Hello, so I am facing a bit of a dilemma. I have an Amazon echo. And while I like it. I am strongly considering purchasing a HomePod. Especially because I am very deep into the Apple ecosystem. The question that I have is, is it worth the $300 that Apple is asking for? I do like how it sounds. Because I saw a demo at my local Apple store. So I definitely would like some opinions from people who have one. Or from people that I’ve ordered the new one but Apple released this week. All comments are welcome.
Comments
I’m in a similar boat.
I have also heard and very much liked the sound quality of the HomePod original which had an extra tweeter and microphone compared to this version but I’d imagine the new one still sounds excellent. I have Echo’s all around the house, about 8 of them. I don’t really enjoy the sound quality, it’s fine but not good, pleasant or remarkable. It’s just some sound. HomePod is just much better however HomePod is also very limiting. You can only stream from a few services including Apple Music or airplay from your apple device. No 3.5mm in or out and the biggest head scratcher, no Bluetooth. Siri sadly is another negative that means I’ll probably just stay on Amazon for now. Cost isn’t a factor here but convenience and functionality are. I have Echo’s plugged into amps, a B & W Zeplin and the rest in stereo pairs. Alexa is much better than Siri on my HomePod mini and if I moved to HomePods I’d lose the ability to plug them into really great audio equipment. If you just want a simple box you can plug in that makes pretty great sound and don’t mind Siri and the limitations of no Bluetooth etc I think you’ll be very happy.
I have the first gen HomePod…
I have the first gen HomePod and while I like it, I find I don't use it much. Since I have AirPods Pro 2 and AirPods Max, I pretty much always use those, especially since spatial audio came out. I thought about getting a second HomePod to make a stereo pair, but didn't before they got discontinued.
Since I don't use the one I have much, and since you can't pair the new one and the old one together, I won't be picking the new one up. It will be interesting to see how it sounds when it gets released.
I don't think a busy Apple store is the best place to demo the HomePod since it's supposed to adapt the sound to the room you put it in. My apartment recently got remodelled and I don't like how much more echoy it is now, which changed the way the HomePod sounds in my living room. Haven't tried moving in the my bedroom to see how the sound changes in there since it's a lot smaller and has carpet in there.
Echo
I also have an Amazon echo in the house. As well as a couple of Google homes. I really liked the 360° sound that the HomePod has. But I don’t know if it would be worth me spending the $300 that Apple is asking for. The echo studio is $100 less. But I am definitely deep into the Apple ecosystem.
Mini
Just get 2 home mini instead of 1 homepod second gen
Great Sound, Limited Functionality
Price is not an issue for me. Amazon echoes have a tinny sound. Amazon creates good, but not great technology. I bought a home speaker last year and in considering various options I found streaming music support to be very important. I chose a marshal Stanmore Voice that uses Alexa. The Amazon service nicely supports Spotify, Pandora, and Tune In. This enables me to just ask Alexa play xxx on Pandora or Spotify or whatever. I can just say a radio station’s call letters and Alexa finds the station on tune In. I can also give songs thumbs up or thumbs down on Pandora. The original Home Pod and Siri was notorious for not working well with streaming services other than Apple Music, like Spotify, Pandora, tune In, Iheart, deezer, and other services. Also, the lack of Bluetooth support killed my interest in the Home Pod. I wanted a device that could play music without Wi-Fi. In the year since buying my speaker, I have not needed to use Blue tooth for a lack of Wi-Fi. I have used it to stream whole albums or use specific music apps. Most of this could be used with airplay, but my speaker does not support it. The Home Pod is small enough to put into a backpack and take to a party or even a trip and vacation. Yet, with no Blue tooth, your Home Pod will be useless hanging out in a log cabin by a remote lake in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula with no cell service and no Wi-Fi like I will have when I vacation up there this summer. The music may sound great, but today we need versatility in functionality.