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4,867
4.2 out of 5 stars

Sonos PLAY:1 Compact Wireless Speaker

$119.99
$199 40% off Reference Price
Condition: New; Open Box
Color: Black
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Top positive review
4 people found this helpful
Possibly life changing!
By Afterbyrner on Reviewed in the United States on February 27, 2015
The Good: The Sonos Play:1 works with virtually every streaming service available. At 6.36" H x 4.69" W x 4.69" D the Sonos Play:1 is is small enough to hide in almost any room, but given its simple beauty, you may choose to display it. The Play:1 can be set up in stereo pairs, or multiple Sonos devices can play synced or independent music throughout the house. The Play:1 is humidity resistant (although not waterproof or water resistant) so it can be safely kept in high humidity areas like a bathroom or indoor pool. Despite its small size, the Play:1 is a clear and powerful speaker. Apps are available for phones, tablets and computers. Simple setup, easily pairs with other Sonos devices. One app for all streaming services. The Bad: Sonos recently lost the ability to stream Audible (presumably due to competition with Echo). The Play:1 requires power and cannot run on battery. The power cable may limit placement options. Sonos speakers rarely go on sale, except usually right before the holiday's, so the price is generally the price. Overall: The Sonos Play:1 is a phenomenal entry point into the wireless streaming market. At $199 it is priced competitively, even though the competition is still trying to catch up. Despite being top dog in the field, Sonos is still pushing ahead by adding features regularly. Sonos is universally praised for their features and sound quality and it is well deserved. For months my wife had been complaining that she needed a way to stream music in our master bathroom while she was getting ready in the morning. She had already bought, and subsequently returned, a myriad of cheap bluetooth speakers that sounded awful and had a hard time filling the 10x12x14 bathroom with sound. So I decided to put the issue to bed with a Sonos Play:1. As soon as we powered the speaker up and started playing music, we realized it wasn't just going to suit the purpose, it was massive overkill! We now have it split time between our kitchen counter and our pool bar, which is a testament to its small size, big sound and portability. I had wanted to buy a Sonos Play:3 for many years, but had a hard time justifying buying a single speaker that cost as much as my Denon AVR-1913. When Sonos released the Play:1 I was instantly drawn to it. The idea that I could have multiple speakers throughout my home, and at my pool bar, all playing the same thing...all controlled through one app, without having to pay an electrician to run wires all over my house was captivating. Despite having the aforementioned Denon AVR-1913 set up as our entertainment center, and as a dual room, seven speaker, two subwoofer monstrosity for parties, the Sonos Play:1 quickly became our go-to option for playing music around the house. Play:1 Features Sonos Physical Features: Two Class-D digital amplifiers (apparently this is where the magic happens, I have no idea what this means) One tweeter One mid-woofer 6.36" H x 4.69" W x 4.69" D 4.8 lbs Built in wifi Top panel buttons for play/pause, volume up/down and skip (double tap play/pause) Screw in mount for speaker stands/brackets Functionality: Stereo Pairing: Through the app, two Play:1's can be paired to form left and right channel speakers. 5.1 Home Theater: Adding two Play:1's to a Playbar and Sub forms a true surround sound experience. Adjustable bass and trebel controls Trueplay tuning: Using the app, you can use Trueplay to measure the acoustics of any room to fine tune your Play:1 so it sounds great no matter where it's placed Insteon integration: Since January 2015, Sonos can be controlled by Insteon devices or through the Insteon app. It can also be added to scenes and preset to play certain music with a scene. Streaming: Sonos can stream over 100,000 free radio stations, shows and podcasts. It can playback music stored on up to 16 PC's, Macs or NAS devices on your home network. It can also wirelessly play music from your iPhone, iPad, iPod touch or Android device. Oh and it works with a couple of streaming services, including but not limited to: Apple Music Spotify Pandora Deezer Radio by TuneIn SiriusXM Google Play Music SoundCloud Amazon Music iHeartRadio Rhapsody Rdio Qobuz TIDAL And downloads from any service offering DRM-free tracks Other Features: Although it isn't waterproof or water resistant, the Play:1 is humidity resistant. You can use the ethernet port on the back of your Play:1 to bring internet connectivity to other devices, such as a set-top box, DVR, PC, game console or network hard drive. Seriously, this is right off of Sonos' site and something I didn't know until I was writing this. Previously this port had been virtually useless when Sonos pushed an update eliminating the need for a bridge. What does it all mean? The Play:1 is beautiful in its simplicity. Its small form factor and well thought out look allow it to almost disappear into any room in which it's placed. While you may not notice the Play:1 when it is silent, it is tough to ignore when it is playing. The Play:1 delivers surprisingly clear and powerful sound at any volume and in any size room. I often bring this one speaker outside to fill my large backyard with music. The app delivers something I long for in other areas of home automation, a single app to control multiple services. No matter which platform you want to use to stream your music, all you need is the Sonos app to control it. And while we're talking about streaming, it's time to dispel a myth about Sonos really quickly: SONOS DOES NOT USE YOUR PHONE'S DATA TO STREAM! While you do control your Sonos with your phone, tablet or PC, all of the streaming is done over your wireless network directly to the Sonos. You can kick off a station or playlist from your phone and then go out for the day and Sonos will continue to play. Despite the fact that it is just a speaker, the Sonos Play:1 has been the most used device in my house since I bought it over a year ago. It has given our lives a soundtrack and given us the ability to quickly change the mood from anywhere in the house. During parties, guests can join the network, add the Sonos app and play whatever they want to hear whenever they want to hear it. The greatest thing about the Play:1 is that it is just the tip of the iceberg. Sonos also offers the Play:3, Play:5, Sub, Playbar and Connect. These can be controlled independently to play from different sources in different rooms, controlled together to play the same source in multiple rooms or paired into systems, delivering stereo or 5.1 surround sound. With the Sonos Connect, you can bring existing stereo equipment into the fold, allowing you to sync your existing entertainment center with Sonos devices around your home. Because of its amazing sound, endless streaming options, massive scalability, ease of use, price point and evolving integrations, the Sonos Play:1 is a must have for your smart home.
Top critical review
126 people found this helpful
The sound of one hand clapping
By gadgetcollector on Reviewed in the United States on August 19, 2014
Pros: beautiful sound, nice looking Cons: expensive, interface is limited and updates are not a priority. Terrible choice for podcasts and audiobooks When I first got these I loved them. The sound was pure. The hardware is amazing. The big drawback with this system is that everything must be done through the Sonos app. You can't set them up in the operating system as a general output. It sounds like a little thing but it means you can't use apps like Audible or podcast managers directly. I had to use my computer to manage the podcasts and the app lumped the audio books into chapterless lumps that were impossible to navigate in. The results were so bad I eventually bought an iPad which I use more and more. The app was so counterintuitive I had to call the help line to coordinate moving from room to room. I waited about 30 minutes to speak to some one. I mentioned integrating the speaker into the op system and they replied that was "too complicated". I wondered about that response since designing an app to be all things to all people would be difficult indeed. Now I know that they have no intention of building anything but a plain vanilla app that streams music but does little else well. That call was in January. I recently began using Amazon Prime Music. I went to their site to see what statement they made regarding support. Instead they were still playing the game "Post on the forums and we will look at your ideas." (Expletive deleted). They charge this much for a product and can't give a simple statement on whether they are going to support a major streaming source? Beyond lame. Update 09/03/2014: This company is about selling, selling, and more selling. The latest big upgrade? It now does not require a bridge. Great news if you are a brand new customer, there is one less piece of equipment to buy. If you are an existing customer who paid for a bridge, well, you were a paying beta-tester. And who can afford to staff the help desk adequately when there is that Superbowl commercial that's still being paid for? You remember, the one where the model drifts through a impeccably decorated modern house with the speakers and the lights telepathically obeying every whim? But that's not the main issue. Every company want to sell more every quarter. The issue is that Sonos continues to misrepresent what this product can do and what kind of support existing customers will get. I was passing through Target and the electronics department just got a Sonos display, and side by side, a Bose display. As I stood there I realized something. Neither system was forthcoming about how it is configured but I suspect the Bose was the usual output from the device setup. But Sonos was all silence, not a word that this was a streaming service that locked you to their app for eternity. Or that if you wanted to do something other than stream Pandora from a non-Chromebook device you were in for a world of hurt. I listen to my Sonos system for less than an hour a month. They were a terrible fit for me. I studied the website and even called customer support before I bought these. They lied and said "oh yes we support Audible" and after I bought them they said "well you need to download the books to your iTunes library and use your computer as a server." So not the same thing. And as far as you can get from telepathic ease. Advice for people considering this system: Read the one and two star reviews. Then go to the Sonos forums and do searches on the streaming services and hardware you want to use, ESPECIALLY, if you have a Chromebook. If everything checks out, great you will have a good experience. But if anything is off DON'T depend on these people for an update. This is a one trick pony from a lame company. Update 12/8/2015 Crazy town is following me. I made up my mind to "let it go" and move on with my life. Even with all the flaws the two Plays weren't a catastrophic experience just a profoundly annoying one. But now things are being to get weird. Remember I complained how audiobooks had to downloaded to my computer and played from there? They took that away. Said: were so sorry, we meant to update this, but we didn't and now it is in the way of something new so, tough luck, though if your speaker has a line in jack you can use that (I AM NOT MAKING THIS UP!). I thought I could avoid this by refusing the app update. But a week later the app could not see the Audible files on the iMac. I was dumbfounded. The files on the Mac hadn't changed, the app hadn't changed so...how? Then I remembered a forum I ran across comparing Bose to Sonos. Apparently Bose loves proprietary hardware and Sonos loves obtrusive software. And somebody claimed every single thing the app did had to run through the Sonos servers. I didn't think this concerned me since my source was generally my own computer. I think I was wrong. The translation was happening on the company server not the app. That's one way the system could "forget" how to recognize these files. This crazy thing was running things to the company that should have stayed entirely on my LAN. It might be listening to everything on my network. The is also another little thing where Amazon says Sonos plays Prime Music and Sonos says "no, you have be a recognized beta tester to play Prime Music." I'll pass. I don't want to play "Mother May I" with these people. There is also this gem on the Sonos website: The Sonos Beta program is where music lovers like you get to try out new software and music services before they're officially available on Sonos. You are at the forefront of the global streaming revolution, making Sonos' vision to stream all the music on earth in every room a reality. Yup, were all servants to Sonos' dream here. If any of you other servants have packet sniffer skills I would love to know if the bridge is passing information to the mothership while the system is supposed to off. Before you call me cray-cray please reflect on the software code embedded into Volkswagen diesels to turn off emissions equipment except when conditions suggested a test was in process. Thanks.

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