Skip to main content

Beep wireless audio device operates like a Chromecast for speakers

beep wireless audio device operates like chromecast old speakers solution
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Created by two ex-Googlers, the Beep is a small, Wi-Fi enabled device that lets you stream music from the Web into any speaker system with a line-in input. Shaped like a classic audio volume dial, the Beep can also be interconnected throughout the home over a common wireless network. For instance, you could play the same song in the living room on the home theater speakers while it’s also playing on the tabletop speaker system sitting on the kitchen counter. It’s very similar to multi-room solutions offered by companies like Sonos, but at a fraction of the price since you would be using your own speakers. 

Powered over USB, the Beep will work with Pandora at launch and play any music you have stored on your mobile device. However, more music applications are likely going to be added over time, hopefully apps like Spotify and Rdio. Music selection is controlled using an iOS or Android smartphone or tablet. It will require iOS 7 or Android 4.3.

Recommended Videos

Interestingly, the developers included a hardware feature that allows users to start or stop music by tapping the dial. This signals the mobile device to start playing the most recent song, station or playlist. In addition, the dial acts as a standard volume dial and controls the volume on the mobile device.

To connect the Beep to a speaker system, you will need a 3.5mm AUX, RCA, or optical input. As an added bonus, the developers have included a 24-bit DAC (digital-to-analog converter) to offer excellent sound quality. Regarding households with multiple people and multiple Beeps, the devices can be grouped or isolated in order to play different kinds of music around the home.  Anyone interested in the Beep can preorder early at a price of $99 in either gunmetal or black. After the product is released during Fall 2014, the Beep will retail for $149. 

Mike Flacy
By day, I'm the content and social media manager for High-Def Digest, Steve's Digicams and The CheckOut on Ben's Bargains…
Cambridge Audio’s first wireless headphones boast AB amplification, long battery life
Cambridge Audio Melomania P100 wireless headphones.

Cambridge Audio is no stranger to the audiophile world or its denizens, who like to obsess over sound quality. So it's no surprise that the company's first set of wireless headphones -- the Melomania P100 -- have a bunch of features aimed squarely at this market. You can buy the new noise-canceling cans for $279 in either black or white starting in July at both cambridgeaudio.com and Amazon.

Design-wise, the P100 may share many design traits with other flagship headphones -- the aluminum and plastic materials are especially reminiscent of Bose's recently released QuietComfort Ultra Headphones -- but under the surface lurks an unusual feature: The company has equipped the P100 with AB amplification, typically reserved for dedicated hi-fi components. It's the same audiophile-grade technology that Cambridge Audio used in its Melomania M100 wireless earbuds.

Read more
Tidal officially kills MQA support, and tosses out Sony 360 Reality Audio too
Tidal and MQA logos separated by a broken heart.

Ever since Tidal announced that it would begin adding hi-res lossless FLAC tracks to its library, we've known that, sooner or later, the service would kill off MQA support entirely. That day, according to an email sent by Tidal to subscribers (and first noted by TechRadar), is July 24.

What was less expected is the news that Tidal will also be ending support for Sony's 360 Reality Audio (360RA) format on the same day. 360RA is a spatial audio format that has been not-s0-successfully competing with Dolby Atmos Music.

Read more
Cambridge Audio adds a retro-cool VU meter to its CXN100 streamer
The Cambridge Audio CXN100 with the VU meter update.

Digital and analog worlds continue to collide as Cambridge Audio announced that it has extended the retro-cool digital VU meter update that its Evo streaming amplifiers are getting today to its acclaimed CXN100 network music streamer as well.

In March, the renowned British audio gear maker fully embraced the iconic 1980s design of the DeLorean automobile with the launch of an Evo 150 Limited Edition integrated amplifier/network player. But as an added bonus, it also dropped the news that that amp, along with the Evo 75 and regular Evo 150 all-in-one players, would also receive a cool, analog-style digital VU meter and clock display feature that would be added as an over-the-air (OTA) update in May.

Read more