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Samsung Readies Wireless Multi-Room, Multisource Audio

RIDGEFIELD PARK, N.J. – Samsung will offer its first dedicated wireless multi-room, multisource audio system on Oct. 13 when its first Shape wireless-audio products appear in stores.

The initial lineup includes a Shape speaker that reproduces music stored on Apple and Android smartphones, stored on networked PCs, and streamed by smartphones from Cloud-based services. Music travels from the sources over a home’s Wi-Fi network to a Shape Hub, which plugs into a home’s router, distributes the music wirelessly to Shape speakers, and ensures synchronization among multiple speakers playing the same song throughout the house, the company said.

A single speaker can be used without the Hub.

The speakers also incorporate Bluetooth with nearfield communications (NFC) pairing.

The first Shape speaker is a wedge-shaped $399 AC-only active stereo speaker, which works with the $49 Hub. An optional $49 wall-mount bracket is available for the speaker. All prices fall under the company’s unilateral pricing policy.

The company plans additional compatible products, said Jim Kiczek, Samsung’s digital audio and video director, but he wouldn’t say whether the technology would be embedded in future soundbars and HTiBs as well as in more active speakers.

“This is the future of audio,” Kiczek said. “Content is all over the place, on PCs and phones, and you can control it anywhere, anytime.”

Samsung is no stranger to wireless music distribution in the house, but the company’s current wireless products consist of iPod/iPhone-docking docking speakers that incorporate Wi-Fi and Apple’s AirPlay, which offers more limited multi-room capabilities than the new Shape system and doesn’t stream music wirelessly from Android phones.

Shape uses a Samsung app to turn Apple and Android smartphones into music sources that feed the Hub over a Wi-Fi 802.11a/b/g/n network with dual-band N. The app also turns the smartphones into system controllers to distribute music from networked PCs to the speakers.

An iOS and Android app for tablets is in development.

From a single smartphone, users are able to transmit multiple phone-stored songs simultaneously to 10 or more wedge-shaped speakers. The ability to stream multiple smartphone-stored songs simultaneously from a single phone is uncommon in wireless multi-room- audio systems, though Sonos and Navvo said they offer that capability.

Samsung also noted that multiple phones can be used simultaneously to stream songs to different speakers.

Besides reproducing music stored on mobile devices and PCs, the speakers also reproduce Cloud-based music services incorporated in Samsung’s app, including TuneIn Internet radio, Pandora, Rhapsody and the Amazon Cloud Player.

A single smartphone can transmit a music service to one set of speakers and a stored song to another set of speakers The system also supports simultaneous streaming from a PC and from smartphones. (See www.twice.com for more details.)

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