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iHome iA5 app-enhanced stereo alarm for iPhone: First Look

April 23, 2010 by · Leave a Comment 

I’ve been waiting to get my hands on this one since January. It’s not that iHome’s new iA5 stereo alarm clock is necessarily anything to write home about as a piece of hardware on its own – the company admitted as much back at CES when the product debuted – it’s the fact that it’s app-enhanced hardware. Actually, the accompanying iHome+Sleep app has been available as a free download in the App Store for awhile, but a compatible accessory is required in order to put the app into any context. And while the real prize here is iHome’s forthcoming $199-priced iA100 alarm clock which will ship sometime later this year and is also compatible with the iHome+Sleep app, the iA5 gets you in the door for $99 and it’s available now. The iA5 is also newly sitting next to my bed, so after putting it through its paces, I’ll report back with a full review. In the mean time, here are my initial hands-on thoughts…

What I heard from the iA5 back at CES was immediately confirmed within the first few seconds of firing up the device here at home: the $99 product doesn’t really measure up audio-wise to iHome’s signature $99 stereo alarm clocks like the iP9; you’ve definitely paying for the app compatibility, as without it, the wedge-shaped iA5 would probably be a $69 product. That having been said, the iHome+Sleep app is extremely detailed product which integrates everything from alarm functionality to weather reports to social networking in a manner that’s much more sophisticated than what apps I’ve seen from other iPhone accessory makers.

So I’ll put the wedge-shaped iHome iA5 and its companion app through their paces and report back to you…

Review: XtremeMac Luna Voyager

September 29, 2009 by · Leave a Comment 

New in iProng Labs: a hands-on review of long-awaited Luna Voyager portable alarm clock for iPhone and iPod from XtremeMac, priced at $79…

XtremeMac Luna Voyager review

review by Bill Palmer

Back at Macworld Expo in January of 2008, while being given a tour of the XtremeMac booth, I spotted a super-slim iPod/iPhone alarm clock called the Luna Voyager. Excited by the prospects I asked for a demo but was told that it wasn’t a finished functioning unit. Fast forward twenty-one months, so long a span of time that XtremeMac has since become part of Imation, and the fully functioning Luna Voyager has finally arrived. And it’s even tinier than I remembered.



Which is a good thing, of course, as traveling with something like an iPod alarm clock can be a pain if it’s too large, particularly with luggage restrictions of late. Minimalistic in every sense, the Voyager only has two tiny visible buttons and a wheel, with recessed speaker grilles on each side. Not much more than an inch tall, the product looks vaguely like an external hard drive laid on its side, both in terms of size and styling. But plug it in (or pop in batteries) and the front lights up with the time of day in bright blue. Drop your iPhone or iPod into the centered dock on the top, set the alarm with a few buttons (the Voyager can automatically set the time of day by getting it from your iPhone or iPod), and you’re off to the races. You can even make a “Luna” playlist in iTunes and wake to that instead of the most recent song played.



Any iPod/iPhone alarm clock is going to necessarily draw comparisons to iHome’s leading line of similar products, and in this case I was expecting the Luna Voyager to square off directly with iHome’s similarly portable iP27 product. However, putting the two next to each other, the iP27 suddenly looks monster-sized – something of a revelation considering how many thousands of miles I’ve traveled with the iP27, and never thought of it as being oversized until now. Actually come to think of it, iHome’s earlier iH26 was smaller than the current model, but the Luna Voyager is significantly smaller than even the iH26.



With that revelation, my expectations for audio quality changed altogether. And as it turned out, my revised expectations proved to be correct. The Luna Voyager sounds merely okay. Impressive audio for its size, actually, but it’s immediately apparent how they managed to get it so small in the first place. I wouldn’t mind waking up to it every day, but the compromise comes when you consider using it for music playback during the rest of the day when you’re fully awake. Whereas the iP27 sounds (just barely) good enough to be used as an all-day speaker system while on the road, the Luna Voyager just doesn’t cut it in that department.



None of which is to distract from its appeal when it comes to its strictly intended use, which is to allow you to wake up to your own music. In my tests I found that the two buttons didn’t suffer in their ease of use due to their tininess, and the alarm fades in with a gradual volume increase, as I’d hoped it would. And the Luna Voyager manages to accomplish with two buttons and a wheel (plus two switches on the back) what it took iHome nine different buttons to pull off on the iP27. Still, I can tell you from experience that traveling with a product like this usually means that you’ll be in a hotel and looking to use it as a daytime playback device at one point in your trip or another. And the Luna Voyager doesn’t sound that much better than the middling speakers built into my laptop.



When it comes to the value proposition, the $79 Luna Voyager comes with basically nothing, whereas the $99 iP27 comes with a remote control and velcro carrying case. Pick up the Luna Voyager for its current $62 price on Amazon.com and it becomes a much better value, but the bottom line is that the product’s lone significant feature is that it’s slim and light and therefore very easy to fit into your suitcase.



I’m just not sure how many users would want to bother lugging along an iPhone alarm clock, even one this tiny, if they’re only going to get this kind of audio quality when they get there; it just has the feeling of “niche product” written all over it. That having been said, this product does one thing and does it really well, and I actually look forward to traveling with it on trips where I need to pack light or when I know I’m not going to have any idle time back at the hotel to use it for daytime music playback anyway.



I suppose I’m personally disappointed with the results because I’ve had high expectations for it the past two years, and it’s turned out to be merely mortal after all. But you’ll probably eat it up if you’re a part of the niche that the Luna Voyager is squarely aimed at.

*****

Learn more about the Luna Voyager at XtremeMac.com.

*****

Review: iHome iP88

September 15, 2009 by · Leave a Comment 

New in iProng Labs: a hands-on review of the new iP88 dual-dock stereo alarm clock for iPhone and iPod, priced at $149…

iHome iP88 review

review by Bill Palmer

Dual-device chargers for iPhone and iPod have become increasingly commonplace over the past year. But until now, the idea of a dual dock on a stereo system had gone untried, presumably if for no other reason than the potential complication involved in using one set of playback controls to manage two devices. iHome’s new iP88 alarm clock, then, comes as a potential boon for those couples who each want to wake to their own music from their own device at different times of the morning, as well as for individual users who have an iPhone and an iPod and simply want to keep both of them fully charged and immediately playable.



This isn’t the first time iHome has offered a $149 “premium” version of their standard (and best on the market) $99 alarm clock, which in its current iteration is known as the iP9. Last year the company sent me the iP99, priced at $149, which sounded a little better, looked a bit sleeker, and squeezed in a few extra features, none of which justified the extra fifty dollars and ultimately left the iP99 which a lower comparative star rating than the cheaper iP9. But this time around, the iP88 is immediately identifiable as being a potentially fifty-dollar-superior product based on the dual dock, based on the dual dock alone, at least for those users who can put such a feature to good use.



I’ll say this about the styling of the iP88: it is what it is. What it looks like in the picture is what it looks like in real life. It’s boxier than the iP9 or iP99, and is in fact a perfect rectangular solid, with the exception of the front grille angling forward toward the center clock – and even it has defined lines. Some users will see the iP88’s squareness as a sign of refinement, while others will see it as just plain square. It strikes me as being more of an individual matter of preference than anything else. The brushed grey metal of the top and sides does match the look and feel of iTunes itself. Then again, there’s no black, blue, pink or purple option here as there is with the iP9.



But you’re going to buy the iP88 for the two docks, not for the styling, as the only option for couples up to this point would have been to buy a pair of iP9 units for a total of $198, as opposed to a single $149 iP88 unit. And what I found while testing out the iP88 with both an iPhone and and iPod nano docked simultaneously is that, for the most part, iHome has managed to pull it off without creating the kind of interface confusion that I thought would be automatic with a product like this. The remote is perhaps the more flawlessly implemented interface, as a pair of buttons near the top allow you to toggle between controlling Dock 1 or Dock 2, much like the buttons on a TV remote control allow you to toggle between your TV, VCR, and cable box. Fortunately, the iP88’s remote is nowhere near as impenetrable as the typical cable box remote, as the company has essentially only had to add one button in order to offer full control of both devices.



Surprisingly, the on-board playback controls are a bit more of a challenge. Left and right play/pause buttons appear to be each encircled in their own volume wheel. But as it turns out, the left wheel controls the volume of whichever device is currently playing, while the right wheel is for setting the alarm. This leads to the awkward scenario of hitting the play button for the unit that’s in Dock 2, then instinctively spinning the wheel surrounding that button in an attempt to adjust the volume, and only then remembering that the volume wheel is on the other side. Much as I tried, this is simply not something I could get used to while I was testing the unit.

That having been said, it’s a comparatively minor complaint, particularly in comparison to what I might have feared going in. The dual alarms work exactly like one would hope, so the bit of confusion only really applies when you’re listening to your music later in the day and two devices happen to be docked simultaneously. In that sense, it’s more of a concern for an individual user who routinely keeps two devices docked (for instance, a stuffed-to-the-gills iPhone along with an iPod classic that holds the rest of the user’s music library) and wants to be able to play music from one or the other; couples are less likely to both have their device docked at the same time, unless it’s close to bedtime.



In all, the dual dock implementation on the iP88 is better than what I was even hoping for. Perhaps I was being too skeptical going in; then again, it’s not as if this has even been attempted up to this point, so it would seem that the industry has been as skeptical as I have. That having been said, now that iHome has shown that it can be done, and done very well (if not quite perfectly), perhaps others will now follow.



As to the iP88’s other premium features, the story here is similar to what it was with last year’s premium model, the iP99. The audio sounds perhaps twenty dollars better, to put it into buying terms. And the LCD can be more finely tuned, with eight dimmer settings instead of the usual three or four. You can set three different alarms (assignable to any combination of docked devices, radio, and/or buzzer). And the day and date display on the clock face. But the real difference here is that the iP88 actually offers a feature worth paying the fifty dollar price premium, in the form of the dual dock.



And of course the iP88 includes all of the features that make the standard $99 iP9 such a great product in the first place, including the gradual wake, the full iPhone/iPod menu control built into the remote, the built-in AM/FM radio, the ability to set the alarm differently for the weekend, the EQ and spatializer settings, and everything else that’s right about the iHome alarm clock line. The iP9 is still your best bet if you only plan to dock one device at a time, as the rest of the iP88’s features don’t add up to make the price premium worth it. But if you’re going to put the two docks to good use, particularly if you had otherwise been considering buying a pair of iP9’s, then the iP88 suddenly becomes the product you never knew you always wanted, and a great value.



I can’t give the iP88 five stars for the simple reason that the dual playback controls aren’t quite perfect and need one more round of refinement to reach the perfection that I expect iHome will achieve on their next attempt at a dual dock alarm. That having been said, if you’ve ever looked at an iPod/iPhone alarm clock and thought that it would be perfect for you if only it worked with two iPods and/or iPhones, then the iP88 is your winner.

*****

Learn more about the iP88 at iHomeAudio.com.

*****

Logitech Pure-Fi Anytime

July 8, 2009 by · Leave a Comment 

Logitech makes some of the best-sounding dockable speaker systems on the market in the $150-$300 range, so what happens when the company scales down to the sub-$100 range and adds alarm clock functionality to the mix? The result is the Pure-Fi Anytime, a boxy-looking, acrylic black system for iPhone and iPod.



The prerequisites for a suitable iPod/iPhone alarm clock system are all there: dual alarms for couples, tri-level brightness adjustment for the display, and the ability to wake to AM/FM radio or a buzzer in addition to the music on your iPhone or iPod. When the alarm goes off, the volume of the music fades in gradually so as not to stun you while waking you up. And as a bonus, you don’t actually have to press the snooze button in order to get yourself another ten minutes of sleep – all you have to do is wave your hand over the snooze button. That last part actually works, by the way. Whether it’ll be of use to you probably depends on just how groggy and confused you typically are when an alarm clock first wakes you up.



But a speaker system has to be judged first and foremost on its audio quality, and in a saturated market you have to put it head to head with the top competing products at that price point. In this case that competitor is iHome’s $99 iH5, and the bottom line is that the while Anytime sounds acceptable for its price, the iH5 sounds noticeably better.



So why consider the Anytime, then? You might prefer the design, which isn’t as thick as the iH5 front to back. And even though the Anytime is a taller unit, the iPhone/iPod sits so much lower that the result is actually shorter overall. And depending on how you wake up each morning, the touch-free controls might be enough to make you overlook the fact that better audio quality in an iPhone/iPod alarm clock is available for the same price elsewhere.

Learn more at Logitech.com

iHome iP9 for iPhone and iPod

April 20, 2009 by · Leave a Comment 

Once upon a time iHome got the idea to build an alarm clock that not only docked with your iPod but allowed you to wake up to your iPod’s music, and an entire industry was born. A few years later and we’ve got companies releasing everything from extravagant several hundred dollar iPod alarm clocks with dozens of built-in features to inexpensive fold-up iPod alarm clocks that fit easily in your suitcase and everything in between.



And now here comes the iP9, the fifth generation of iHome’s own original iPod alarm clock (the original version was called the “iH5” if that helps you understand the nomenclature a little better), and while it doesn’t necessarily look that different from the original, it turns out the iP9 runs circles around it for the same original $99 price tag. And equally important for a certain segment of users, it works with the iPhone. Which wasn’t always a given.



First there was the iH9, which was essentially the same product as the iP9 but wasn’t shielded against cellular signals and was therefore essentially unusable with an iPhone (unless you count putting your iPhone in airplane mode to be “usable” anywhere but on an airplane, which I don’t). Then there was the $149-priced iP99 which was iPhone-compatible but was otherwise just a minimal step up from the iH9, meaning that iPhone users were essentially paying a $50 surcharge. But now the iP9 gets it right on all counts. It works equally well with the iPhone and the iPod, offers audio quality superior to any other sub-$100 iPod/iPhone alarm clock product on the market, the dual alarm clocks that so many iH5 users used to complain about not not having back in the day, and the remote control that used to cost $20 extra is now included the $99 package. In fact that remote control has also come a long way as it now offers EQ adjustment as well as the ability to navigate up and down your iPhone or iPod’s hierarchal menus (so long as you’re standing close enough to your iPhone or iPod to be able to read its screen). Throw in the built-in AM/FM radio with presets, and the value proposition keeps increasing.



Suffice it to say that iHome’s flagship $99 alarm clock product has come a long way in the four years since it first hit the market. Being picky would be asking why it now only comes in a choice of black or grey and no longer in the original white, but I suppose that would be like asking Apple why there’s no longer a white iPod on the market.



And of course there are other options out there. Altec Lansing’s Moondance Glow alarm clock (which is annoyingly still incompatible with the iPhone) offers superior qudio quality and a wider set of features, but it also comes with a $179 price tag which puts it in an entirely different category. And iHome’s own iP99 is still around, with its price now reduced to $129, but since it doesn’t offer $30 worth of additional audio quality I can only recommend the iP99 over the iP9 to those users who strongly prefer the iP99’s more tunnel-like styling. And of course Chestnut Hill’s $499 George alarm clock is in a category unto its own.



The bottom line is that the iP9 is the best sub-$100 iPod/iPhone alarm clock product on the market, an impressive fact considering that companies like Logitech and XtremeMac (and too many others to list) have been nipping at iHome for years with impressive alarm clock offerings of their own. And those competing products will continue to come to market as more iPod and iPhone users decide they want to wake up to their own music (and of course we’ll review those products as they do).



But right now my money is on the iP9. If $99 is your budget and you’re not looking for a portable alarm clock (iHome and various competitors offer those as well), the iP9 is hands-down the best alarm clock stereo system for use with your iPhone or iPod.

iP9 at iHomeAudio.com

This review is excerpted from an upcoming issue of iProng Magazine. Click here to subscribe to iProng Magazine digitally for free and receive every issue automatically

Can’t wait til the next issue? Click here to read iProng Magazine’s April 7th issue featuring an interview with Carlos Santana and more

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