For those who have XM or Sirius as a home receiver......ever since I purchased the Logictech Squeezebox last November, I have no need at all except for Baseball to have a satellite receiver at all in the home. yes , you can subscribe to Sirius on the squeezebox...but why? if it's another expense.
This is the greatest invention since Sony came out with the first model receiver for XM in 2001. But this is making satellite seem tired. It picks up under Radio Time, Shoutcast, Live 365, Pandora, and a whole lot more sources for music and even sights like Facebook.
There has been a few glitches here and there, but they seem to send easy download updates to correct the situations, like the alarm. Hook up some computer speakers, and you have a great unit. With the battery pack , you can take it outside....or even at a WIFI or Starbucks place and listen.
It has it's own Internet or Radio Time for searching. There a re some terrestrial staions that may have their own web site player, where it may not be compatible, but sometimes it might if you input the IP and Portal address to make it compatible. This is the best and latest gadget out at least for now.
This is the greatest invention since Sony came out with the first model receiver for XM in 2001. But this is making satellite seem tired. It picks up under Radio Time, Shoutcast, Live 365, Pandora, and a whole lot more sources for music and even sights like Facebook.
There has been a few glitches here and there, but they seem to send easy download updates to correct the situations, like the alarm. Hook up some computer speakers, and you have a great unit. With the battery pack , you can take it outside....or even at a WIFI or Starbucks place and listen.
It has it's own Internet or Radio Time for searching. There a re some terrestrial staions that may have their own web site player, where it may not be compatible, but sometimes it might if you input the IP and Portal address to make it compatible. This is the best and latest gadget out at least for now.