After a bruising year, Sonos readies its next big thing: a streaming box | The Verge

We have a lot of Sonos speakers in our house. $200-$400 dollars for a tv box seems crazy high in cost. Unless they really nail the interface for it and provide far more HDMI outputs than my TV, I don’t see how this competes with the abundance of affordable streaming devices on the market–let alone the premium (yet still less expensive) Apple TV.

After a bruising year, Sonos readies its next big thing: a streaming box | The Verge:

After the most tumultuous nine months in Sonos’ history, the brand is trying to find its footing again. Even as work continues to rehabilitate the company’s beleaguered mobile app, Sonos is planning to take a big swing in a new product category: it’s getting into video for the first time. In the coming months, Sonos will release a streaming player that sources tell me could cost between $200 and $400 — a truly staggering price for its category.
Keep reading here…

My smart speaker setup

I aspire to write more about my smart home setup here but doing so requires a style of writing that doesn’t always come easily for me. So I decided to podcast about it. Scroll below to hear my recent conversation with David MacDonald about how I set up my smart speakers. Click here to learn about my favorite smart home devices.

Episode Description:

Robby and David (music composition, theory, and technology teacher at the Wichita State University) compare smart speakers, their assistants, and their smart home ecosystems. This episode covers the HomePod, Google Nest, Amazon Echo, Siri, Alexa, Google Assistant, Sonos speakers, and the various quirks that result from trying to use them in combination.

Backstage Access Patreon supporters get extended conversation about Apple Notes, DEVONthink, Standard Music Font Layout compatibility, FileMaker databases, student motivation, grading (and ungrading), and sticker charts.

Subscribe to the Blog…
RSS | Email Newsletter

Subscribe to the Podcast in…
Apple Podcasts | Overcast | Castro | Spotify | RSS

Support Music Ed Tech Talk

Become a Patron!

.bmc-button img{height: 34px !important;width: 35px !important;margin-bottom: 1px !important;box-shadow: none !important;border: none !important;vertical-align: middle !important;}.bmc-button{padding: 7px 15px 7px 10px !important;line-height: 35px !important;height:51px !important;text-decoration: none !important;display:inline-flex !important;color:#ffffff !important;background-color:#000000 !important;border-radius: 5px !important;border: 1px solid transparent !important;padding: 7px 15px 7px 10px !important;font-size: 20px !important;letter-spacing:0.6px !important;box-shadow: 0px 1px 2px rgba(190, 190, 190, 0.5) !important;-webkit-box-shadow: 0px 1px 2px 2px rgba(190, 190, 190, 0.5) !important;margin: 0 auto !important;font-family:'Arial', cursive !important;-webkit-box-sizing: border-box !important;box-sizing: border-box !important;}.bmc-button:hover, .bmc-button:active, .bmc-button:focus {-webkit-box-shadow: 0px 1px 2px 2px rgba(190, 190, 190, 0.5) !important;text-decoration: none !important;box-shadow: 0px 1px 2px 2px rgba(190, 190, 190, 0.5) !important;opacity: 0.85 !important;color:#ffffff !important;}Buy me a coffeeBuy me a coffee

Show Notes:

App of the Week:
Robby – HomeRun 2
David MacDonald – Letterpress

Album of the Week:
Robby – Hiatus Kaiyote – Mood Valiant
David MacDonald – Frederic Rzewski: The People United Will Never Be Defeated – Ursula Oppens | The People United Will Never Be Defeated – Kaj Schumacher | Winnsboro Cotton Mill Blues

Tech Tip of the Week:
Robby – Use a clipboard manager
David MacDonald – New stream deck store!

Where to Find Us:
Robby – Twitter | Blog | Book
David MacDonald – Twitter | Website

Please don’t forget to rate the show and share it with others!

METT Episode #21 – Music and Technology We’re Thankful For, with Craig McClellan

Robby's cohost from The Class Nerd podcast, Craig McClellan, returns to talk about recent smart home and Apple purchases, speakers with digital assistants, technology and music we are thankful for.

Sponsor Music Ed Tech Talk! Do you have a product or service related to music or technology that you would love to get in front of music educators? Reach out to me on my Contact page to learn more about advertising on my site and this podcast.

Use code THANKFUL at checkout to buy anything on my Store for $10 off! This puts my Scale Exercise Play-Along Tracks at only $5!

Show Notes:

The Class Nerd Podcast – Listen to Craig and I talk about using technology in the classroom
Philips Hue Bulbs
Lutron Caseta Light Switches
MyQ Garage Door Opener
Netatmo HomeKit Doorbell
Nest Hello Doorbell
Starling.io
Eero
Sonos One
Craig's Guitar:

Cory Wong
Vulfpeck
Robby's Viral TikTok:

@_robbyburns #duet with @_robbyburns I added the percussion. #sleighride #concertband #bandmusic #fyp #foryou #christmasmusic #percussion #babiesoftiktok

♬ original sound – Flute Dude Music

Robby's Way More Viral (But Less Good) TikTok:

@_robbyburns #duet with @_robbyburns

♬ original sound – Flute Dude Music

Leroy Anderson's Sleigh Ride Arrangement
@flutedudemusic on TikTok
Star Wars Themes on Guitar During Worship Songs – TikTok

Robby's We Wish You A Merry Christmas Meme TikTok:

@_robbyburns #duet with @simplyaleah_ #christmasmusic #musictheory #musicnotation #vibraphone #percussion #fyp #foryou #accidentaljazz

♬ original sound – Aleah Vassell

Tech We're Thankful For

HomeRun App
Kemper Amp
TikTok
TextExpander
forScore for Mac
Apple Pay

Music We're Thankful For

Brahms Symphonies – George Szell/Cleveland Orchestra

Ruston Kelly – Shape & Destroy

Painted – Lucky Daye

NEEDTOBREATHE – Out of Body

Boston Brass – Rewired

Thad Cockrell – If In Case You Feel The Same

Where to Find Us:
Robby – Twitter | Blog | Book
Craig McClellan – Twitter | Website

Please don't forget to rate the show and share it with others!

Subscribe to Music Ed Tech Talk:

Subscribe to the Blog

Subscribe to the Podcast in…
Apple Podcasts | Overcast | Castro | Spotify | RSS

The 7 Best Apple Homekit Devices

Learn about my smart speaker setup on this episode of my podcast:

Subscribe to the Podcast in…
Apple Podcasts | Overcast | Castro | Spotify | RSS

I keep promising myself that a larger dive into my home automation workflow is coming to this blog. And it is. But I thought that I would first take a moment to outline the top seven apps and devices that I am using in combination with the Apple Home app. These get special attention given that their HomeKit integration allows me to conveniently manipulate them all from within the Apple Home app and command them with Siri. 

All of the devices in this post are also compatible with the Amazon Echo. I only buy home devices that are equally compatible because I use Alexa in my house as well. Furthermore, the home automation space is still very young and fragmented. The more open a platform is, the more flexible it will be now and in the future. 

Philips Hue Lights

Be careful. These WiFi connected light bulbs are the gateway drug of home automation. With them, I can now turn on every light in my house with my phone or voice. For my small house, the bulbs work just fine, but I would recommend the light switches for larger homes for convenience and to save money. Check out the image below to see how these lights appear in the Home app. I can control them individually or group them together. I can automate them by time or location in the Apple Home app. It’s really nice to have the lights gently dim around bed time, and gradually wake me up with a gentle red hue an hour before work in the morning. Because my iCloud account also knows who and where my wife is, I can set up an automation that turns off all the lights once both of us have left the house, and another that turns them back on when one of us returns. 

Check out Philips Hue lights here

<div class="
      image-block-outer-wrapper
      layout-caption-below
      design-layout-inline
      combination-animation-none
      individual-animation-none
      individual-text-animation-none
    ">




    <figure class="
          sqs-block-image-figure
          intrinsic
        " style="max-width:1155px">







      <div class="image-block-wrapper">
        <div class="sqs-image-shape-container-element



          has-aspect-ratio
        " style="position: relative;padding-bottom:216.45021057128906%;overflow: hidden">







            <img src="https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/5595df9ce4b0ce9ff9ecd1a8/1563223588757-ZFAEJMCLMC400SAZIJ5X/public.jpeg" alt="The Home app aggregates all of my various different home automation devices." width="1155" height="2500" style="display:block;object-fit: cover;width: 100%;height: 100%;object-position: 50% 50%" loading="lazy">

        </div>
      </div>






      <figcaption class="image-caption-wrapper">
        <div class="image-caption"><p class="">The Home app aggregates all of my various different home automation devices.</p></div>
      </figcaption>


    </figure>


</div>





















































<div class="
      image-block-outer-wrapper
      layout-caption-below
      design-layout-inline
      combination-animation-none
      individual-animation-none
      individual-text-animation-none
    ">




    <figure class="
          sqs-block-image-figure
          intrinsic
        " style="max-width:1155px">







      <div class="image-block-wrapper">
        <div class="sqs-image-shape-container-element



          has-aspect-ratio
        " style="position: relative;padding-bottom:216.45021057128906%;overflow: hidden">







            <img src="https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/5595df9ce4b0ce9ff9ecd1a8/1563223614905-LPEQV1YSJFHR7RMI9K8I/public.jpeg" alt="The Good Morning scene is automatically set to run at 6:30 am on weekdays and at 9:30 am on weekends." width="1155" height="2500" style="display:block;object-fit: cover;width: 100%;height: 100%;object-position: 50% 50%" loading="lazy">

        </div>
      </div>






      <figcaption class="image-caption-wrapper">
        <div class="image-caption"><p class="">The Good Morning scene is automatically set to run at 6:30 am on weekdays and at 9:30 am on weekends.</p></div>
      </figcaption>


    </figure>


</div>





















































<div class="
      image-block-outer-wrapper
      layout-caption-below
      design-layout-inline
      combination-animation-none
      individual-animation-none
      individual-text-animation-none
    ">




    <figure class="
          sqs-block-image-figure
          intrinsic
        " style="max-width:1155px">







      <div class="image-block-wrapper">
        <div class="sqs-image-shape-container-element



          has-aspect-ratio
        " style="position: relative;padding-bottom:216.45021057128906%;overflow: hidden">







            <img src="https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/5595df9ce4b0ce9ff9ecd1a8/1563223657653-97BXL0WKN3QEKELR8YFD/public.jpeg" alt="This is the set up screen for my Good Morning scene." width="1155" height="2500" style="display:block;object-fit: cover;width: 100%;height: 100%;object-position: 50% 50%" loading="lazy">

        </div>
      </div>






      <figcaption class="image-caption-wrapper">
        <div class="image-caption"><p class="">This is the set up screen for my Good Morning scene.</p></div>
      </figcaption>


    </figure>


</div>

Ecobee Thermostat 

The Nest thermostat was the first home automation device I ever bought. It doesn’t work with Apple HomeKit though. So when it unexpectedly died last year, I jumped at the opportunity to try something new. Ecobee thermostats are the best around. Speaking into the thin air “Hey Siri, I’m cold” to turn up the heat is a modern day dream. Of course, I can automate temperature in all of the same ways I can do lights. And I can even group these devices into “scenes” in the Apple home app to streamline frequent actions. For example, the “Arriving Home” scene turns on the air and the lights. This scene is not only triggered by button or voice, but automatically runs when my phone is within close proximity to my house. 

<div class="
      image-block-outer-wrapper
      layout-caption-below
      design-layout-inline
      combination-animation-none
      individual-animation-none
      individual-text-animation-none
    ">




    <figure class="
          sqs-block-image-figure
          intrinsic
        " style="max-width:1155px">







      <div class="image-block-wrapper">
        <div class="sqs-image-shape-container-element



          has-aspect-ratio
        " style="position: relative;padding-bottom:216.45021057128906%;overflow: hidden">







            <img src="https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/5595df9ce4b0ce9ff9ecd1a8/1563223801419-ZBAJ0T8SU4JVD983XRR4/public.jpeg" alt="This is what you see when you open the ecobee app." width="1155" height="2500" style="display:block;object-fit: cover;width: 100%;height: 100%;object-position: 50% 50%" loading="lazy">

        </div>
      </div>






      <figcaption class="image-caption-wrapper">
        <div class="image-caption"><p class="">This is what you see when you open the ecobee app.</p></div>
      </figcaption>


    </figure>


</div>





















































<div class="
      image-block-outer-wrapper
      layout-caption-below
      design-layout-inline
      combination-animation-none
      individual-animation-none
      individual-text-animation-none
    ">




    <figure class="
          sqs-block-image-figure
          intrinsic
        " style="max-width:1155px">







      <div class="image-block-wrapper">
        <div class="sqs-image-shape-container-element



          has-aspect-ratio
        " style="position: relative;padding-bottom:216.45021057128906%;overflow: hidden">







            <img src="https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/5595df9ce4b0ce9ff9ecd1a8/1563223766650-MAU3K7GDJD4XGCS5M3RN/public.jpeg" alt="Once you tap on a thermostat, you get more detailed controls." width="1155" height="2500" style="display:block;object-fit: cover;width: 100%;height: 100%;object-position: 50% 50%" loading="lazy">

        </div>
      </div>






      <figcaption class="image-caption-wrapper">
        <div class="image-caption"><p class="">Once you tap on a thermostat, you get more detailed controls.</p></div>
      </figcaption>


    </figure>


</div>





















































<div class="
      image-block-outer-wrapper
      layout-caption-below
      design-layout-inline
      combination-animation-none
      individual-animation-none
      individual-text-animation-none
    ">




    <figure class="
          sqs-block-image-figure
          intrinsic
        " style="max-width:1155px">







      <div class="image-block-wrapper">
        <div class="sqs-image-shape-container-element



          has-aspect-ratio
        " style="position: relative;padding-bottom:216.45021057128906%;overflow: hidden">







            <img src="https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/5595df9ce4b0ce9ff9ecd1a8/1563223817202-2BWRRVIU0YJJQB7NZNF3/public.jpeg" alt="This is my Arrive Home scene. The door unlocks for me, the thermostat turns on a good temperature, and the lights on the main level of the house turn on." width="1155" height="2500" style="display:block;object-fit: cover;width: 100%;height: 100%;object-position: 50% 50%" loading="lazy">

        </div>
      </div>






      <figcaption class="image-caption-wrapper">
        <div class="image-caption"><p class="">This is my Arrive Home scene. The door unlocks for me, the thermostat turns on a good temperature, and the lights on the main level of the house turn on.</p></div>
      </figcaption>


    </figure>


</div>

Schlage Sense Door Lock

My Schlage Sense allows me to unlock my door with the tap of a button. My teaching studio is in the basement of my house and the door is upstairs. It is disruptive to a lesson to constantly be answering my door, so now I just tell my Apple Watch “Hey Siri, unlock the door.” It authenticates through contact with my wrist and completes the task. Of course my Arriving Home and Leave Home scenes also unlock and lock the door, in addition to all of the other actions I mentioned above. Having my front door unlock for me when I arrive home makes me feel like I am living in the future. Having it automatically lock when I leave gives me peace of mind that my house is safe. 

Logitech Circle Camera

Of all the HomeKit devices out there, cameras are the hardest to shop for. I have found the Logitech Circle to be the best out there. Nest makes some great cameras but their lack of HomeKit support has driven me away. I have the Logitech set up in our dining room, facing down the primary hallway in my home. It is plugged into an iHome smart plug which is also HomeKit enabled so that I can turn it off and on remotely. This plug is automated in the Home app to turn on when neither my wife and I are home and turn off when one of us arrives home, therefore working like a security camera. When it detects motion it turns on our dining room and kitchen lights. It has a two way microphone so you can chat with someone in your home if you need to. And what I love about it most is that the camera feed shows up right in line with my other smart home controls in the Apple Home app. 

<div class="
      image-block-outer-wrapper
      layout-caption-below
      design-layout-inline
      combination-animation-none
      individual-animation-none
      individual-text-animation-none
    ">




    <figure class="
          sqs-block-image-figure
          intrinsic
        " style="max-width:2306px">







      <div class="image-block-wrapper">
        <div class="sqs-image-shape-container-element



          has-aspect-ratio
        " style="position: relative;padding-bottom:47.96184158325195%;overflow: hidden">







            <img src="https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/5595df9ce4b0ce9ff9ecd1a8/1563245323222-CD1381GVERK8SFKT4O1S/public.jpeg" alt="The interface for the Logi Circle 2 app." width="2306" height="1106" style="display:block;object-fit: cover;width: 100%;height: 100%;object-position: 50% 50%" loading="lazy">

        </div>
      </div>






      <figcaption class="image-caption-wrapper">
        <div class="image-caption"><p class="">The interface for the Logi Circle 2 app.</p></div>
      </figcaption>


    </figure>


</div>

Eve Sensors

Sensors need no introduction. These things can trigger any other home device to act when they detect motion. Most of mine are set to turn on the lights in a given room when I walk into them. But they can also trigger thermostats and smart plugs. My favorite sensors on the market are made by eve. They are easy to set up and work reliably. Eve also makes a number of other interesting HomeKit products. 

<div class="
      image-block-outer-wrapper
      layout-caption-below
      design-layout-inline
      combination-animation-none
      individual-animation-none
      individual-text-animation-none
    ">




    <figure class="
          sqs-block-image-figure
          intrinsic
        " style="max-width:1155px">







      <div class="image-block-wrapper">
        <div class="sqs-image-shape-container-element



          has-aspect-ratio
        " style="position: relative;padding-bottom:216.45021057128906%;overflow: hidden">







            <img src="https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/5595df9ce4b0ce9ff9ecd1a8/1563245112963-UKZSGRDR2JDRAJT4WIL7/public.jpeg" alt="Sensors appear as ‘Triggered’ in the Apple Home app when they have detected motion." width="1155" height="2500" style="display:block;object-fit: cover;width: 100%;height: 100%;object-position: 50% 50%" loading="lazy">

        </div>
      </div>






      <figcaption class="image-caption-wrapper">
        <div class="image-caption"><p class="">Sensors appear as ‘Triggered’ in the Apple Home app when they have detected motion.</p></div>
      </figcaption>


    </figure>


</div>





















































<div class="
      image-block-outer-wrapper
      layout-caption-below
      design-layout-inline
      combination-animation-none
      individual-animation-none
      individual-text-animation-none
    ">




    <figure class="
          sqs-block-image-figure
          intrinsic
        " style="max-width:1155px">







      <div class="image-block-wrapper">
        <div class="sqs-image-shape-container-element



          has-aspect-ratio
        " style="position: relative;padding-bottom:216.45021057128906%;overflow: hidden">







            <img src="https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/5595df9ce4b0ce9ff9ecd1a8/1563244980281-22GVCDXUXZV1HNSEWDL8/public.jpeg" alt="In Apple Home, I can make an automation that turns on the upstairs light whenever my eve sensor is triggered upstairs." width="1155" height="2500" style="display:block;object-fit: cover;width: 100%;height: 100%;object-position: 50% 50%" loading="lazy">

        </div>
      </div>






      <figcaption class="image-caption-wrapper">
        <div class="image-caption"><p class="">In Apple Home, I can make an automation that turns on the upstairs light whenever my eve sensor is triggered upstairs.</p></div>
      </figcaption>


    </figure>


</div>





















































<div class="
      image-block-outer-wrapper
      layout-caption-below
      design-layout-inline
      combination-animation-none
      individual-animation-none
      individual-text-animation-none
    ">




    <figure class="
          sqs-block-image-figure
          intrinsic
        " style="max-width:1155px">







      <div class="image-block-wrapper">
        <div class="sqs-image-shape-container-element



          has-aspect-ratio
        " style="position: relative;padding-bottom:216.45021057128906%;overflow: hidden">







            <img src="https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/5595df9ce4b0ce9ff9ecd1a8/1563245022462-IQ70RH25Z1S5LNU4J5FL/public.jpeg" alt="The eve app makes a great alternative to the Apple Home app for controlling all your devices." width="1155" height="2500" style="display:block;object-fit: cover;width: 100%;height: 100%;object-position: 50% 50%" loading="lazy">

        </div>
      </div>






      <figcaption class="image-caption-wrapper">
        <div class="image-caption"><p class="">The eve app makes a great alternative to the Apple Home app for controlling all your devices.</p></div>
      </figcaption>


    </figure>


</div>

iHome Smart Plugs

I like using smart plugs as an all purpose way of turning on and off the things in my house that are otherwise not “smart.” In addition to the camera workflow I mentioned above, I also have these plugged into other devices throughout the house. For example, my bedroom fan is plugged into one. I can now turn it on and off in the middle of the night without getting up. “Hey Siri, turn on the fan.” A lot of brands make smart plugs but the iHome is the easiest to set up and use in my experience. 

Apple HomePod

I was hesitant about the HomePod at first given that it shipped with incomplete software and relies entirely on Siri for voice commands. Still, the device offered some compelling features. When iOS 11.4 brought the features that were missing from release (AirPlay 2 and multi room audio), I scooped one up while Best Buy was running a 100 dollar off deal on them, refurbished. 

The HomePod fulfills a lot of the same purposes as the Amazon Echo. It is distinguished by linking into the Apple ecosystem, allowing me to command Apple Music, Apple Podcasts, and all of the home automation devices mentioned above. 

Control of the HomePod exists inside the Apple Home app where it appears as a speaker device. The recent addition of AirPlay 2 allows my two Sonos One speakers to show up in the Apple Home app as well. 

The HomePod is first and foremost a good speaker. But it can also command your other speakers in the house and even the audio output of your Apple TVs. Simply command “Hey Siri, move this music to the living room,” and listen as your music is magically transported from one speaker to the next. You can output your Apple TV audio through to this handy speaker and speak playback commands to your tv and movies with statements like “pause,” “stop,” and “skip ahead 50 seconds.”

The HomePod is the core of the Apple Home experience. Of course, you could just as easily control every device in this post from an Echo. However, as an Apple Music subscriber, and frequent listener to podcasts in the kitchen, having a HomePod makes sense for me to own.

It looks like the investment is going to pay off. This fall, iOS 13 will be adding even more features to the HomePod and Home app. For example, the HomePod will be able to distinguish between my voice and my wife’s. This way, when she asks it what is going on today, it will read from her calendar instead of mine. iOS 13 is also introducing speaker automations for scenes. So my Good Morning scene in the Home app will now play my favorite breakfast playlist in addition to turning on select lights and changing the temperature.

And finally, HomeKit automations and Siri Shortcut automations are going to be better tied together, and will be able to be triggered automatically. For example, doing something like stopping my wake-up alarm will both run the Good Morning scene and automatically run this Siri Shortcut that tells me how I slept, delivers a weather report, and opens a meditation in the Headspace app.

<div class="
      image-block-outer-wrapper
      layout-caption-below
      design-layout-inline
      combination-animation-none
      individual-animation-none
      individual-text-animation-none
    ">




    <figure class="
          sqs-block-image-figure
          intrinsic
        " style="max-width:2500px">







      <div class="image-block-wrapper">
        <div class="sqs-image-shape-container-element



          has-aspect-ratio
        " style="position: relative;padding-bottom:74.95999908447266%;overflow: hidden">







            <img src="https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/5595df9ce4b0ce9ff9ecd1a8/1563374060420-0S1M2P30U5A2C0VT2PGB/public.jpeg" alt="In iOS 13, HomePod play controls show up right in the Home app." width="2500" height="1874" style="display:block;object-fit: cover;width: 100%;height: 100%;object-position: 50% 50%" loading="lazy">

        </div>
      </div>






      <figcaption class="image-caption-wrapper">
        <div class="image-caption"><p class="">In iOS 13, HomePod play controls show up right in the Home app.</p></div>
      </figcaption>


    </figure>


</div>





















































<div class="
      image-block-outer-wrapper
      layout-caption-below
      design-layout-inline
      combination-animation-none
      individual-animation-none
      individual-text-animation-none
    ">




    <figure class="
          sqs-block-image-figure
          intrinsic
        " style="max-width:2500px">







      <div class="image-block-wrapper">
        <div class="sqs-image-shape-container-element



          has-aspect-ratio
        " style="position: relative;padding-bottom:74.95999908447266%;overflow: hidden">







            <img src="https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/5595df9ce4b0ce9ff9ecd1a8/1563374085979-VN06CS7BNMZMSQLQJKUG/public.jpeg" alt="In iOS 13, music playback can become part of your scenes." width="2500" height="1874" style="display:block;object-fit: cover;width: 100%;height: 100%;object-position: 50% 50%" loading="lazy">

        </div>
      </div>






      <figcaption class="image-caption-wrapper">
        <div class="image-caption"><p class="">In iOS 13, music playback can become part of your scenes.</p></div>
      </figcaption>


    </figure>


</div>





















































<div class="
      image-block-outer-wrapper
      layout-caption-below
      design-layout-inline
      combination-animation-none
      individual-animation-none
      individual-text-animation-none
    ">




    <figure class="
          sqs-block-image-figure
          intrinsic
        " style="max-width:2500px">







      <div class="image-block-wrapper">
        <div class="sqs-image-shape-container-element



          has-aspect-ratio
        " style="position: relative;padding-bottom:74.95999908447266%;overflow: hidden">







            <img src="https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/5595df9ce4b0ce9ff9ecd1a8/1563374125562-1MSNIN8LTM4OWU1EUM8M/public.jpeg" alt="The new Siri Shortcuts app on iOS 13 integrates home automations and personal automations. It also allows them to be automatically triggered by time, location, opening a particular app, and more! In this example, stopping my wake-up alarm triggers m…" width="2500" height="1874" style="display:block;object-fit: cover;width: 100%;height: 100%;object-position: 50% 50%" loading="lazy">

        </div>
      </div>






      <figcaption class="image-caption-wrapper">
        <div class="image-caption"><p class="">The new Siri Shortcuts app on iOS 13 integrates home automations and personal automations. It also allows them to be automatically triggered by time, location, opening a particular app, and more! In this example, stopping my wake-up alarm triggers my I’m Awake Siri Shortcut, which sets the Good Morning scene, reads me the weather, tells me how I slept, and starts a meditation.</p></div>
      </figcaption>


    </figure>


</div>

Brief experiment with Apple Music on the Amazon Echo

Read Apple Music is Now Available on the Amazon Echo for the (week old) scoop.

I have played around with this a little and there are still some major hang ups with using Apple Music on Amazon Echos.

In my limited testing, Echo did not always play requested music from my Apple Music account, even though Apple Music was set as the defaul music service to stream through when not otherwise specified.

Problem two: Amazon Echos can not stream to a group of Sonos speakers. This is pretty much a deal breaker as I can ask my HomePod to play music and have it send the output to a group of Sonos speakers via AirPlay 2. Echos can only stream from themselves.

Even the HomePod is early days enough that there are tons of hang ups with grouping speakers. It often forgets which speakers I like to AirPlay to and I have to readjust my groups in the AirPlay settings. This is a pain, but at least I have the option to do it.

I would love to see an update to the Home app and or Shortcuts app that allows me to create an automation that triggers music from pre-specified speaker groups at a specific time or based on my location. This is something that the Echo can do. Fingers crossed.

🔗 Sonos gets AirPlay 2 Support and Affinity Designer Comes to iPad

It’s an exciting day for users of Apple products today. Two announcements that caught my attention are highlighted below…

Affinity Designer Debuts on iPad as a Full-Featured Graphic Design Tool – MacStories:

Nearly one year ago, Serif released Affinity Photo for the iPad as a full-featured photo editing powerhouse. Unlike what companies such as Adobe do, where a Mac app like Photoshop is broken down into less powerful versions on iOS, Affinity Photo was brought to the iPad with no compromises whatsoever. Today, that same philosophy is bringing us Serif’s second major iPad app: Affinity Designer.

Where Affinity Photo focuses on photo editing, Affinity Designer is a vector-based illustration tool. And with full support for the Apple Pencil, iOS 11’s drag and drop, and system technologies like Metal, the app looks like the ultimate portable design studio.

For a limited time, Affinity Designer is available at a launch price of $13.99, 30% off the regular price of $19.99.

I have long been looking for something like Adobe Illustrator on the iPad. I have been very happy with OmniGraffle for designing seating charts, posters, flyers, and other graphics on iOS, especially because it syncs flawlessly to its Mac counterpart. For $13.99 I am going to be very tempted to give Affinity Designer a spin. Download it here.

<div class="
      image-block-outer-wrapper
      layout-caption-below
      design-layout-inline
      combination-animation-none
      individual-animation-none
      individual-text-animation-none
    ">




    <figure class="
          sqs-block-image-figure
          intrinsic
        " style="max-width:220px">







      <div class="image-block-wrapper">
        <div class="sqs-image-shape-container-element



          has-aspect-ratio
        " style="position: relative;padding-bottom:100.44117736816406%;overflow: hidden">







            <img src="https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/5595df9ce4b0ce9ff9ecd1a8/1531347878229-ASIZ2JHEVIF1K2QJ4QLJ/IMG_1671.JPEG" alt="IMG_1671.JPEG" width="220" height="221" style="display:block;object-fit: cover;width: 100%;height: 100%;object-position: 50% 50%" loading="lazy">

        </div>
      </div>






    </figure>


</div>

Next up, Sonos!

Sonos Adds AirPlay 2 Support to Certain Speaker Models – MacStories

Sonos announced today that it has added AirPlay 2 support to compatible speaker systems. The update allows users to stream audio to the company’s Sonos One, Beam, Playbase, and the second generation Play:5 speakers from iOS apps that support AirPlay 2 of and from iTunes on a Mac.

I recently purchased a HomePod and have been looking forward to pairing its audio with my existing Sonos Playbar in the living room and Sonos Play:1 in the bedroom. Jason Snell wrote a great post for Macworld that gets into the all the details about how all of these different smart speakers play together.

Sonos update adds AirPlay 2 support | Macworld:

Perhaps most impressively, all AirPlay 2 speakers can play music in perfect synchronization. If you’ve got a HomePod or two and a compatible Sonos device, you can now select all those devices and play music through them, entirely in sync. Even better, if you’ve got incompatible Sonos devices and place them in the same group as an AirPlay 2-compatible Sonos device via the Sonos app, those speakers will also play synchronously. I was able to get music to play in sync throughout my house this morning, via a paired set of HomePods, a Play:5, and the (incompatible) Play:1 in my bathroom.

My two Sonos speakers are incompatible. So I can’t get too excited unless I buy a new Sonos One or Play:5. I do need one of these for the basement but it is a steep price to pay. Furthermore, it is a bummer that the old speakers cannot be controlled individually through the Apple home app, only as a group with a compatible Sonos.

I can bypass this problem in the living room, where my TV (with Apple TV attached) is running its audio through a Sonos Playbar. AirPlay allows a phone to send audio to an Apple TV on the same network, so if I want to control the Playbar individually, I just send audio to the living room Apple TV its attached to. The bedroom will be a different story, through I cannot imagine that many scenarios where I will need separate music or volume control in the bedroom and basement.

 

<div class="
      image-block-outer-wrapper
      layout-caption-below
      design-layout-inline
      combination-animation-none
      individual-animation-none
      individual-text-animation-none
    ">




    <figure class="
          sqs-block-image-figure
          intrinsic
        " style="max-width:1136px">







      <div class="image-block-wrapper">
        <div class="sqs-image-shape-container-element



          has-aspect-ratio
        " style="position: relative;padding-bottom:106.38629150390625%;overflow: hidden">







            <img src="https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/5595df9ce4b0ce9ff9ecd1a8/1531347912824-E7ZY7GFA4PW2UW1SMJCB/FullSizeRender.jpg" alt="FullSizeRender.jpg" width="1136" height="1209" style="display:block;object-fit: cover;width: 100%;height: 100%;object-position: 50% 50%" loading="lazy">

        </div>
      </div>






    </figure>


</div>

The Sonos Approach

As an advocate for both high quality speakers and home automation, the relationship between the Amazon Echo and the Sonos home stereo is exciting to me. Ever since the announcement of their future integration, I have wondered: how specifically will I be able to command my Sonos speakers? Will the Amazon Echo speaker itself be able to play music from my Sonos library? Will music accessible on my Sonos (Amazon Prime for example) be able to be triggered on the Sonos? Will I be able to trigger anything from my Sonos library from the Echo, even if the Echo doesn’t have that information stored within it?

These questions plague me. In the meantime, it is great to see that Sonos is thinking about deep integration and the long term. Check out this article about it:

http://www.theverge.com/2017/2/14/14596904/sonos-ceo-alexa-smart-home-outdoor-speakers-patrick-spence-interview

Plex for Sonos

​Plex has announced that their service can be linked to your Sonos speakers.

Plex for Sonos | Media Server | Media Streaming Server:

Plex can connect to any Sonos system wirelessly, no matter where it is. You always have access to every one of your songs, playlists, and music libraries with Plex.


I use Plex to host and stream my video and music library. I also just bought my second Sonos speaker for the living room in my house. I must say that I am thrilled that I will now be able to stream anything from my Plex library to my Sonos speakers.

If you are curious about setting up a free Plex account, it is easy to learn about from their website. Did I mention that you can read about how I use Plex in my forthcoming book, Digital Organization Tips for Music Teachers? You can preorder that here.