Sound+Image

GOOGLE Home Hub

A screen on a smart speaker brings both gains and losses, but the Hub proves addictive.

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This is not the first smart speaker with a screen that we’ve reviewed, and our view remains that there are obvious benefits from the visual informatio­n, but the screen also places limitation­s on their use. Google’s Home Hub does, however, go some way to overcoming these issues. So while a display inevitably makes a smart screen far larger than a smart speaker, the Home Hub proves remarkably dinky when you unbox it — 18cm wide and 12cm high, with a 7-inch diagonal screen. That’s far less dominant of a bedside table than, say, our awardwinni­ng JBL Link View smart screen, which adds speakers either side of an 8-inch screen, making it far larger at 33cm wide.

Secondly an always-on screen is visually distractin­g, especially in a lounge, or in a bedroom. To counter this, Google has included what is calls an ‘Ambient EQ Light Sensor’ which pulls a similar trick to the system in Samsung’s ‘The Frame’ TVs; it prevents an intrusive active illuminati­on and, once you’ve set the easily adjusted brightness down a notch or two, presents a remarkably passive image

— in many lights it can mimic a matte finish photograph. Indeed it is a better photo frame than any SD-card-loaded photo screen we’ve seen, although here you must have your photos

stored in Google Photos. Until this review we didn’t use this resource, but we now do, having discovered that while uploading full-size photos will eat into your allocated space in Google Drive, if you allow Google to apply its own compressio­n algorithms, there is no limit on how many pictures you can upload, nor do they count against your Drive allowance. That’s quite the free cloud back-up! (Google already has all our mail, music and documents, so it may as well have our photos too.)

Given Google’s penchant for gathering informatio­n from all corners of our lives, it’s perhaps a surprise that the Home Hub appears to be pandering to privacy concerns by not including a camera. It has twin mikes for hearing your voice commands, of course, and very effective at far-field listening they proved. But no camera, so that while you can make Google Duo calls using the Home Hub, they are audio only, not video chats. By contrast JBL’s Link View does have a camera, but allows you to slide a physical barrier across the lens so you can be darned sure it’s not watching you. Both approaches are interestin­g given that such privacy issues are normally downplayed by those who are placing always-listening (but not always-recording) devices in our homes.

Audio & video playback

It’s worth noting that one thing Google Home Hub is not is a video player. The screen is a good screen, but a small screen. And while it does YouTube (which is quite the resource), you can’t send it anything else — you can’t ‘cast’ video to it, because it does not contain a video Chromecast.

But it is an audio Chromecast, along with Bluetooth, and Google Assistant. With a supported streaming service (Google Play, Spotify) linked in your Google Home app, you can verbally request any music, and out it flows. Link via Bluetooth and you can send any music source to the Home Hub, though audio quality here is clearly limited by its speaker, size not stated. It produces enough for general use, avoiding sharpness for the most part, but sounds small, mono and lacking in bass, with nothing below 80Hz and not much up to 120Hz, thinning even spoken word. It’s a radio-like sound, not a device for pumping tunes.

Chromecast is also an effective multiroom system (see panel below right), so that you can a group the Home Hub with other Chromecast-enabled products and enjoy playback in multiple areas.

Plus of course the screen has many benefits when using Google Assistant in other ways. Ask about your daily commute and you get a map as well as an estimated travel time. Say ‘Hey Google, 10 minute timer’ and the screen counts down, so you no longer have to ask ‘Hey Google, how long on the timer?’ Kids can get pictures of animals as well as the sounds of animals. And of course with YouTube on tap you can ask “Hey Google show me how to cut up a pineapple.” We still find Google Assistant to be ahead of the rest in accuracy of comprehens­ion and quality of response. One thing potentiall­y ripe for developmen­t is adjusting the audio responses in the context of the screen; the Voice responses seem the same as from an audio-only Google speaker, when often the screen has already done much of the work.

For those installing Google-compatible smart devices like lights and plugs, the Home Hub is also an always-on control point, potentiall­y easier than opening your phone or tablet. Swiping down takes you straight to the Home control screen.

Everything about the Home Hub — the screen, the YouTube, the photo display, the Home control, the limited sound — we reckon it all makes the Home Hub a superb device for the kitchen. And perhaps only the kitchen. You really should not make it your default music device, because it simply isn’t good enough, though it does avoid being actually nasty or audibly offensive. In the kitchen it plays like a radio, helps you cut pineapple, allows you to broadcast messages to other Google devices around the home. In that scenario, it proves so successful that the missus has announced she wants one there permanentl­y. And that’s a first.

More info: www.google.com.au

 ??  ?? ◀ MEET THE FAMILY: Google itself offers Chromecast­s, Homes and more — but the Home app also runs hundreds of third-party Google-enabled devices. Bluetooth CD-quality streaming High-res streaming Multiroom platform Stereo drivers Separate speakers Battery operation Dedicated app Voice control (Google)
◀ MEET THE FAMILY: Google itself offers Chromecast­s, Homes and more — but the Home app also runs hundreds of third-party Google-enabled devices. Bluetooth CD-quality streaming High-res streaming Multiroom platform Stereo drivers Separate speakers Battery operation Dedicated app Voice control (Google)
 ??  ?? Google Home Hub Price: $219
Google Home Hub Price: $219
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