

- #UE MUSIC LIBRARY HAS WRONG IP ADDRESS ANDROID#
- #UE MUSIC LIBRARY HAS WRONG IP ADDRESS SOFTWARE#
- #UE MUSIC LIBRARY HAS WRONG IP ADDRESS FREE#
#UE MUSIC LIBRARY HAS WRONG IP ADDRESS ANDROID#
If you have an iPhone or iPod touch, or an Android phone or tablet, you can download the Smart Radio app.

I will say though that the Smart Radio is kind to poor sources and tends always to be listenable. With internet radio, of course, the sound quality is limited by the source. The Squeezebox team has always cared about sound quality, and it shows. That said, the Smart Radio sounded like a smaller version of the Boom, which I mean as a compliment. The Boom was better in every way, deeper and sharper. I compared it to a Squeezebox Boom, a now obsolete stereo player which is considerably larger. The mono speaker has separate tweeter and woofer for extended frequency response. Yes it is mono, but considering the size of the unit it is deep and rich, and lacks the annoying squawk of some small music players. That means something for you, whatever your musical taste or location. Radio is supplied through a link with tunein, which claims 50,000 stations. When the unit is on standby it displays a clock, making this an excellent if pricey clock radio. When a station is playing you can easily assign a preset, simply with press and hold. Incidentally, support was easy to contact and most helpful, which is not the case with every product. I am inclined to put this down to bad luck and possibly early firmware which will soon be updated. There was some kind of fault which later fixed itself. Select Live Radio, pick a station, and play.ĭisclosure: in my case this is not what happened. A menu displays on the screen, and you use the rotary controller to navigate, pressing it in to select an option. Next, wait a moment while the unit updates its firmware if necessary, and the unit is ready to play. What you do then is to plug in the power, switch on, and connect to your home network, usually via Wi-Fi. Since this is unadvertised I guess there is no guarantee the feature will remain. No remote is supplied, but if you have a Squeezebox remote it works. The input jack means you can use the Smart Radio as a powered speaker for most MP3 players, iPods and smartphones.įinally there is a secret feature: an infrared receptor on the front. There is also a stereo headphone jack (although the Radio itself has only a single speaker), and on the back, a wired Ethernet port and a 3.5mm jack input. On the front is a 2.4 inch colour screen, 6 numbered presets, a large rotary controller, a smaller rotary volume control, a power button, and 8 further buttons: Home, Alarms, Add, Back, Rewind, Pause, Forward and Play. There is an internal rechargeable battery which (says the manual) takes 6 hours to charge and then plays for 6 hours of course you can use it while charging. A recess in the back forms a grip for easy carrying in one hand. The unit has a beautiful though easily marked shiny black finish and surprisingly weighty, probably a sign of quality. Out of the boxĮnough preamble, how is it out of the box? What you get is the UE Radio, a power supply, a standard 3.5mm mini-jack cable, and a brief introductory booklet in eleven languages. It is intended to offer a simple out-of-the-box experience without any setup issues, whereas the physically similar Squeezebox Radio which preceded it was unashamedly part of the Squeezebox system.
#UE MUSIC LIBRARY HAS WRONG IP ADDRESS FREE#
Turn it on, connect to your Wi-Fi network and instantly have access to thousands of free internet radio stations from around the world, online music services, as well as the music stored on your computer. Other products in the new UE range – headphones, wireless speakers – have nothing to do with Squeezebox.Įven the UE Smart Radio does not use Squeezebox branding at all. Now Logitech seems to have abandoned efforts to beat Apple in home entertainment, and the UE Smart Radio is the only current product which still uses Squeezebox technology. Products like the Squeezebox Touch, reviewed here, won acclaim for their high sound quality and the flexibility of the system, but the weak point has always been that setup is too complex and quirky to win over the mass market. Squeezebox build up an enthusiastic following, and in 2006 the company was acquired by Logitech which set about bringing the system to a wider market.
#UE MUSIC LIBRARY HAS WRONG IP ADDRESS SOFTWARE#
The Squeezebox music system originated with a company called Slim Devices and consisted of open source music streaming server software and hardware players which you connected over wired Ethernet or later Wi-Fi. The Logitech UE (it stands for Ultimate Ears) Smart Radio has some history behind it.
