not-be-enough
/#ftag=CAD-09-10aai5b


-- 
The following information is important for all members of the V iPhone list.

If you have any questions or concerns about the running of this list, or if you 
feel that a member's post is inappropriate, please contact the owners or 
moderators directly rather than posting on the list itself.

Your V iPhone list moderator is Mark Taylor.  Mark can be reached at:  
mk...@ucla.edu.  Your list owner is Cara Quinn - you can reach Cara at 
caraqu...@caraquinn.com

The archives for this list can be searched at:
http://www.mail-archive.com/viphone@googlegroups.com/
--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"VIPhone" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to viphone+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com.
To post to this group, send email to viphone@googlegroups.com.
Visit this group at https://groups.google.com/group/viphone.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to