Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

The Sonos One is an intelligen­t choice for new smart speaker

- BOB AND JOY SCHWABACH

After we accidental­ly dumped a load of cinnamon on our Echo Dot, Alexa wouldn’t talk to us anymore. No matter. We decided to get a better smart speaker: the Sonos One.

The Sonos One (second generation), for $200, lets you talk to either Alexa or Google Assistant when you want music or answers to questions. The sound is great, but it didn’t exactly blow us away. Unless “blow us away” is taken literally. Joy upped the volume on George Gershwin’s “Rhapsody in Blue” during the quiet part, then forgot about it. When we asked Alexa for the time the next morning, we were blasted out of bed.

Before buying the Sonos One, we looked at comparison­s between it, the Amazon Echo Studio and the Google Max. Nearly every reviewer favored the Sonos One. One said the Google Max is better, but of course it’s $400 instead of $200. If you get two Sonos Ones, you’ve got the equivalent, they say. For now, we’ll stick to one.

The Sonos One has a new app called Sonos S2. Here’s what’s new: If you have more than one Sonos One, and you’d like to hear a song continue as you go from room to room, you can group multiple rooms and save the setting. That way, you don’t have to set it up each time. But that’s pretty expensive. Joy remembers an intercom in her childhood home that did the same thing.

If you already have an Echo Dot or Google Home, you could plug in a speaker. But when we tried that with our other Echo Dot, Bob declared the results “muddy.” It couldn’t compare with the Sonos One.

Years ago, we bought a couple of Altec Lansing VS2320 speakers that plug into our computer, and they’re still selling for around $80. They blow Sonos away.

First we played the music we ripped from CDs. Later we played the music we found on YouTube. Excellent sound. Excellent deal.

IPAD TRICK

Joy gave away our complete set of the Oxford English Dictionary when we moved. Then we regretted it. So we bought the two-volume version, which crams every four pages into one. You can get it used for $70 on up. The original 20-volume set cost us $1,750, though we got free shipping. The type on the two-volume version seems about 1 point high, but somehow Joy can read it without glasses. Bob tried the iPad trick. Here’s how.

Take a photo with your iPad or any other kind of tablet. Find it in your photos app. Then use your fingers to expand it. If the screen orientatio­n on an iPad keeps flipping on you, from portrait to landscape, keep it

on a flat surface. Alternativ­ely, lock it in place using the Control Center. Here’s how: Swipe your finger down from the top right to see a lock pop up. This didn’t work for us, but you may have a better finger.

QUICK CLEAN

You can speed up your computer by cleaning up software debris. We recommend the free “CCleaner,” which you can download from CCleaner. com.

CCleaner — both the free and the paid versions — gets rid of junk that can slow you down. But the paid version, for $25 a year, goes beyond that, adding privacy features, file recovery and more. When we ran it the first time, it removed 3,139 trackers, including 2,999 from Google Chrome, as well as 1,588 megabytes worth of junk in the form of temporary files. Both versions also delete cookies, which are small text files that are stored on your computer to make websites load faster. They can slow you down if they build up. Unfortunat­ely, some people rely on

cookies to store their passwords. If you do that, you’ll have to re-enter the password the first time you go to a site after the cookies are deleted. We use the built-in password manager in Google Chrome, so we were glad to see the cookies go. Other browsers have these too, or you can use a program like RoboForm or Dashlane.

CCleaner comes with a registry cleaner, but you can ignore it. Twenty or 30 years ago, extra files in the registry could slow down your computer. But that’s not the case now. These days, registry cleaning can do more harm than good, unless you’re recovering from a virus on your machine and need to remove all traces of it.

When you download the free CCleaner program, choose the custom installati­on. That way, you’ll have a chance to decline offers of extra programs instead of having them automatica­lly installed. That’s how the company earns money on the free version — by getting you to download other free stuff they hope you’ll upgrade later.

INTERNUTS

Passwords.Google.com has all the passwords you use to get into various websites, if you’ve saved them when prompted by Google. Click on one of the sites in the list, such as Facebook, then click the eye with a line through it to see what the password is. Sometimes we’re just tired of resetting our passwords, so we take a peek here.

OsherFound­ation.org. Joy is in a creative writing group sponsored by Osher Lifelong Learning Institutes, nicknamed “OLLI.” For the past several months and into the foreseeabl­e future, they’re using Zoom video conferenci­ng instead of meeting in person. Besides writing, they have current affairs groups, literary groups, science discussion­s and more. From the website, click on Learning Institutes to find one in your area. All are affiliated with nearby universiti­es.

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