![]() So I just open Spotify and play some music. To be honest sometimes I have a hard day and all I want is to enjoy music and read a book. No mentioned that also have other extra functions like Philips Hue, where you can integrated your lights with your music. No wonder why have more clients than any other service. But easy to use, good interface, nice design. The music quality is not the best, I am agreed. The ONLY music streaming service that I know that have a good interface and easy to use is Spotify. Is it the music streaming services or Sonos or both sides for not to let us (the users) to enjoy in a easy way our music. I am wondering who is responsible for not allow Sonos speakers into the streaming services? In conclusion, the Sonos app is limited in functions compared to the Streaming Services Apps (Spotify, Tidal, Qobuz, Etc.) In addition If I found the song and then I want to start the Song’s Radio in the Sonos app, this is not possible. So I have to go to the boring and ugly Sonos app and search for the Song, which it is not as accurate as searching from the Streaming Music App. Now here is the problem, when I go to Tidal or Qobuz apps and try to look for the Sonos speakers in their Tidal Connect and Qobuz Connect I don't see them. Also, the interface in Spotify for searching music is more dynamic and accurate than the Sonos App. We like to go simple without complicate our life. The users, We love to use out streaming music services such as Spotify and go to Spotify Connect and select your device or speaker and play our music on that selected device. Then if you want to search your music is a nightmare. I find it useful for those things I just mentioned. That would require more computing power than just passing a lossless signal.Look, the good thinks about the app are: to control the EQ, set Trueplay (ONLY in iPhones, no iPads or Android devices…) and to set the voice or night mode. Just to be devil’s advocate, the iPad could be working harder because it’s converting lossless to AAC on the fly. If this is not the case then Appel has a problem with the power consumption. It seems like the iPad is working with larger files and this is also what I think I could hear, a better sound with Lossless on. I do not know if this is the case, what has made me suspicious was that my iPad gets hotter when playing with Lossless on. But if that were the case, that may well be the reason you are getting the effect of better sound via lossless. Perhaps it is to get to sound better, perhaps it is some other reason. So what you should get is the same volume level - but I have seen reports that Apple Music has its lossless streams play a little louder than lossy streams. When you do this, the Music continues to play, except that it is very briefly muted when you switch from the standard sound to Lossless or the other way around. You just turn the Lossless stream on or off. The music plays all the time with the same volume. In the iPad's Music quality setting, you simply switch Lossless on or off. The music from the Appel Music App plays via Port. Ps: the reason this matters- I would much rather use the S2 app to control music, as Airplay has unfortunately proven very unstable on my Sonos system (especially across multiple speakers) since moving to a new apartment-whereas S2 (for the most part) has been stable/reliable. when S2 streams a file from Apple Music, is Apple giving them access to the lossless files? Or is Apple reserving those files for customers who are using the Apple Music interface? (For what it’s worth, I’ve noticed that music that I’ve listened to recently via the S2 app is showing-up on my Apple Music widget as “recently played” so there’s definitely some background dialogue happening between the two apps). However, I’m willing to admit that this perceived difference in quality may be psycho-somatic (since I’m still confused as to whether the S2 app is capable of accessing lossless files when it queries the Apple Music database).Īny chance either Apple or Sonos have provided an authoritative answer to this question? I.e. ![]() ![]() My ears, however, seem to think that the quality isn’t as high-fidelity when I listen to the same music via the S2 app (which, of course, is pulling the same music from my Apple Music subscription). When listening to music directly through Apple Music on my Sonos speakers (via Airplay), I definitely notice improved quality with the new “lossless” quality offered by Apple. I know this question has been asked (but apparently not answered) previously, but I thought I’d try again.
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