Any opinion or feedback on the NAIM UnitiServe or UnitiCore?


Have a few hundred CDs and I'm loking to transition to a NAS based system and the NAIM units have caught my eye. Please share your thoughts or comments on them. How is their interface? Is the UI on the app adequate or is it horrible? I just want to be able to connect it to my main system and listen there. I don't need to stream to other parts of the house or do any complex setups.
TIA
jcatral14
I can second the recommendation on NAIM servers, but he new Uniti-Core far surpasses their previous iterations in simplicity and usability and at half the cost.  Setup couldn't be easier.  I'm not aware of any bugs in the new NAIM app.

I don't make money by selling audio components, and a mac mini can be made to sound just as good for a lot less money.  if you have a really complex setup the Naim items could be the way to go.  also big black boxes may look cool to you, so...
@ tomic601 and tdimler, thanks! In the interim I have also found out about Bluesound Vault 2 but I think I will still go with a NAIM solution. I will probably add one to my system later this year :-)

Thanks all.
https://forum.audiogon.com/discussions/naim-core?highlight=naim%2Bcore

dont want to hijack thread so you can look at the link on which is my experience with Naim Core...far form "reference" as they call it...half baked product...i left it only because it sounds good...but i am searching for good sounding alternative in which you can do simple things like import (not rip) your music from HDD and can read Genre tags...Naim "reference" Core cant do that :)...they practically force you to do Naim rips...read my whole true story and let someone convince me that Naim is professional company...i wanted to like it but...  
Here is our reply as a Naim dealer in regards to Raindogs experience maybe this would be helpful.

Naim's service and support is routinely excellent but as with Naim and many other companies Kef is a good example, with their LS 50 wireless, products are realeased on the market with a rudimentary feature set or with software platforms missing with the expectation that the features or platforms which are missing will be addressed shortly after launch.

Most companies write their applications for IOS first, why the IOS world takes in to consideration the crazy amount of Apple I phone users, but what you may be missing, is the fact that most tech savy users, have an Ipad, and even if you are an Android user, I prefer my Samsung Note 8 over the Apple Phone world, most techies have an Ipad.

So if you write for IOS first you are going to take care of a lot of users

Most Core users are going to load their music and will be searching by Artist first then album and then possibly Genre. 

I can't tell you how many of our clients open the app and scroll through cover images first long before they do   any other types of searches on these kinds of devices.

Naim routinely updates both their software and firmware and usually if a feature is missing it will be added with the next software update. 

In the cases where uploading music misses tagging info sometimes that is the reason that you don't get an appropriate genre match.

The Core sounds amazing and for the gentleman who thinks a Mac mini can compare sonically it doesn't we have tested Aurender and many of our specialty servers vs tweeked up Mac Minis and sonically the servers are usually far better sounding. 

So unfortuantely for Raindog I think he got slammed by being an early adopter. The Core is excellent and Naim's products routinely rock!

Dave and Troy
Audio Doctor NJ