ARCHIVED FORUM -- March 2012 to February 2022READ ONLY FORUM
This is the second Archived Forum which was active between 1st March 2012 and 23rd February 2022
They're about the same size - Apple's is the newer technology.
Does anyone have a view as to which sounds better, on the published specs, or having heard both?
I've had a pair of BeoLab 3s for years now, and love the look and sound; but am considering replacing with a pair of HomePods (better interface, no need for that ugly plastic box for wireless).
BV Harmony 65 / Eclipse 55 / BL 50 / 19 / 18 / BS 2 all brass
BV Horizon 48 / V1 40 / BL 17 / Beoplay S3 all black
V1 / BL 3 / BS Essence MKII / Beoplay A3 all white
BS Moment / BS 3000 / BS 3200 / BL 400 all silver
Headphones / bluetooth speakers / BLC NL-ML / BLGateway
I know…B&O virus has grown on me !
Full disclaimer: I haven't heard the HomePod, and likely won't be ordering one for a while.
Having owned a pair of Beolab 3 speakers, I have to say unequivocally that I doubt the HomePod will come close to the quality and imaging of the sound (even with two in a stereo pair) of a pair of Beolab 3 speakers. I doubt anyone would disagree.
I'd get a Sonos Connect and hook up your BL3 speakers to that if you want to have the best SW and audio experience for accessing your music library. I think anyone who is happy with a pair of B&O speakers will be disappointed with the sound of the HomePod. But if you are willing to sacrifice sound for an interface and ecosystem that you're already a part of, I think it'll have a pretty decent market.
BeoNut since '75
Got the HomePod today - airplaying music alternately between it (single) and (on the other side of the room) two BeoLab 3s in stereo, but right next to each other (my Living Room is in flux)...and, I don't know...
I'm no expert, but the HomePod sounds more precise, clearer, with better separation between elements...but, the BL3s sound fuller, more mature somehow, though muddier.
It isn't a fair competition because it's two vs one (if I replace the BL3s with the HomePod, there will be two of them by then), because I don't have much experience listening out for audio detail, and because they're in different parts of the room.
V interested to hear other opinions, as not yet sure enough of my own.
I have read reviews where the "stereo" sound with a pair of Homepods sounds different than "stereo" that we're all used to. Haven't experienced this myself, but I think we all may be comparing apples / oranges; pardon the pun. I still contend that traditional stereo should sound better on a pair of Beolab 3's than two Homepods.
leonb:Got the HomePod today - airplaying music alternately between it (single) and (on the other side of the room) two BeoLab 3s in stereo, but right next to each other (my Living Room is in flux)...and, I don't know... I'm no expert, but the HomePod sounds more precise, clearer, with better separation between elements...but, the BL3s sound fuller, more mature somehow, though muddier. It isn't a fair competition because it's two vs one (if I replace the BL3s with the HomePod, there will be two of them by then), because I don't have much experience listening out for audio detail, and because they're in different parts of the room. V interested to hear other opinions, as not yet sure enough of my own.
Sal: I have read reviews where the "stereo" sound with a pair of Homepods sounds different than "stereo" that we're all used to. Haven't experienced this myself, but I think we all may be comparing apples / oranges; pardon the pun. I still contend that traditional stereo should sound better on a pair of Beolab 3's than two Homepods.
Is stereo pairing of HomePods available to anyone yet? I thought that Apple stated that this was available later this year. I've read several reviews but haven't read any that have stereo pairing working yet. Do you have a link to one?
Hi Mark
all the "stereo" reviews I have read have been when Apple has been demonstrating it; so those were demos in the US and the UK, and the articles came out in the previous fortnight,
I am not aware of any reviews of loan units being a pair operating in stereo mode.
And yes, "stereo" is to come later - I assume when AirPlay2 arrives
leonb: Got the HomePod today - airplaying music alternately between it (single) and (on the other side of the room) two BeoLab 3s in stereo, but right next to each other (my Living Room is in flux)...and, I don't know... I'm no expert, but the HomePod sounds more precise, clearer, with better separation between elements...but, the BL3s sound fuller, more mature somehow, though muddier. It isn't a fair competition because it's two vs one (if I replace the BL3s with the HomePod, there will be two of them by then), because I don't have much experience listening out for audio detail, and because they're in different parts of the room. V interested to hear other opinions, as not yet sure enough of my own.
At least from what I understand they are not so far in sound quality. Different experience... but does it justify the huge price difference between Apple and B&O. I like very much the design of B&O but again not anymore for 10 times the price and with a bad after sale service.
Sal: I still contend that traditional stereo should sound better on a pair of Beolab 3's than two Homepods.
@ Sal, I got my HomePod and I must say that one should perhaps listen to it first before judging. I am a total B&O fan but Apple has done their homework on the speaker side.
In fact, I only worry that if Apple were to apply their technology / software expertise to larger and true home audio set up. how will that impact B&O. On the small speaker side, I have no more reason to look at B&O. HomePod Setup was clean and though it is focused on Apple Music, Airplay always is available.
Currently have only 1 HomePod and will get another one once the Airplay 2 is available. I can only imagine what the 2 HomePod set up will considering the software muscle and the A8 chip in these units but 1 is also enough to fill the room with all around sound with clarity and separation and warmth.
svinaik: Sal: I still contend that traditional stereo should sound better on a pair of Beolab 3's than two Homepods. @ Sal, I got my HomePod and I must say that one should perhaps listen to it first before judging. I am a total B&O fan but Apple has done their homework on the speaker side. In fact, I only worry that if Apple were to apply their technology / software expertise to larger and true home audio set up. how will that impact B&O. On the small speaker side, I have no more reason to look at B&O. HomePod Setup was clean and though it is focused on Apple Music, Airplay always is available. Currently have only 1 HomePod and will get another one once the Airplay 2 is available. I can only imagine what the 2 HomePod set up will considering the software muscle and the A8 chip in these units but 1 is also enough to fill the room with all around sound with clarity and separation and warmth.
You're right, I should hold judgement. That being said, I haven't read a bad review of the HomePod yet from the sound front. I am waiting for Airplay 2 to come to HomePod & Sonos before making my decision on one or the other and buying.
That being said, I am curious how users like my wife and I (we don't have ANY Apple Music subscriptions: No iCloud Music, No Apple Music, No iTunes Match, etc.) will get along with it, would we be relegated to only playing music from our phone's local library? I still don't quite understand the capabilities, regardless of the documentation for users without any subscriptions with Apple.
Sal:You're right, I should hold judgement. That being said, I haven't read a bad review of the HomePod yet from the sound front. I am waiting for Airplay 2 to come to HomePod & Sonos before making my decision on one or the other and buying. That being said, I am curious how users like my wife and I (we don't have ANY Apple Music subscriptions: No iCloud Music, No Apple Music, No iTunes Match, etc.) will get along with it, would we be relegated to only playing music from our phone's local library? I still don't quite understand the capabilities, regardless of the documentation for users without any subscriptions with Apple.
Sal: That being said, I am curious how users like my wife and I (we don't have ANY Apple Music subscriptions: No iCloud Music, No Apple Music, No iTunes Match, etc.) will get along with it, would we be relegated to only playing music from our phone's local library? I still don't quite understand the capabilities, regardless of the documentation for users without any subscriptions with Apple.
In that case, you can:
- Play the music you have purchased on iTunes through HomePod using Siri
- Play every music you have on any Apple Device (or accessible through an Apple Device, like on Spotify) through AirPlay on the HomePod, using your Apple Device to control the HomePod
- If you are interested in playing your ripped CDs, you should definitely consider iTunes Match. It costs only about 20 bucks/year, and allows you to upload all your locally stored music to iCloud Music Library, and replay it on the HomePod through Siri.
elephant:But where did your phone’s music come from ?
My wife uses her MacBook Pro (iTunes Library >400GB) and syncs what she wants to her 256GB iPhone.
I use my MBPro the same way, syncing what I want on hand to my 64GB iPhone.
We have a Mac Mini always on as a server with a combined iTunes Library available through Home Sharing & Twonky. We have Sonos Connect also accessing the server as well as Twonky for use via the B&O app, Home Sharing is used for AppleTV and iOS Music App, see below...
I hate using the iOS Music App to access the Server via Home Sharing because of the time it takes for the Server to load as a Shared library on my iPhone.
We don't use any form of "streaming" services (i.e. Spotify, Google, etc.)
didole:- If you are interested in playing your ripped CDs, you should definitely consider iTunes Match. It costs only about 20 bucks/year, and allows you to upload all your locally stored music to iCloud Music Library, and replay it on the HomePod through Siri.
With all of the stellar comments and reviews about the HomePod's audio quality, I have been looking into iTunes Match, especially since much of our library consists of ripped CDs.
I found that when I played with iTunes Match, it did a poor job of covering my collection. I had a fair number of CDs that were important to me that weren't available with it, and none of the more esoteric things like rips of LPs or tapes of course. Another issue I noticed was, that the metadata on iTunes when ripping CDs is a mess a lot of the time, especially on compilation CDs. I had worked mightily to correct some of the worst issues, and as soon as I turned iTunes Match on it scrambled my library and metadata back to what iTunes had originally assigned, wrongly, to it. I think you could have heard me swearing all the way to Antarctica when that happened, probably scared the penguins.
If you can AirPlay your library from your PC using iTunes and wifi, that's good, if not, it's a major issue.
Jeff
I'm afraid I'm recovering from the BeoVirus.
Jeff:If you can AirPlay your library from your PC using iTunes and wifi, that's good, if not, it's a major issue.
Thanks, We're an all Mac family where airplay is not an issue in the least. Perhaps there is a place for HomePod in our house after all.
Sal:With all of the stellar comments and reviews about the HomePod's audio quality, I have been looking into iTunes Match, especially since much of our library consists of ripped CDs.
elephant:I have tested the following:- A1 BlueTooth- A2 BlueTooth- A3 local source (ie the iPad)- HomePod (of course) Airplay- BL6K + BL11 Airplay and BlueTooth- BL20 BlueToothUsing both the iPad (1st generation) and an iPhone 5S.These tests were using Adele’s “Take It All” track and I am going to repeat the process tomorrow but using other Adele tracks and good old Jennifer Warnes.