Skip to main content

Linksys Wireless Home Audio System Review

Linksys Wireless Home Audio System
“Though we prefer the look of Sonos and the price of Logitech, Linksys produces a quality competitor.”
Pros
  • Good streaming quality; multi-format audio support; compact
Cons
  • Not as stylish as Sonos; costs more than Squeezebox Boom; controller feels chintzy

Summary

Sonos, watch your back. Last year, Logitech released the Squeezebox Boom, one of the best media streamers we’ve tested for Multiroom music at a low overall cost with built-in speakers. Now, Linksys (er, "Linksys by Cisco" – a name-change only a marketer could love) has jumped into the pit. With the package price the same as the Sonos, and features that are remarkably similar, the Linksys Multiroom Home Audio System is easy to setup and use, performs well over 802.11n, and has a subtle, compact design that fits well in either an upscale Seattle apartment or a suburban bedroom. It’s a functional and well-designed product, but perhaps a little too geeky for some music fans.

Features and Design

The entire Multiroom Home Audio package consists of several bundled kits; each product is available separately as well. The Premier kit ($1000) consists of the Director and IR Remote, one Player and IR Remote, and the Wireless-N Controller. The Trio ($850) includes two players, two remotes, and the controller. The Executive ($550) is for those who live in a home with dark-paneled walls and a Lexus in the garage (pronounced "gai-rage") –  it includes just the Director, a remote, and two speakers. There’s also a package that includes a small, trained ferret and two-dozen chilled oysters on the half-shell (not really). Linksys learned an unfortunate tip from Microsoft and the Vista marketing campaign – a single bundle and individual products would have sufficed. You can’t mix and match streaming media gear from multiple companies, since that would be too easy. Just to keep you guessing, there’s also an iPod speaker dock ($80) and an as-yet-unavailable Conductor (price TBD), which has built-in speakers.

Linksys by Cisco Wireless Home Audio System

Linksys by Cisco Wireless Home Audio System

So what do all of these products do? Glad you asked. The Director is an amplified music streamer, and it’s a powerful device. It’s similar to the Sonos ZonePlayer 120 (e.g., no speakers). You can use your own speakers or add the Stereo Speaker Kit ($150). A bright LCD screen shows you the current song, and the included IR remote lets you change the volume, access Internet radio stations, and configure settings from across the room. Meanwhile, the Player ($300) does not include the LCD screen or even a video-out connection: It connects to your own stereo, essentially a dumb-terminal that you control with the remote or, more likely, the Controller DMWR1000 Wireless-N Touchscreen Remote ($350). Since the controller also uses Wi-Fi, you can use it anywhere in the home to control audio.

That’s just a description of all the gear. Getting everything setup is really easy. You connect each device on by one with an Ethernet cable to your router. The Linksys setup program shows an animation of how to connect and configure each unit. You also have to install a Cisco media player program, which is a far cry from Apple iTunes but suitable enough –  it’s obviously as version 1.0 product. The program watches music folders on your PC or a server and refreshes the content automatically. We can’t imagine using it as a primary tool, and you can’t buy any songs. It’s mostly a config-and-forget tool.

Once up and running, each component then connects over Wi-Fi using 802.11n, a more robust networking protocol than 802.11g and one that can cover your whole house in 100Mbps networking goodness. You do need your own 802.11n router; Linksys recommends their own WRT610N.

Linksys Controller DMWR1000Curiously, the Linksys Multiroom Home Audio System is both highly functional and well-designed, but we ended up preferring the Sonos and the Logitech Squeezebox Multiroom systems, for different reasons. Let’s start with the Sonos. The little design accoutrements do matter, especially when you’re jumping in with both feet and have the gear in at least two rooms or possibly in every room. The Sonos has a beefy, curved edge design — and it’s white, so it matches anything. The black and gray styling of the Linksys gear says “music product designed by router company,” and the Player especially is just too light (in weight) and dark (in design) to justify a lofty position on our entertainment rack. The Controller is also too light — it just feels a bit too much like a plastic case with computer chips inside. It does have an accelerometer like the Sonos controller, so when you pick it up it wakes from a sleep state. The interface is clear and easy to use, but content is not as easy to organize as the Sonos or Apple TV.

DMP100 PlayerThe Squeezebox Boom, an exceptional music streamer, matches the non-luxury design of the Linksys product (euro-black), but it’s easier to use. For example, you can configure the Boom right on the device. It has built-in speakers, and supports a bevy of Internet radio stations. Plus, the audio quality is just rich and robust, all for only $300 – far cheaper than any of the Linksys gear.

Still, the Linksys music gear sounds fantastic. The speaker kit is only passable in sound quality for the price (we thought Bruce Springsteen sounded a bit frail and boxy), but when we connected the device to our own NHT bookshelf speakers, we more were impressed. The Director has 50 watts of power per speaker, so you can really crank it up. The Multiroom system supports quite a few formats, including FLAC Lossless, AIFF, WAV, PCM, MP3, AAC, AAC+, Ogg Vorbis, and MP2. You can play raw uncompressed audio files and most flavors of MP3. In several tests, we never had any jittery audio or connection problems. The system also supports the Rhapsody audio service, which is a good perk. Now that Apple iTunes Store lets you buy unprotected audio, it opens up a world of music possibilities. The iPod speaker dock is a handy extra, and you can access your iPod collection with the Controller remote.

Conclusion

After a long commute, when you’re ready to chill out with some early Radiohead or disrupt the neighborhood with the new Underoath release, Linksys has you covered. The Multiroom Home Audio System is expandable, works well, and supports a wide variety of formats. We’re not big fans of the design – it’s a little too Euro-techie for us. For roughly the same price, the Sonos looks more stylish in every room, and works about the same (and we’ve even seen some amazing deals on the Sonos). The Logitech Squeezebox Boom and Duet models are also much cheaper. Sure, imitation is flattery –  but there’s no amazing new feature or a noticeable uptick in audio quality on the Linksys music system that makes it a must-buy compared to the already well-established competition.

DMC250 DirectorPros:

  • Good streaming quality
  • Multi-format audio support
  • Compact

Cons:

  • Not as stylish as Sonos
  • Costs more than Squeezebox Boom
  • Controller feels chintzy


Pricing

Premier Kit – $999.99
Trio Kit – $849.99
Executive Kit – $549.99
Conductor – Pricing not available
Director – $449.99
Player – $299.99
Stereo Speaker Kit – $149.99
Controller – $349.99
iPod Dock – $79.99
IR Remote – $29.99

John Brandon
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Sennheiser Momentum True Wireless 3 get Bluetooth multipoint and hi-res audio
Close up of Sennheiser Momentum True Wireless 3.

Sennheiser has just released a software update for its flagship wireless earbuds that enables Bluetooth multipoint, a feature that the Momentum True Wireless 3 were missing when they launched earlier in 2022. The update comes just days after Sony made a similar announcement regarding its LinkBuds Series and WF-1000XM4 earbuds.

Bluetooth multipoint is the ability to pair a set of headphones or earbuds to two devices simultaneously, such as a computer and a smartphone. When you're connected to two such devices, you can quickly and seamlessly switch between them, just by starting the playback of an audio source -- no need to drill back into your device settings. When a phone call is received, the connected earbuds will automatically switch to the phone, and ideally, switch back to the previous device after the call ends.

Read more
Audio-Technica’s $2,700 wooden wireless headphones do something no other headphones can do
Audio-Technica ATH-WB2022 wireless headphones.

Audio-Technica (A-T) has been doing some wild things in honor of its 60th anniversary, like creating a $9,000 phono cartridge, and bringing back its quirky Sound Burger portable record player from the 80s. But those are just fun frivolities. The really impressive birthday gift that this 60-year-old is sharing with the world is the ATH-WB2022, a set of wooden, wireless headphones that claim to be the very first to have built-in balanced stereo.

I know, you may be scratching your head, wondering how this feature can possibly justify an insane $2,700 price tag, but audiophiles are going to be salivating right about now.

Read more
Platin Audio’s wireless home theater speaker system now handles Dolby Atmos
Platin Audio Monaco 5.1.2 Dolby Atmos WiSA system.

When it comes to getting a true Dolby Atmos home theater sound experience, your choices are pretty simple. You either buy an A/V receiver and hook it up to a bunch of wired speakers, or you go the soundbar route. But now there's a third choice, with Platin Audio's new Monaco 5.1.2 wireless home speaker system, which can be pre-ordered starting September 13 for $1,499, with deliveries beginning in mid-October.

The Monaco 5.1.2 includes two front speakers, two surround speakers, a center channel, and a subwoofer, all of which communicate via the WiSA system for wireless audio. This means that each speaker is independently powered and can be placed anywhere within the same room. The speakers get their signal wirelessly from the included WiSA Sound Send module, which can transmit eight channels of lossless audio at up to 24-bit/96kHz, with incredibly low latency, so audio sync problems shouldn't arise.

Read more