Squeezebox (network music player)

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The Squeezebox is a hardware device from Slim Devices. It is designed to play internet radio or digital audio streamed to it across a home network, either WiFi or Ethernet.

There are 2 diffent running modes:

  • Standalone mode connecting to an internet server, without a PC.
  • Squeezebox can be used with a SlimServer running on a home PC or also on NAS devices like the Linksys NSLU2, so a SlimServer can also run without a PC.

Contents

[edit] Squeezebox versions

[edit] SLIMP3 (2001)

The first-generation hardware requires SlimServer to run, which is free open source software. It is wired-Ethernet only and natively supports one audio format, MP3. SlimServer can transcode other audio formats to MP3 on the fly using a program called LAME as well.

[edit] Squeezebox (November 2003)

Second generation hardware, which originally used the same display. Main feature additions included optional 802.11b WiFi, support for uncompressed PCM/WAV/AIFF audio streams, and headphone, coaxial and optical SPDIF outputs. It also requires SlimServer to operate. Slim Devices offered a bitmap display upgrade for this hardware, but that is no longer available. Some units have a 40x2 Noritake character display, others have a 280x16 pixel Noritake bitmap display.

[edit] Squeezebox2 (April 2005)

Third generation hardware. Features included optional 802.11g WiFi], native support for more audio formats (FLAC,WMA,Ogg), upgraded 320x32 pixel greyscale bitmap VFD display, visualizers, bitmapped fonts.

This model has infrared remote control, analog outputs, volume control, headphone jack, coaxial and optical digital outputs.

The Squeezebox2 supports numerous audio formats including MP3, Windows Media Audio, Musepack, Monkey's Audio, Apple Lossless, FLAC, Shorten, WAV, AIFF, Ogg Vorbis, and unencrypted AAC. Of these, MP3, Windows Media, FLAC, WAV, AIFF and Ogg Vorbis are natively supported by the player firmware; the remainder are automatically transcoded by the Slimserver host software into one of the player-supported formats. DRM-protected AAC from the Apple iTunes Music Store is not supported.

[edit] Squeezebox v3 (November 2005)

Fourth generation hardware. Features and most technical specifications are identical to that of the Squeezebox2. New board and chassis design.

Dimensions: 7.6"W x 3.7"H x 3.1"D (192mm x 93mm x 80mm) including stand.


[edit] Transporter (September 2006)

Fifth generation hardware. Features are similar to Squeezebox v3. Geared towards audiophiles. Additional features over Squeezebox v3 include dual 320x32 pixel displays, front panel buttons and tactile feedback knob, redesigned backlit remote control, balanced (XLR) and unbalanced audio outputs, balanced and unbalanced digital inputs and outputs (AES/EBU and SPDIF) (inputs for operation as a standalone DAC), RS-232 serial connection for external control, Infrared input and output.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links