Where are the cheap home streamers?


When CD players were first introduced, they were $1000 and more new.  And this was in early 80's dollars.  New ones would eventually drop to under $200, and new players that also play most all formats can still be had around at that price or less.  Sure, not the best quality, but they work well enough for most.  

The new frontier is of course, streaming.  Whether from a local host, online, and so on.  Many options in the high end, but what seems odd is the lack of budget options.  Probably the least expensive that's of decent quality is the Sonos Connect.  Oh sure, you can pair a computer or tablet with a cheap DAC, and get by.  Or roll your own with a Raspberry Pi solution.  And yes, most disc players are "smart" and can stream audio and video just fine.  Among other issues, is that the budget options are defaulting to HDMI out, and omitting Optical, Digital, and Analog out.  

There were some early efforts by Sony and Dlink a few years ago.  Both not only required a display, but were pretty terrible implementations overall.  We recently tried one of the Dayton WBA 31s.  For a mere $50, expectations were of course also modest.  As you might imagine, analog audio out is not great.  Below that of many phones we'd say.  It does however had an optical output.  A dealbreaker for most of our clients in terms of added complexity.  If produced in sufficient number, there is no good reason such a unit with a decent DAC couldn't be built and sold for $200 or so.  Or maybe someone is doing this, and it's just not well distributed?  



128x128austinstereo
I currently have a Megaboom on my bicycle and use Pandora with my Bluetooth phone.  The selection of music is mostly crap, and very redundant.  I had Tidal but did not have this or any other streamer except a computer.  Are the selections better on sites such as Tidal?
Hi everyone 

just another thought about streamers etc... your infrastructure will also be a gating  factor.  I know hardwire enet is ideal but I have had great success with Netgear Orbi mesh wifi network solutions ...  and streaming local files and streaming services ... 

there is a difference between a 30$ wifi access point/ router and more robust solution .


good hunting 

bill

I recently committed to separating my DAC from my streamer in the hopes that I could better manage upgrading needs along the way. One side up grades while the other doesn't etc.
I did find it difficult to find a streamer that checked all the boxes and a lot of that had to do with services followed by sound quality.  of course I am coming from a reasonable price standpoint because again, the technology for streaming is happening to fast for me to justify spending a bunch on a streamer yet.
Th bluesound products really are a great way to go while more of this shakes itself out.  Really versatile and can be used with Roon as well.  (Although if all you have is a Bluesound Node, you don't really need Roon).
My DAC is a Denafrips so I wanted to get high res files when available so that also limited me with the Bluesound that does not output those digitally when connecting it just as a streamer to the Denafrips.
For now I am giving a Raspberry Pi 4b with RoPieeeXL a shot using Roon.  Upgraded power supply addresses the biggest weak link with ese.  Initially I am having too many issues with dropped signal even though I shouldn't.  I am still working on it.  When it works, it's all I need.
Another product I might try is the Sonore Micro Rendue which get rave reviews.
Yes the Google Chromecast is awesome.
Here are some additional thoughts about the benefits of non-cd digital playback by Robert Harley in which he argues that jitter is higher from CD players than from hard-drive based playback solutions.  Older, but relevant: https://www.theabsolutesound.com/articles/do-hard-disk-drives-sound-better-than-cd-2/