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by wlj 2333 days ago
They’re admitting a misstep, but they’re not actually changing much.

At best, there’s a vague pledge to update legacy players a bit longer, but they’re still breaking your current whole home audio system, because legacy and modern players will need to be split into two separate systems.

1 comments

No the article says the opposite. It says they’ll continue working together:

“First, rest assured that come May, when we end new software updates for our legacy products, they will continue to work just as they do today. We are not bricking them, we are not forcing them into obsolescence, and we are not taking anything away.”

They'll continue working together if and only if you never update the software on the newer devices in your system ever again.
"We are working on a way to split your system so that modern products work together and get the latest features, while legacy products work together and remain in their current state. We’re finalizing details on this plan and will share more in the coming weeks."
Yes, thats two sets, only working within each set, not across both sets.

“Half house audio” is the new hotness.

That was the original stance, it's unclear to me if it still is. The post they made seems to be intentionally vague...
I just found this [0] in their forums from Sonos employee:

“In May, you’ll be able to decide if you want to keep your legacy devices operating with your modern devices, and you’ll be able to put them all into a non-updating legacy system”

So they are actually reversing course to a certain extent.

If there’s one thing Sonos has shown throughout this mess, it’s that they’re really quite poor at communicating things clearly.

[0] https://en.community.sonos.com/ask-a-question-228987/questio...