If you’re a Sonos owner, I can almost guarantee that at some point (and maybe many points) since the launch of the company’s redesigned app, you’ve wanted to throw your phone at the wall. The frustration of not being able to use the wireless speakers in your home may be a quintessential first-world problem, but it doesn’t change the fact that this was all so avoidable. But now there are rumors that Sonos is contemplating bringing back its old app — known as Sonos S2 — and I couldn’t be more supportive. Frankly, I don’t know why it hasn’t already happened.
When the new app launched in early May, I immediately noticed a slew of missing features and performance issues. My reaction — which was shared by many industry watchers — was a wait-and-see approach. Software bugs are just a fact of life, and Sonos has had to squash plenty of them over the years. I was willing to give the team the benefit of the doubt, and I fully expected that by the end of May — maybe, worst-case scenario, mid-June — everything would be back to normal.
But when those timelines came and went, and it became clear that progress on the new app was painfully slow (while at the same it felt like people were discovering new bugs daily), my optimism sank. I joined the rest of my fellow
As soon as the new app hit its one-month anniversary in June and the
I can only think of one reason why this didn’t happen:
And that’s basically what Spence said on the company’s earnings call on August 7: “We viewed rearchitecting the app as essential to the growth of
I certainly understand Spence’s reluctance to let down Ace owners. But I do not understand throwing all
In his official apology for the situation, Spence laid out a months-long plan that will see the new app finally work the way everyone thought it should have from the start. I’m delighted that
Is supporting the
The answer is obvious, as it has been from the start of this fiasco, for those who were clear-eyed enough to see it: bring back the old app. And don’t rerelease the new one until it has all of the features and reliability
To be clear, there could be risks to this approach. Going back to S2 after updating to the new app might have some unintended consequences as
It was the right call. It gave customers a choice over how to use their products. Many ended up splitting their systems into old and new. It meant using two apps for two different collections of
A similar approach could be used for the return of the S2 app: If customers don’t own the