I admit to feeling some trepidation when my Slim Devices Squeezebox review unit arrived. Since buying a house a year and a half ago, my stereo from early high school has sat unused in our basement. (Note the cheesy, Space-Invaders-like display on the screen and the layers of dust.)
I popped open one of the tape decks and look what I found:
Looking at the Squeezebox, I wondered not only if I could make it work with my stereo, but if it would even be worthwhile given my decidedly low-key approach to music.
Here’s the answer: Yes, yes, unequivocally yes. Can I have it for Christmas, please? Pretty please with a cherry on top?
Every new thing I tried with the Squeezebox just made it better — Starting with streaming my own music, then accessing the SqueezeNetwork and finally going full out with Pandora. If you want to skip set-up and some of the more gory details, scroll to the end for a list of pros and (very few) cons.
After getting my stereo and speakers up and running (the red cable goes in the red hole�), setting up the Squeezebox was pretty simple. Not something I’d recommend for Grandma, but if you’ve got a wireless network in the house, the Squeezebox doesn’t put forth anything too daunting during installation. Plug it into the stereo and the wall and you’re pretty much good to go.
The Squeezebox automatically polls for SSIDs and lets you choose the wireless network you want to access. I have to admit to one embarrassing moment. I didn’t realize the device itself was wireless, but had thought I’d have to plug it in to my router and that my music would then stream wirelessly from my computer. I was annoyed that there was no Ethernet cable included in the packaging. Damn cheapskates! Of course, joke’s on me. No cable needed.
I had a little more trouble downloading the SlimServer software on my laptop. For some reason, on the first go-through, my computer said the software had downloaded, but I couldn’t get it up and running. I uninstalled and reinstalled, however, and it worked fine.
The menus on the Squeezebox are beautiful. I played first with accessing music on my laptop. My options were as follows:
After playing around with my paltry music supply, I switched over to the SqueezeNetwork. Wow.
The SqueezeNetwork is what makes the Squeezebox such a compelling product. You can access tons of Internet radio without going anywhere near a PC. I have friends who listen to Internet radio all the time, but I’ve never been able to get into it because I have no interest in dealing with my laptop to listen to music. The SqueezeNetwork gets around that little dilemma.
In addition to the regular menu options, with the SqueezeNetwork, I can listen to:
And here we come to the best thing of all about the Squeezebox: Pandora Radio. If you haven’t played with Pandora online, go try out the free version at www.pandora.com. It’s awesome. You choose songs or artists, and Pandora builds a channel around your selections. You can vote thumbs up when you like a song on the new channel or thumbs down to help Pandora refine the spectrum of music played.
Pandora on the Squeezebox is even better because you can do the same stuff using only a remote control. You can listen to channels you’ve already created, create new channels by searching with keywords or by launching a new channel from a song you hear and like, vote thumbs up and thumbs down on songs, add a channel to your favorites, and listen to a QuickMix that Pandora creates from your existing channels.
The one catch is that you have to sign up for a premium Pandora account through the Slim Devices site. It’s free for 90 days, but then you have to pay to continue accessing Pandora on the Squeezebox. Ouch. Talk about your crack addiction. On the other hand, the premium account is only $36 for a year, or three bucks a month. Not too steep.
There are a couple of other cool-but-random things on the Squeezebox that make you think the developers had a little too much time on their hands, like the RSS Newsticker and the Natural Sounds option, complete with sound effects you might use in a radio skit. But hey, it makes you think folks had fun putting Squeezebox together.
Squeezebox at a Glance
Pros:
Cons: