play-fi

Latest

  • Vintage room with contemporary home cinema system - 3d rendering

    DTS will integrate TV speakers into WiFi surround sound setups

    by 
    Kris Holt
    Kris Holt
    08.18.2021

    Play-Fi Home Theater-compatible TVs will hit the market within the next couple of months.

  • iHeartRadio brings its internet radio stations to Apple TV

    by 
    Billy Steele
    Billy Steele
    01.05.2016

    Earlier this year, Apple CEO Tim Cook proclaimed that TV's future meant more apps. That's certainly the case for Cupertino's streaming device, and today the gadget got one more piece of software. iHeartRadio now streams radio and other music content to the set-top box, offering another option for bringing some audio into your living room. The internet radio app also streams to Play-Fi-enabled speakers, too. With the Play-Fi app on both iOS and Android, you can beam high-quality lossless audio and control the stations with your phone or tablet.

  • The TUAW Daily Update Podcast for July 24, 2014

    by 
    Steve Sande
    Steve Sande
    07.24.2014

    It's the TUAW Daily Update, your source for Apple news in a convenient audio format. You'll get some the top Apple stories of the day in three to five minutes for a quick review of what's happening in the Apple world. You can listen to today's Apple stories by clicking the player at the top of the page. Be sure that your podcast software is set up to subscribe to the new feed in the iTunes Store here.

  • DTS expanding whole home audio choices with new partners and iOS links

    by 
    Mel Martin
    Mel Martin
    07.24.2014

    DTS, the company which gives us such great audio in theaters and on DVD and Blu-ray discs, is continuing a push to make a mark with distributed wireless audio in the home, taking on Sonos, Apple's AirPlay, and others with a push for Play-Fi technology. Today, the company added new high end partners McIntosh, Sonus Faber and Wadia who will integrate DTS Play-Fi into their home audio products. Current partners include Polk, Definitive Technology, SpeakerCraft, Pandora, BBC and ESPN Radio. Sources and services can be played from a smartphone or tablet, or from the desktop of a PC, wirelessly over an existing home WiFi network, to any number of Play-Fi connected speakers throughout the home. Play-Fi supports multi-zone, multi-room and multi-listener modes. It means, for example, different people in one home can listen to the sources they want in whatever room they want, as long as it is equipped with the proper hardware. Playback can be managed from any iOS device, or that device can serve as a playback source. Play-Fi works over your existing wireless network, and with the right hardware, even supports lossless playback of high resolution audio files like those in the FLAC format, something Sonos and Apple don't do. DTS offers a Play-Fi iOS app right now that allows music to stream from your iOS device to any DTS device from its product partners. It offers better audio quality than Bluetooth streaming, but you are limited to products that support it, such as speakers from Wren and Phorus. That list will grow. Music can also sit on networked attached storage or a PC. At this point, Macs are the weak link in the chain, as there is no Mac client as yet although iOS is well supported. Sonos, and of course Apple, support all Macs and iOS devices. Dannie Lau, one of the inventors of the Play-Fi standard, told me that the product is device agnostic, meaning that anyone who wants to license it can include the Play-Fi chipset. Any product with a Play-Fi label can be mixed and matched with any other hardware. Apple has also had success with AirPlay. Users with iOS devices and Macs can stream music from iTunes or their devices to speakers from companies including Denon, Marantz, B&W, JBL, and iHome. Content can be streamed to one or multiple devices. AirPlay also supports streaming video and audio to an AppleTV. There are also solutions from companies like Bose that offer similar capabilities. The whole area of access to any media in the home is really heating up. The competition is good for consumers, and sure to advance the state of the art. Play-Fi has a leg up with support for high resolution audio files, but each system has pluses and minuses.