The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

TECHNOLOGY APPLE ENTERS FIELD OF SMART SPEAKERS

- By Jim Rossman Dallas Morning News

If you follow Apple, you probably know the company rarely jumps into any product market first.

Apple was not the first company to offer the personal computer, MP3 player, smartphone or smartwatch, but with each product, it waited for the right time to swoop in with its own version that came to dominate the market.

The connected-speaker market began with the Amazon Echo in 2014, and Google followed with Google Home in 2016. I’m also including the Alexa-enabled Sonos One, which debuted in 2017.

Apple has taken the familiar route of not entering a market until it feels its product could dominate.

The Apple HomePod ($349.99, apple.com) is certainly a great-looking speaker, but is there enough on the inside to pull customers from the more establishe­d competitio­n?

When Apple executive Phil Schiller introduced the HomePod at the Apple Worldwide Developers Conference in June, the first thing I noticed was the price.

Apple has never been one to enter a market at the low end on price.

At $349, the HomePod is not the most expensive connected speaker — that honor belongs to the $399 Google Home Max — but it’s still pretty expensive. For $349, I can buy two Sonos One speakers with Amazon Alexa built in.

Features

HomePod is absolutely full of components, including a high-excursion woofer and a custom seven-tweeter array.

The speakers are designed to work with an Apple A8 processor and advanced software to “analyze the music, dynamicall­y and continuous­ly tuning the low frequencie­s and automatica­lly adapting the acoustics for the best sound experience.”

The woofer faces upward, while the seven beam-forming tweeters are placed in a ring facing outward around the HomePod.

An array of six microphone­s is positioned around the body of the HomePod to pick up your voice when you speak to Siri.

The HomePod is covered in a seamless fabric mesh (space gray or white), and there is a touch surface on top to allow for manual control of volume, music playback and Siri.

Setup

You’ll need an iOS device (iPhone or iPad) to set up HomePod.

You plug it in and bring your iPhone over, and the setup wizard will appear on your phone’s screen. You’ll want to have your iOS device already connected to your home’s Wi-Fi network.

You’ll be asked to give the HomePod a name and whether you’d like to enable Personal Requests, which enables features like setting reminders, sending texts with your voice or having Siri read incoming texts. Personal Requests require your phone to be on the same Wi-Fi network as the HomePod.

You’ll then be asked for your permission to transfer some settings to the HomePod, including your Apple ID and Siri voice and location preference­s, as well as your Wi-Fi network login credential­s. You’ll also be asked for your Apple Music login. You can set up a free trial from the setup screen if you are not an Apple Music subscriber.

It all happens in a few sec- onds.

Playing music

The HomePod is designed to play music via Siri voice control from Apple Music, uploaded iTunes Match songs, your iCloud Music Library or your iTunes pur- chases. HomePod straight To If you’d play from those like pulls the to sources, the play internet. music from the other dora or sources, Spotify or such even as music Panstored on your phone or computer, you’ll have to use

AirPlay, which means the phone or computer needs to be on the same Wi-Fi network as the HomePod.

Apple has announced that HomePod will work with AirPlay 2, which will allow dif- ferent songs to play to each room. This functional­ity is coming later this year.

Controllin­g music with your voice is great. Home- Pod’s microphone­s are really magic.

You can give voice com- mands even if the HomePod is playing at full volume. In fact, you don’t even need to raise your voice.

Simply say, “Hey Siri” in a normal voice, even from across the room or the next room, and the music volume lowers so you can speak the command.

I was amazed at how low I could speak to HomePod and have it recognize the command.

Apple is far ahead of Amazon when it comes to giving commands when music is playing. I was more pleased with the Sonos, but I realized that was because the Sonos app allows the user to tweak treble and bass. When I set those controls to neutral, the Play:1 and HomePod sounded pretty similar. The HomePod had more on the low end, but with my treble dialed back up on the Sonos, I liked Sonos a tad better. Then I brought the HomePod into my living room, where I have two Sonos Play:1 speakers in a stereo pair. In a not-very-fair comparison, I liked the Sonos pair better than the single HomePod. When Apple enables stereo pairing on the HomePod, I’ll be happy to retest.

Sound quality

Ihave several Sonos Play:1 speakers at home, which is what we use to play music throughout our house. I have several Amazon Echo Dots around the house that can control the Sonos playback via voice.

So naturally I wanted to test the HomePod against the Sonos.

I set up a test with the HomePod and a single Play:1 side by side on my kitchen counter. I queued up a few songs from Apple Music and played the same songs through each speaker, alternatin­g between them. At first

Privacy

As with any connected speaker, there may be some worry about personal privacy. I meet people all the time who think Alexa is recording everything they say.

Apple reassures us that “Siri on HomePod is equally as private and secure as it is on our other devices” and notes that all communicat­ion to Apple is encrypted.

Do you need one?

If you are ensconced in the Apple Music ecosystem and don’t have a significan­t investment in Alexa or Sonos, you are just the target market for the HomePod.

I have gone down t he road with Sonos, so I haven’t found the killer feature that would make me run out and buy the HomePod. I simply have all the functional­ity from my other devices.

That said, it will fill even the biggest room in your house with high-quality sound.

Everyone who listened to the HomePod at work and at home said it sounded better than they thought it would. I have to agree.

 ?? APPLE INC. ?? The Apple HomePod, which sells for $349.99, was universall­y praised for sound quality. It’s full of components, including a high-excursion woofer and a custom seven-tweeter array.
APPLE INC. The Apple HomePod, which sells for $349.99, was universall­y praised for sound quality. It’s full of components, including a high-excursion woofer and a custom seven-tweeter array.

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