I was going to post this in the BeoSound 5 photo thread, but then thought that it didn't really fit there. So here goes:
Now that music has gone digital, it's really worth it to rethink
what you want from your music centre. Where you would previously
dedicate a substantial portion of your budget to the source (CD-player,
record player, etc.), you are now free to spend the majority of your
budget on the sound source: the speakers; and on the unit that
translates the digital signal to a signal that your amplifiers/speakers
understand - the Digital-to-Analog-Converter, or DAC.
In addition, you want to control playback as conveniently as possible,
now that your music is in the form of digital files, stored on a
harddisk somewhere. Unfortunately for B&O and many other providers,
the company that provides the best solution is not in high-end hifi,
it's Apple, which recently dropped Computer from its name and became
Apple Inc. I think we can safely assume that Apple intends to provide
A/V content and the means to store and control it, and that its
solutions will remain at the cutting edge of what's possible.
My music server is hidden away and connected to a wireless base
station. I have a DAC connected to a Beosystem 6500, another connected
to a Beolab 5000. My third DAC-solution is inside my BeoLab 5 speakers,
provided by B&O - they receive an s/pdif coax signal from an
associated Mac mini, which is connected with wireless to the server and the speakers produce sublime sound.
I'm using an iPod Touch and an iPhone to select and control the music
on my server (through the Mac mini and other computers), and to decide
on one or more destinations for that music. It's all working quite
seamlessly, and the transfer speed through wireless is such that I can
watch concert videos stored on the server on various computers and
screens throughout the house.
I've added an AppleTV to this setup, which gives me access to a
large repository of films and tv-series, in HD-quality. I've stopped
ripping regular DVDs to the server after the AppleTV made its
appearance - and now only rip concert and opera DVDs, that I then put
away in a box in the basement. In our household, we've pretty much stopped watching broadcast television.
There's nothing on the market that
competes with the flexibility of the above solution - the disadvantage
being that it requires some setup skills, and that you occasionally
must reset the system. (Once in a blue moon, really, but it does
happen.) Sooloos, Linn, Logitech/Squeezebox, B&O, Loewe and many
others are offering "streaming content" solutions - many mysteriously
still using Microsoft software at its core, but fortunately providing
interfaces to simpler ways of controlling playback.
I find that
being able to go through my albums at the flick of a finger, or just
searching, with a unit that fits in my shirt pocket and which accesses
my system from anywhere in the apartment, is just perfect - and that
providers of music systems who do not allow for this kind of
interaction will suffer for it. As always, it's worth looking at what
the kids are doing - and they're using their iPhones and iPod Touch
units to control their iTunes playback on their Apple and Windows
enabled computers. They'll be expecting the same convenience from
whatever music system they purchase in the future.
I'm spending
the money I would otherwise have used on a conventional source on
upgrading my speakers, and on acoustical treatment of the listening
rooms in which they are placed. I am also going to put down CAT6
Ethernet cabling to the critical rooms from the A/V server room - while
wireless provides high throughput, it can't compete with the rate and
stability of physical cabling.
So what does this mean for solutions such as Sooloos and the BeoSound 5? I think that if B&O make the BeoMaster 5 expandable, and give it strong capabilities, then they have an elegant solution that will provide a troublefree interface to a new way of listening to music. (I hope it's troublefree! As I wrote above, I do occasionally have to reset the music system I have set up now, and it would be good if it just worked every single time I switch it on. BS5, Sooloos, Sonos and others are providing such one-click solutions.)
As many are making their digital music purchasing decisions now, it would probably be smart if B&O were to officially announce the capabilites of BeoSound 5 pretty soon!