ie8 fix

Sonos Bundle BU250 user reviews

User Reviews

  • Rating Breakdown:
  • 5 star:
    7/9
    7
  • 4 star:
    0/9
    0
  • 3 star:
    0/9
    0
  • 2 star:
    0/9
    0
  • 1 star:
    2/9
    2
My rating: 0 stars

you have not rated this yet

Write review
Results 1-5 of 9
  • 5.0 stars

    "Single best electronics purchase I've ever made" on by bradcorrodi

    Pros: Unsurpassed ease of use, continuing improvements, does the one job it promises to do every time. Idiot-proof to setup, tolerant to difficult environments, has all the features you really want without all the clutter from things you'd never use.

    Cons: It is expensive, and you will find it addictive. I waited two years for the price to drop - it never moved - I gave in - then 3 months later bought 3 more. Track title search interface could be better - but this is nit picking.

    Summary: The product has a clear idea of how most people want to listen to music, and the design is so focused around this that it is entirely intuitive to use. They have not tried to make it stream video or pictures, and as a consequence it does a really, really good job with music. If you are comparing alternatives, be sure to focus on the remote. That is what you will be using 95% of the time you are trying to play music. Can you use the remote literally anywhere within 250 feet of any part of your music system, or are you restricted to line of site - or worse - using your TV as the display for your remote? Can you have as many remotes as you want (including your iPhone)? Does the display show you everything you want to see when you are looking for a particular track, playlist or just enjoying the cover art? Can you use the same interface to seamlessly blend playlists across your own 'local' library of various different music file types and on-line services like Rhapsody? Sonos does it all because they have focused so specifically on doing the music listening experience right.

    Added to that, the company has spent some serious time and effort to hide the complexity of setup and configuration. The boxes automatically form a 'mesh' network connecting themselves to every other 'box' in range. The result is signal connectivity better than any WiFi I have ever used from a laptop - without ever having to type in a MAC address, subnet mask or SSID.

    There are some things to pay attention to when setting up your system, though. If you do have a big music library, you will have to make it DRM-free to use the Sonos to play it. Sad for some, but better for all of us that they didn't waste time trying to implement DRM when it looks like it is now going away. You should also take your selection of a NAS device very seriously. I had to re-rip my 700+ CD collection 3 times due to NAS failures. Beware the "cheap" Maxtor drives that claim to be RAID. They may have redundant drives inside and so are technically RAID, but if one of them fails it can be nearly impossible to recover a good copy from the other (they are low-level Linux formatted, and the O/S is so bad that it propagates file corruptions from one copy to the other). Western Digital makes good drives, but their "book" drives are better suited to backups than 'live' streaming to the 4 or 5 different rooms you'll soon be serving with your Sonos. When the 'local' drive source of music can't keep up with even the buffered read-stream demanded by the Sonos, it gives up and stops playing - returning to the beginning of the playlist queue as if it had finished. Splash out and by a NetGear ReadyNAS - hot-swappable, and you can put bigger drives in its 4 bays if and when your collection grows. I am glad that I can now add a 2 TB SATA drive to the 2x1TB drives I bought with my ReadyNAS for about the same price.

    Accessing internet radio from anywhere in the world is also well-designed bonus that I never anticipated when buying the system. Who needs Sirius?? The one point I would disagree with in the C-Net review is the line-in jacks on your ZP90 - you will use them if you are a sports fan. Now if you have to run upstairs or into the kitchen for a refill, you can have the game on in every room by selecting your A/V Home Theater as your source for the other zones in your house.

    My only regret is that I missed out on 2 years of enjoying the Sonos by foolishly not buying one when I first discovered them 4 years ago. I thought that either the price would come down or I would be able to find a cheap, standards-compatible uPNP player that would access my NAS. I was wrong. Great design for a very specific purpose is much, much better than generic components - and is worth paying for because you will enjoy it every day.

  • 4.5 stars

    "Amazingly simple, good sound and ready to listen" on by outsidedude

    Pros: amazingly simple to set up. good sound. Love the massive internet radio selection. Stream tunes from iTunes, my cd player and internet - I use it each and every day. and it's just plain fun - really

    Cons: it's a bit pricey, but SO easy, it's worth it. I don't like the Best Buy team didn't know that the main box needs to be hardwired to the ethernet; other than that, I LOVE IT!

  • 5.0 stars

    "Fantastic device" on by pneligan

    Pros: simple setup, beautiful control. everytime works out of the box. previously used squeezebox - horrible interface, did not support apple lossless. the controller looks and feels like an ipod and you can sit on the couch and enjoy with no pointing!

    Cons: a bit expensive to expand the number of receivers.

    Summary: incomparibly the best music streaming solution. i have tried everything out there over the years, this was the first not to disappoint. this is the IPOD of music streaming, noting else even comes close.

  • 0.5 stars

    "BEWARE!! Not for the CD collector/audiophile." on by MsDoright

    Pros: Speaker sound is good for wireless speakers.

    Cons: All music must be digitally stored.
    Must be expert in Sonos, Media Player and iTunes software.

    Summary: I already had a whole house system and all I really wanted was the ability to change CD tracks from the control panels. Our audio/video/media system vendor recommended changing out the system to a Sonos. BIG MISTAKE He sold me up the river.

    I have thousands... literally thousands of CD's and in order to listen to them on the Sonos, I must have them on my running computer or a hard drive I have that's dedicated to the Sonos. I've yet to figure out how to use iTunes without my computer system running.

    Also, if I want to listen to a CD, then, I must change it to digitally stored music. That, in and of itself, can be a pain as not all CD's upload correctly. Out of the 100 or so I've loaded, I have 6 sitting on my desk that don't upload correctly at all. I can't even manually fix them. Until I figure out how to digitally convert them, then, I can no longer listen to these CD's through my whole house system.

    This is a good system for those who:

    -digitally store their music
    -don't have large CD collections
    -or-have the time to convert all their CD's to digital storage
    -have the time to make sure they are proficient with Media Player, iTunes, et. al.

    So, I just blew $15,000 converting my whole house system and I'd change it all back if I could.

    Updated on Feb 29, 2012

    I forgot to say that my system is very large and over three floors. There are 11 zones.

    Consequently, I must have controllers on each floor. If you buy one of these systems, just use existing computers/tables/phones to control it. At worst, buy tablets for the locations where you want control.

    This system would be best for someone who is just beginning to set up a 'whole-house' system instead of converting an existing one.

  • 5.0 stars

    "Highly Addictive" on by pbchef

    Pros: Easy to set up, Great sound, highly portable (I have a Play 5). A lot of choices of things to listen to including your own computer music library. Very cool way to listen and explore new music.

    Cons: PC interphase is not as slick as the IPAD's, in fact the I have seen all the interphases except for the sonos controller and the IPAD app is by far the best.

Results 1-5 of 9

Write a Review

Quickly sign in with: or Log in or create an account to post a review.
Submit

The posting of advertisements, profanity, or personal attacks is prohibited. Click here to review our site terms of use.

Compare to other audio system components

Compare Selected

select

Sonos Play:5 Starting at $384.99

  • Editor's rating: 4.0 out of 5

select

Sonos Play:3 Starting at $299.00

  • Editor's rating: 4.0 out of 5

select

Logitech Squeezebox Radio Starting at $139.99

  • Editor's rating: 4.0 out of 5

select

Sonos Play:5 Starting at $388.50

  • Editor's rating: 4.0 out of 5

Sponsored Premier Brands on CNET

Where to Buy

Pricing not available

Set price alert
ie8 fix
ie8 fix
ie8 fix
  • Recently Viewed Products
  • My Lists
  • My Software Updates
  • Promo
  • Log In | Join CNET