squeezebox

By lieven


This week I finished the first phase of my home-network plans : from every computer one can stream iTunes-music files to be played in the living room, and from every computer one can stream iPhoto or iMovie-files to the TV-set. Both solutions involve new hardware and as it usually is with hardware : there are elegant or clumsy solutions. The photo-video solution is rather clumsy so I’ll postpone it until later. The audio-solution on the other hand is extremely elegant : I bought a squeezebox from slimdevices. It is extremely small (22cmx5cmx12cm) so you can place it virtually everywhere, it can be connected to your network either wireless or by ethernet and it has several alternatives to connect to your speakers or hifi-set : a headphone mini-jack (which is at the moment what I use to connect it to a pair of powered speakers) but I can always upgrade my listening experience using : analog audio RCA, digital optical or digital coax. The service it provides is excellent, all information is available from their website (they do not ship a CD but you can download the latest version of slimserver from the website (available for all platforms)) and they have several forums among which a rather enthusiastic users-forum (no surprise to me). You get it running in no time. First download slimserver and install it on the machine(s) containing music you want to stream over the network. What it does is to add one extra item to your SystemPreferences and clicking it you can start the SlimServer. Then, power up the squeezebox and follow the messages on the display. I choose to connect to a wireless network, it then detects the names of the possible networks and asks you to choose one, asks what type of encryption it uses (for Airport b take 64 bit, for g take 128 bit encryption). The most difficult part is to type in the wireless password as it wants the hexadecimal equivalent of your pass phrase. To find it, open up Airport Admin Utility, log in to the network you want and on the screen you get look for the password icon, clicking it will give you the hexadecimal WEP-key. If you are familiar with SMS you’ll find it easier than me to type this in to the squeezebox (use the number keys to simulate a keyboard). After this it will connect to your network and get the IP-address of the SlimServer (the computer on which you started the server) and you have access to its iTunes-library. Two caveats : make sure you use the MP3-option to get CD’s into iTunes (the default setting of Preferences/import is AAC not MP3 (btw. slimdevices now claim that you may also use AAC-files, I didn’t check this out yet but have no doubts it will work). The second is that the display screen is rather small to browse the library if you are used to iTunes’ window. A neat way around it is to use a webbrowser on ANY computer in your network (for example the iBook on your lap). Just fire up Safari and go to the Rendezvous-window (it took me some time to figure out what they meant by it : in Safari go to the Bookmarks pulldown menu, then choose Show all bookmarks and on this page you will find a Rendezvous-tab, click it and one of the bookmarks will be SlimServer and by clicking on it you have web-access to control your squeezebox. Very neat, this Rendezvous awareness and a sharp contrast to the clumsy photo-video solution. So, if you want to free your music and hear it via hifi-standards rather than via computer-soundcards go and buy as many squeezebox sets as you will need to fill your house with music!


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