The Bose SoundTouch system lets you play music in multiple rooms, either the same or different songs, all controlled via an app on a smartphone or tablet. Three different-size SoundTouch speakers launch Oct. 10, but Bose plans to eventually build SoundTouch into all its home audio systems.
Available on iOS, Android, Mac and Windows, the SoundTouch app integrates music from three different sources: music stored locally on a computer, a set of Internet radio stations curated by Bose, and Pandora. The system also supports Apple AirPlay.
Bose says the SoundTouch system makes music "effortless" through a set of six presets. Once they're set, all you need to do to hear music is press one button.
Left to right: SoundTouch Portable ($399), SoundTouch 30 ($699) and Sound Touch 20 ($399).
The SoundTouch 30 ($699) is the largest speaker, meant for big rooms.
The SoundTouch Portable is the only system that's battery powered, letting you move it from room to room.
To begin playing music from a speaker, just drag the song (or preset) to the speaker in the bottom strip.
You can easily have all the SoundTouch speakers play the same song. Volume can be adjusted individually, or in unison.
Buttons for the presets are prominent on the supplied remote control.
The connectors on the back of the SoundTouch 30 and 20 include an Ethernet port of you want to hard-wire it into a network.
The SoundTouch Portable lacks the Ethernet jack.
The SoundTouch controller (not available yet) is gesture-sensitive (just wave your fingers over it to activate) and the inner disc has all the presets. Twisting the outer rim controls the volume.
If you've always wanted one of those whole-house audio systems, where you have speakers in multiple rooms playing the same song, it's a good time to be alive. Previously the domain of people who could afford extensive installations and the custom installers that go with them, whole-house audio systems have become simple, relatively cheap and wireless.
Companies like Sonos pioneered the field of distributing digital audio throughout a house, and advancing wireless technologies — coupled with ever-more-powerful smartphones — have led to the likes of Samsung entering the category. Now Bose is getting in on the action with its SoundTouch system, which can stream music to multiple speakers in different rooms, all controlled from a smartphone or tablet.
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Bose, however, isn't just getting its feet wet with whole-house wireless audio — it's jumping in completely. In addition to introducing three new different-size SoundTouch speakers, the company is promising to upgrade all of its home audio gear with SoundTouch compatibility in the next six months.
That means everything from the company's soundbar to the tried-and-true Wave desktop radio will soon upgrade to SoundTouch, letting customers integrate their gear into a whole-house system. But if you want to try the system now, you'll need to get one of the new speakers, including the large-size SoundTouch 30 ($699), the "normal" size SoundTouch 20 ($399), and the roving SoundTouch Portable (also $399).
While SoundTouch does what you expect from such a system — send streams of music (either different or the same) to speakers in multiple rooms, all controlled from an app — Bose has added what it sees as an essential element: making the experience "effortless." It achieves this via presets: Every speaker has six buttons that remember six different music sources. The idea is you get home, press one of those buttons, and music just starts playing.
Those presets can be assigned (via the app) from three different kinds of sources: music stored locally on a computer, one of many Internet radio stations (from a list Bose curates) or Pandora (Bose plans to add more services soon). Once you start the music playing, it's easy to assign the preset, either through the app or on the device itself. Presets are assigned to a person's SoundTouch account, so all speakers in your home will share the same ones.
Setup is relatively painless: Plug in the speaker(s), download the app and get them connected to your Wi-Fi. Once they're on the network, they'll automatically show up in the app, and you can rename them with a few taps. The SoundTouch app is available for iOS, Android, Mac and Windows. The speakers are also support AirPlay, although that will be a direct stream — when using one of the supported sources, content is pulled from the Internet (à la Google Chormecast).
I attended a demo of SoundTouch, and the speakers themselves sound good, even if the design is uninspiring (I much prefer Samsung's wedge-shaped M7). Playing the big SoundTouch 30 speaker at 75% volume, it filled an entire floor of a townhouse in New York City's Greenwich Village with big sound, with crisp highs and rumbling lows and no distortion I could detect. To preserve my eardrums, I didn't dare go to 100%.
The SoundTouch 20 is a good size, and the vertical design ensures it takes up as little space as possible; it's right at home on an end table or nightstand. The portable model is even better, although it's clearly designed to be taken room to room, but not outside the house (try the SoundLink for that).
As mentioned, Bose has big plans for the SoundTouch concept. In addition to upgrading its entire line, it'll introduce a SoundTouch 2.1 system with a pair of small "jewel" box speakers and a subwoofer (the sub lets the system play nice and loud, while the speakers take up very little room). There'll also be a SoundTouch controller, a disc-like remote control about the size of a really thick coaster.
How do you like Bose's take on whole-house wireless audio? Share your thoughts in the comments.
Images: Mashable, Christina Ascani
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