![]() The company routinely issues software updates to fix performance issues and add meaningful features. In fact, they’ll likely work for many months after. Essentially you’re left with two different systems if you opt to upgrade non-legacy devices to S2.Īnd to reiterate, your legacy speakers and controllers won’t completely stop working in June. And this new software will power new features, and keep support for both Amazon’s Alexa and the Google Assistant. The classic Sonos name and app will be reserved for S2. Legacy products will not support S2, and will use a rebranding of the old app which will be named Sonos S1 Controller. This is the new operating system to power the current Sonos lineup, and it’s also the internal name for the new app. Its newer products and speakers will continue to receive full updates with new features, but legacy devices will begin a slow end-of-life path with updates coming only as bug and security updates (meaning fixes), but nothing new.Īnd we finally have some information about what exactly is happening. If you’re a long-time customer and user of Sonos smart speakers, the company announced some potentially bad news back in January: As of June 2020, Sonos will start classifying some of its older products as legacy devices and end support for them. "Now the context is completely different, and what's complicated is the smart home.Your CNN account Log in to your CNN account We made it a lot simpler," Rappoport says. "When we started, multiroom audio was really complicated. With the expansion of smart-home tech and a move toward high-end "architectural" audio integrations in homes, more customers are relying on professional installers to create complex setups where audio devices, video screens, lights, and appliances all work together. Sonos isn't working this tightly with installers out of the goodness of its heart. Support for the customizable web service IFTTT is also planned. With that programming interface, developers can write code to make Sonos speakers provide notifications from smart-home devices, or play custom audio clips. The new mono mode and volume limiting controls will also aid some setups, as will the new developer controls Sonos plans to open. The new Amp also supports AirPlay 2, Alexa, Google Assistant (soon), and other Sonos network features, though it doesn't have onboard mics itself. Recognizing it cannot do it all, Sonos is now partnering with a company called Sonance to extend TruePlay tuning and networking abilities to a new line of embedded speakers. The Amp is now TV friendly, like the Sonos Beam, with an onboard HDMI ARC connection and IR receiver, and makes a good option for home theaters with wired front or rear speakers, or ceiling-mounted speakers. The clean design and new skills may even free the Amp from rack purgatory and let the device integrate more fully with the increasingly complex ecosystem of connected devices for the home. ![]() ![]() All Sonos customers will begin to notice additions to that help match them with installers, in case they have grander ambitions for their home speaker network. ![]() Soon it will treat them to a new web portal offering dedicated support, community features, early info on upcoming products, and promotional help. In the past year, Sonos has expanded what it now calls its "Installed Solutions" department, launching a freight program and co-op funding for its installation partners. They'll be able to buy the $599 Sonos Amp starting December 1, months before its February 2019 public launch. Today, Sonos is debuting a new version of the Amp, and professional installers will get first crack at it. Yet installers still stuck with the old hardware, working harder and harder to come up with ways to jerry-rig the underpowered Connect:Amp into increasingly complex home networks. As time went on, Sonos let its Amps languish and shifted focus to standalone speakers. If an installer sold a client a Sonos system instead of a more expensive setup with a CD changer and complex amp hardware, it often meant they'd receive fewer angry calls about speakers not working. Sonos systems didn't always make the installers as much money as large-scale custom builds, but customers liked the features and reliability. But from the very start, with 2005's ZP100 amplifier, professional installers proved to be some of Sonos' strongest advocates. ![]()
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