Slim Devices Squeezebox

December 9th, 2003 | by Jeff Fila

  • Photos:

It's useful in the bedroom, the home theater, the garage, the kitchen and anywhere you may want to listen to music.


Highs: Digital and analog outputs, intuitive navigation, open-source software, visually appealing

Lows: No support for WPA encryption, display hard to read at a distance

Summary

Editor's Choice

While the company Slim Devices has been around for over two years, we only just learned of their SLIMP3 networked music player this summer. We checked out the SLIMP3 for a review and loved it. In that review, we mentioned that the only thing it lacks are digital outputs and wireless capabilities.

 

Just as if the folks at Slim Devices had catered to our every whim, only a week after we posted our review of their SLIMP3 they were telling us of their new networked media player, the “Squeezebox”.

 

We were the first review site to have our hands on the Squeezebox and unfortunately only had it for one day. But in that 24-hour period we used the Squeezebox as much as possible and tried everything we could. So did it improve upon the already editors-choice SLIMP3? Read on to find out.

 

For comparision, click here to read our review on the SLIMP3 network music player.




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