![]() So I wasn’t invited to the Logitech Harmony Ultimate Alexa beta and I have some concerns about how Sonos activities are going to be handled with respect to Alexa’s voice recognition. Alexa, Sonos, Smart Things, Harmony, Oh My Compared to using an Echo Dot and a connected speaker, well, for me there is no comparison. Edit: Working as of November 30! But all the other Alexa skills that I currently use are working and I’m a very happy camper. I’m not concerned about the sleep sounds skill since as an Amazon Prime subscriber there are plenty of Sleep Sound playlists that work just fine if I ask Alexa to “play a sleep sounds playlist in the bedroom”. An Internet search turned up this Sonos thread on non working skills where after reading through all the posts, it seems that only Sleep Sounds is called out by name as not working along with the Flash Briefing. ![]() I’ve been told this is a known limitation and being looked into. On the other hand, I do like to call up my Flash Briefing when I get up and currently when I ask Alexa for my flash briefing on Sonos One, there is silence. You can’t make and receive calls (but for my usage, being able to make and receive calls on Sonos is not something I need, and I do have an Echo Show in the kitchen). There are only a few Alexa skills that I’ve found that don’t work on Sonos One. Sonos really should be ashamed of themselves for not addressing this. Since Sonos still (obstructively) relies on the dangerous SMB1 protocol for streaming from local Windows computers to Sonos speakers, I’ve moved to a DLNA based Twonky Server on NAS for streaming my huge collection of ripped music. There is one negative about Sonos that I feel important to call out. My music taste is pretty eclectic and ranges from Opera to Rock, to Blues, to Folk, to Jazz and to Classical. A stereo pair really fills the room and while some complain about not having thumping base, for me, the balance is perfect. Oh yeah, shuffling Alexa from Prime Music (where I have some playlists) and oh yeah, what great sound. Alexa somehow sounded happier on Sonos One than on the Echo DotĪnd then the first test, “Alexa, play Adele in the Bedroom”. I’d already enabled the Sonos skill in the Alexa app and linked my Sonos account, so setting up the new speakers was pretty fast and easy. So, I when launch day arrived, I grabbed two white Sonos Ones. I’d been using an Echo Dot in the master bedroom, sometimes connect to a Bose Soundlink Mini II (which I mostly use outside on my deck in the summer). I’d been thinking about getting a pair of Play 1’s for the bedroom for a while and didn’t pull the trigger as I started hearing the rumors of an Alexa powered Sonos speaker. With Sonos Play 5’s paired up on 2 floors, I had whole home audio (the master bedroom shares air space with my loft home office and a cathedral ceiling covers both). I ripped my existing CD collection to digital and starting working on doing the same with my dad’s vast collection of vinyl. ![]() And of course everything was going digital and online streaming services were just starting up and I signed up for Pandora. I listened to Sonos Play 5’s in a showroom and was hooked. But still only in one room/one floor And then, along came Sonos with whole home audio. When I started equipping my own home for music, many, many years later, I started with some Bose bookshelf speakers in one room and then a 5.1 system of speakers from Cambridge Soundworks through a home receiver/home theater setup. These were large, stage/concert quality speakers and wow, it was magnificent even though I wasn’t allowed to play rock and roll or folk music. And then fishing through walls and floors to wire for whole home audio. He’d build speakers for our home from scratch, going to Acoustic Research in Cambridge, MA for the very best parts. My dad was an audiophile who originally owned a record store and moved on to own radio stations. It’s not my fault that I’m very, very particular about how my music sounds.
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