Thursday, November 20, 2008

Sonos BU130 Digital Music System Bundle

Sonos BU130 Digital Music System Bundle

Sonos BU130 Digital Music System Bundle Buy this product from Amazon
 
5
Publisher : Sonos
Company : Sonos


Features
  • Includes two Sonos ZonePlayers and one Sonos Controller
  • Lets you enjoy the music files on your PC or networked hard drive anywhere in your house
  • Hassle-free wireless networking capability
  • Controller offers a 3.5" color LCD and a clickwheel control the provide easy browsing of your PC music library and independent control of each ZonePlayer in your system
  • Multi-zone synchronous playback (same music plays in multiple zones simultaneously) or multi-stream playback (each ZonePlayer plays individually selected music)

Product Description

The Sonos Bundle 130 gives you everything you need to wirelessly stream music to two rooms of your house. And it all comes in one convenient bundle. Just connect the ZonePlayer 80 (ZP80) to your home theater or stereo and place the ZonePlayer 100 (ZP100) with built-in amplifier in any room where you want music. Connect one ZonePlayer or ZoneBridge to your network and all the rest work wirelessly.

Customer reviews

The Best 5 by .. William Warshauer (Washington, DC)
This is unbeatable. I've had Sonos for several years now and it's great. Good quality music all over your house. Brings Rhapsody and Pandora and other services off the computer and into your stereo. Remote is great and is like an i-pod for your house. So worth the money....!

Amazingly simple and powerful! 5 by .. Stephanie Fountain (Chapel Hill, NC)
I've owned lots of audio, video, and computer equipment over the years. I've never encountered a product that is so simple to install and intuitive to use and provides so much flexibility. I was thrilled to yank my 400 disc jukebox out of my audio cabinet and replace it with the little Sonos box! This seems a bit pricey, but it is worth every penny! Buy it now!

Wireless audio with Mac-like simplicity. 5 by .. Stephen McMenamin (Fullerton, CA USA)
During a recent remodeling project, we installed speakers in the walls and ceilings of most of the rooms. We had planned to install a high-end wired system, but the cost was a bit staggering, and it required us to make some unchangeable decisions about where to locate audio equipment. Then I heard about the Sonos system. I did a bit of research and liked what I read, so we went ahead with it. I especially liked that I could get the whole Sonos system installed and connected to the speakers for far less than just the speaker wiring was going to cost!




The Sonos system consists mainly of small units called Zone Players. Each is a combination of a wireless router and an audio amplifier. You attach one (hard-wired) to your network router, and you place one in each room in which you have speakers. You attach each pair of speakers to a Zone Player exactly as you would to a normal audio receiver or amp. The Zone Players communicate with each other in what is called a "mesh network." The system can use audio from a variety of sources: (1) your digital music library, (2) any audio source patched into a Zone Player, (3) Sirius internet radio, or (4) the Rhapsody music service. Using a small wireless remote control panel you can direct music from any source to any Zone Player. You can have multiple sources playing in different rooms at the same time, or you can group rooms together. One side benefit is that each Zone Player can serve as an access point to your wireless home network as well.



The Sonos system installed easily and works flawlessly. The UI is excellent. In addition to the aforementioned wireless controllers, you can also operate your system from your desktop or laptop. Our system uses the Zone Player 100, since the speakers it drives do not have their own amplification. If some or all of the speakers you have are already attached to amplifiers, you can use the Zone Player 80, which is basically a router without a built-in amplifier.



I am completely satisfied with the Sonos system. I can recommend it without reservations to anyone who wants to be able to distribute audio flexibly and wirelessly to multiple rooms.

Spectacular 5 by .. esanta (San Jose, CA USA)
This is the absolute best digital jukebox out there, period. As an added bonus, it's flexible, scalable, multizone, wireless... and systems costing twenty times as much do not even come close the ease of use: Sonos currently has the highest Wife Acceptance Factor of any techno-gadget out there, only equaled by TiVo.



Although some amount of technical savvy is required for the initial setup, anybody can pick up the beautiful remote and immediately figure out how to use it (it's a bit like an iPod).



This bundle contains the wireless controller and its charger (but no charging cradle, more on this later), a ZP80 and a ZP100. The main difference between the two zone players is the ZP100 has a built-in amplifier so you can hook up speakers directly to it, whereas the ZP80 doesn't but it offers digital output (coax and optical) which the ZP100 lacks. Both zone players feature an analog input (you could use it for a TV or a satellite radio receiver, for instance) as well as analog line output. It's the perfect starter kit for a two-zone system; you can always add more controllers and zone players later as needed, and seamlessly integrate them into your system.




Sonos has been relentlessly adding features since its initial release: Rhapsody, Pandora, Napster, Sirius Satellite Radio (no antenna needed, you get the feed over the internet). Reliability has been exemplary.



The price may seem a little steep for a music system, but the nearest competitor (Logitech Squeezebox Duet Network Music System) is nowhere near as fully featured (no amplifier, no audio input, no Sirius) and doesn't cost much less for a two zone system. It also seems to be a lot more complicated to setup and use, but I must admit not having any first-hand experience with it.



The only blemish on the Sonos is that they sell the charging cradle separately for a ridiculous amount of money (it's just a dumb piece of plastic) when it's an indispensable part of the system. Considering the fairly high price of the system, I fail to see the rationale behind excluding it from the bundle... It must be the brainchild of some marketing moron. Other than this minor but irritating point... This is just the most enjoyable, reliable, easiest to use system out there.



This NAS box is a perfect complement to your Sonos system and will host the music files so you can turn off your computer and keep the music going: D-Link DNS-323 2-Bay Network Storage Enclosure



The infamous cradle (don't forget to order it): Sonos CC100 Charging Cradle for Sonos CR100 Controller



Edit: the Logitech Squeezebox Duet now supports Sirius.



[Edit August 2008] Sonos released new ZonePlayers, ZP90 and ZP120, part of the new BU150 bundle which replaces the BU130. Don't buy the now obsolete BU130 bundle unless you can get it at a significant discount over the BU150.

Music Lovers Dream Machine 5 by .. B. Bole (Tampa)
I spent a lot of time researching before making this major purchase. Thankfully, it has lived up to expectations. I have an extensive music collection: it took me nearly a year to rip it all to flac, a lossless digital compression system. I loaded much of it onto a 1 tb Buffalo Linkstation server (purchased from Amazon for about $350) and linked the Sonos to it. Now I can scroll through the entire collection and select and play albums or tracks in seconds (and no more hours putting away dozens of CDs after they are played).




I researched both Sonos and the Logictech Squeezebox, which does the same thing: stream music from a hard drive to a device connected to your receiver. The Squeezebox is cheaper and may very well be a great product. I decided on the Sonos because it seemed likely to be more stable and easier to connect. If you review the Squeezebox website, you will see the latest software and products have been released, but still are undergoing development. The Duet, the most comparable product, is very new. I am not a computer geek and am easily frustrated when technical problems develop. Again, I cannot speak to whether Squeezebox would have caused any problems, but Sonos was very easy to connect and has worked perfectly.



Perhaps the best example I can give of how simple this is to use is that my wife uses it. She found switching on the CD player, loading discs, and switching the receiver to CD too frustrating to bother with. But she figured out the Sonos controller on her own and has started playing music.



As with any technology, I have my fingers crossed, but one month into this system, I have to say that for anyone who spends a lot of time listening to music, you cannot live without this system!

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