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internet radio  mp3 player  roku  tabletop radio  wireless music  

Roku SoundBridge R1000 Radio Network Music System

Roku SoundBridge R1000 Radio Network Music System

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Artist: Alvino Rey
Brand: Roku
Category: CE

List Price: $399.99
Buy Used: $329.00
You Save: $70.99 (18%)

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Qty 1 In Stock
Rating: 3.0 out of 5 stars 82 reviews

Color: Black
Media: Electronics
Discs: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 4.2
Dimensions (in): 12.8 x 11 x 9.2

MPN: R1000
Model: R1000
UPC: 829610841199
EAN: 0829610841199
ASIN: B000BIFY6Q

Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Features:
  • WiFi music system with advanced digital music streaming functionality, pair of stereo speakers, and subwoofer
  • Native support for Apple iTunes and Rendezvous, Windows Media Player, Windows Media Player 10, and Rhapsody
  • Accesses free Internet radio stations via broadband connection; bright 280 x 32 vacuum fluorescent display
  • Patented Linear Magnetic Drive stereo speakers and subwoofer with acoustic enclosures and built-in digital amps
  • Ultra-fast 400 MHz Blackfin DSP; measures 11 x 6 x 6.5 inches (W x H x D); 1-year warranty

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
SoundBridge Radio is a complete Wi-Fi Music System that brings the world of Internet radio to every room of the house in rich, clear, stereo sound. Combining all of SoundBridge's advanced digital music streaming functionality with incredible-sounding stereo speakers, subwoofer, AM/FM radio and alarm clock, SoundBridge Radio takes today's tabletop radio to the next level in audio power and ease of use. Access all your music using simple and familiar radio controls. A few buttons for presets, scan, and source select make digital music easily accessible.

Amazon.com Review
Amazon.com Review Like its smaller cousins, the Roku M1000 and M500 network music players, Roku's SoundBridge Radio is designed liberate your digital music from your computer and let you crank up Internet radio stations and your unprotected digital music files in the room of your choice. But unlike those products, the SoundBridge Radio doesn't require a hi-fi system because the SoundBridge Radio is the hi-fi system. And not a bad one at that.



A clean design and several easy-access-ports give the SoundBridge added versatility. View larger.


Most of the radio's ground-breaking Wi-Fi features can be accessed via the convenient remote. View larger.
Featuring two linear magnetic drive full-range speakers and a linear magnetic drive subwoofer -- each powered by built-in amplifiers -- the SoundBridge puts most table-top radios to shame. If you have a lot of space to fill with your music, you'll want to think twice before replacing your stereo system with it. But for a unit this size, the SoundBridge offers excellent sound performance, and its many ground-breaking Wi-Fi features make it worth the price.

As a complete Wi-Fi music system that can stream your MP3, WMA, AAC, WAV, and AIFF music files in high-performance sound; play AM, FM and Internet radio; automatically update the time via atomic transmission; and wake you up to a variety of ascending alarm sounds or your favorite Internet station or digital music, the SoundBridge has clear aspirations to be your bedside radio of choice.

Without needing any special software for your computer (PC or Mac), within a few minutes of breaking this five-pound radio out of its packaging you can be browsing through the music you have stored in your Apple's iTunes, Real Networks' Rhapsody, Windows Media Connect or Windows Media 10 music players. All you need is a wireless network with a broadband connection, and your digital music is yours for the asking. (However, because Apple doesn't license its digital rights management code, SoundBridge -- like most other non-Apple network media players -- can't play protected songs from the iTunes Music Store.)

In our test we set up an iMac G5 on our network running Apple's iTunes. The radio, which is configured with Wi-Fi 802.11b but is 802.11g compatible, immediately recognized the network but took several tries before it successfully connected. (If your network is locked, the SoundBridge will ask for a password. And if you have access to more than one wireless network, the SoundBridge will give you the option of choosing which network to connect to.) Once online, the radio automatically updated the Roku software and was officially ready to perform. And for the remainder of our test over several days, we never once had another connection problem.

Diving straight into our iTunes folders, it didn't take long for us to recognize the several play features that put the SoundBridge head and shoulders above many of its competitors. For starters, unlike other network players we've tested, the radio recognized our iTunes playlists, and a neat "song queue" feature let us easily create our own playlists with the radio's remote. And as a huge brownie point, the SoundBridge not only categorized our songs by genre, title, artist and album (as most networks players do), it also queued up each song in the same order as they were originally placed their respective albums. Astoundingly, not all Wi-Fi players can make that claim.



Large, easy-to-access buttons -- including a huge snooze bar -- on the top of the radio make the SoundBridge an excellent clock radio option. View larger.
On the Internet radio front, SoundBridge doesn't come out quite so well. While Roku's marketing material claims "10,000 stations -- No strings attached," that wasn't exactly our experience. The radio is pre-configured with dozens of Internet stations -- all of which can be accessed without the computer powered on -- and the radio has 18 pre-sets that offer quick access to the station of your choice. But to access the rest of the world's Internet radio stations, you have to go through several somewhat tedious steps with Roku's Web interface to configure them.

The strongest criticism of SoundBridge concerns its remote capabilities and navigation. The features of the SoundBridge are designed to be accessed both through the large, easy-to-access buttons on the radio itself, and via its basic 5.5 x 2-inch remote. Unfortunately, the remote works for some features, but not for others, and less-than-intuitive navigation makes things unnecessarily complicated.

The most glaring example of this problem is with the SoundBridge's highly convenient "source" button located behind the radio's conveniently huge snooze button. You hit the source button until you reach -- you guessed it! -- the music source of your choice. If you want AM radio, you tap the button until "AM Radio" appears on the radio's display. Pretty simple, and just how it should be. However, if you are using the remote you must hit the "home" button, which then leads you to a navigation level that's dependent upon the level you're starting at. If you're listening to AM radio, for example, and you want Internet Radio, the remote requires that you click several times through two additional navigation levels to make the switch. And there are other similar problems with the remote configuration and navigation.

Call us spoiled, but this can be a drag. Is it a deal breaker? Not by a long shot. The SoundBridge Radio is the first dedicated Wi-Fi radio that has the ability to serve your digital music collection, and it does it with a performance and convenience that should please most listeners. But at this price, and with thousands of examples of well-designed remote appliances to draw from, we would have liked these issues not to have been issues.

Pros:

  • Wirelessly delivers digital music and Internet radio from your PC or Mac
  • Linear magnetic speakers and woofers offer excellent sound performance
  • Alarm clock functions feature large, easy-to-access buttons and several alarm options, including Internet radio and digital music wake-up
Cons:
  • Poorly integrated remote control and difficult navigation
  • Internet radio stations somewhat difficult to configure


Amazon.com Product Description
Amazon.com Product Description The wireless R1000 SoundBridge radio system combines the convenience of a high-quality tabletop radio with the versatility of a digital music device, giving listeners the best of both worlds. The R1000 doesn't actually store song files itself. Rather, it communicates with your Mac or PC over your home's WiFi network and accesses all your saved WMA, AAC, MP3, WAV, or AIFF files. Once the files are retrieved, the R1000 plays them over its pair of built-in stereo speakers and subwoofer, which deliver unsurpassed audio quality. As a result, you can listen to any of your digital tunes or podcasts on the R1000 regardless of whether your computer is located upstairs, down the hall, or in the basement.



The R1000's top panel includes a snooze/sleep button, several radio presets, and scan up/down buttons. Take a closer look.
The R1000 is compatible with a variety of Mac and PC digital music players, including iTunes, MusicMatch, Windows Media Connect, Windows Media Player 10, Rhapsody, Windows Media DRM 10, and more. It also stands ready to play free Internet radio stations, and doesn't require a computer to do so. All you need is broadband access and a WiFi home network and the R1000 takes care of the rest, giving you one-touch access to any available jazz, talk, rock, or pop station. And should you want to take the R1000 to a friend's house or elsewhere, you can simply store your favorite music files on an SD/MMC card and plug it into the available slot for offline playback.



Other features include a built-in subwoofer, an SD/MMC card slot, and a headphone jack. Take a closer look.
Your digital files are easy to navigate thanks to the bright 280 x 32 vacuum fluorescent display (VFD) and the handy remote control, which lets you browse and select music from across the room. The radio also offers Roku's Fast Browse feature, which browses by album, artist, genre, or composer (providing your files are properly encoded with said details). And those who prefer traditional browsing can simply use the top preset, scan, and source select buttons located on top of the radio.

The unit's superior audio quality stems from the precision-engineered sound system and the patented Linear Magnetic Drive stereo speakers and subwoofer. Each full-range speaker is outfitted with its own tuned acoustic enclosure and built-in 20-watt 3G digital amplifier, while the sub offers a proprietary Delta Tunnel-tuned acoustic enclosure and a 30-watt 3G amp. Together, the speakers deliver a full-bodied audio performance that far surpasses most tabletop radios, all in a package that's only 11 by 6 by 6.5 inches (W x H x D).

In addition, Roku has outfitted the SoundBridge with a super-fast, 400 MHz Blackfin DSP processor and 16 MB of DRAM memory, giving it more than enough headroom to handle future software updates. Other features include a traditional AM/FM tuner; a full-function clock radio (tuned to the U.S. atomic clock) that wakes to digital music, Internet radio, AM/FM stations, iTunes playlists, podcasts, or selectable alarm tones; a gradual volume ramp mode for listeners who like to wake up slowly; a headphone jack for private listening; and a built-in light sensor that automatically dims the display in the evening.

The R1000 system weighs 4 pounds and 15 ounces and is backed by a one-year warranty on parts and labor.

What's in the Box
R1000 SoundBridge radio system, remote control, two AAA batteries, power cable, external AM antenna, external FM antenna, user's manual.


Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 82
1 2 3 4 5 6 ...17Next »



1 out of 5 stars Roku Soundbridge R1000   July 13, 2010
jsleeckx
Do not - I repeat - do not buy that thing. The power unit died after one year and Roku wrote me that they don't have replacement units any more. The power unit is in a sealed box together with the bass loudspeaker. So, forget it. Look at the Roku forum: many people have the same problem.


1 out of 5 stars wonderful radio with a horrible design flaw in the power supply   June 21, 2010
Curt Elsbernd
I bought my Soundbridge Radio well over a year ago. I love radio and this immediately became my most favorite gadget. I kept it next to my bed. I woke up listening to the BBC and went to sleep listening to WFMU in New Jersey (I'm in California).

About a week ago it just died - no warning, no error message - nothing. I did a search on the Roku forums and found out all about the serious design flaws and shoddy workmanship of the power supply and my heart sank. Fixing the power supply isn't really an option. If fixed it will fail again in a year or so. If you're handy with electronics, there are instructions on the Roku forums for replacing the power supply with an external laptop power supply. When I get some time I'm going to give it a try, but until then I'm out one radio and the $250 I spent on it.

I seriously thought about ordering a replacement from Roku, but decided that I didn't want to find myself with another dead radio in about a year. I've ordered a Logitech Squeezebox Boom as a replacement. I can't speak for the quality of the Logitech radio yet, but it should last more than a year.

If you are considering purchasing this radio - don't. There's no support from Roku and it will die just after it gets out of warranty.



1 out of 5 stars The worst support ever... BEWARE!   June 12, 2010
Steve Kellar (Chicago, IL)
I rarely weigh in on these reviews but I have to tell people this: ROKU internet radios are nice when they work, but if you ever need technical support FORGET IT. I have been at it for literally MONTHS to get a defective unit replaced. In fact, after a few months I was able to send in $75 for a replacement unit, which did finally arrive. BIG MISTAKE. It worked for a couple of weeks and now will not connect to my home network anymore. Try to get a response from ROKU -- what a joke. I get auto response emails telling me they received my email -- then it must go into a dead zone. And, guess what? No telephone support! I finally called a sales person -- which you can get to, of course -- and was told that their business is now focused on the Netflix box. So here I am, $299 for the first unit, then $75 for the second one, and 10 MONTHS LATER with no internet radio that works. This totally -- and I use the word advisedly -- SUCKS. I've never had a worse experience and I would love to get a phone call from these people challenging my facts. PLEASE PLEASE CALL OR EMAIL ME ROKU! If you're not going to service these things, please stop selling them!!!


2 out of 5 stars Discontinued - Customer Support Non-Existent   May 22, 2010
Zzyzx Oh (USA, East Coast)
I am an experienced technical user and own three Roku Soundbridge units and a Roku Netflix player. I ordered this from Roku when I saw the price cut to under US$200. But they shipped (what looked like a repack) without double-box and the unit arrived in bad shape, unable to connect to a WiFi network. Attempts to get an RMA failed, and after a period of time I had to dispute the charge with my credit card company - seems Roku closed their warehouse and lost the returned radio. It appears the success of their NetFlix player has strained them beyond their ability to provide decent support. That's sad, because they have a history of innovative products that are fun to use. One more issue: the Roku units operate 802.11B only, so any other devices on your WiFi router will be slowed down when this is in use.

Only buy this radio if you are willing to repair it yourself or use a third-party. Roku isn't "home" when you call.



2 out of 5 stars Power supplies do not last   March 3, 2010
Lynn S. Burger
1 out of 1 found this review helpful

During my second year of ownership, the power supply stopped functioning. I found that many other owners of this radio have experienced the same problem. Some of them found a source that will fix the units for around $100. I decided to use my $100 and purchase another type of Internet radio instead. I now have a Chumby, which I am enjoying more than I did the Roku.


Showing reviews 1-5 of 82
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