![]() ![]() good luck with this!Īmazon are not (not at all) helpful. Too many stories of HDMI audio extractors also limiting the resolution and many, many stories of pain and frustration.Īmazon are not (not at all) helpful. I probably wouldn't have heard the difference and it does look neat.įiddling with FireSticks and Cubes was an option, but seems like you really need an AVR to make that work reliably (and I don't). This works for me and I'm really happy.Īlong the way I found out that Heos or Play-Fi would probably have done the trick too, but I couldn't find anything better than the Bluesound for the price.Īmazon's Echo Link was a tempting option, with the restriction that it's limited to CD-quality (and it resamples). ![]() The interface is clunky but the sound is great. Need my laptop for work, so that wasn't a viable option.Įnded up with a Bluesound Node (pre-loved on eBay to keep the cost down). ![]() Fairly sure the audio resolution was limited by android. Started out with a wired connection from my phone to my DAC (Chord Mojo, about to be replaced with an ASR recommendation) - sounded nice but it tethered my phone. It's even more frustrating to get clear information! As per Amazon’s announcement, Amazon Music HD (16 bit/44.1kHz) and Ultra HD (24-bit) streams are now compatible with Amazon's own devices, including select Echo devices, Fire TV Stick and Fire TV Stick 4K and Fire Tablets, as well as every speaker in the Sonos ecosystem. Here's my own experience of this I use Amazon Ultra HD (their term for hi-res, better than 16/44.1) for music streaming for a number of reasons (family accounts being a big one) and found it incredibly frustrating to get hi-res quality music out. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |