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'm thinking that software development, API's, etc play into the price of streamers. 
Common phone apps, small and relatively simple, are downloaded to millions of phones and through advertising,  generate money to cover development costs.
When a company builds a streamer, hoping to sell 10,000 or 50,000 with no advertising income, the more complex development costs are spread over fewer devices. The streamer must be compatible with lots of providers and different protocols. Plus, they often have to create an iOS and Android app to accompany the streamer.
The node 2i can stream directly or in some cases, through the mobile app. It supports Spotify connect, roon, bluetooth, Google cast, etc. All that interoperability costs money to create and often involves paying a fee to those services or protocols.
The Node 2i does all that very well. When you pay less for a streamer, you may lose quality, interoperability, a user friendly  interface, or all of the above. When shopping for a lower price streamer, do a lot of research, read reviews, etc... make sure it does what you need it to do, and has a UI (user interface) that doesn't drive you crazy.
Yes, I have a Node 2i and like it a lot. I'm using it with an external DAC (not high end at all) and it sounds slightly better than it's internal DAC did. The internal DAC wasn't bad at all...but would be out of place on many of the higher end systems owned by subscribers to this forum.
The only thing missing, in my opinion is a BlueSound receiver that could be plugged into aux inputs on systems in other rooms for nice, whole house sound. The BlueSound Pulse speakers have streamers built in, can serve as endpoints for well synchronized sound originating from the Node 2i and they aren't bad as wireless, remote speakers go...but the don't come close to most, spare stereo systems most of us have. I bought one Pulse, the big one. Its wasn't cheap and the sound was a little disappointing...so it remains in the kitchen, where nothing resembling critical listening will occur. 
@austinstereo--

As for the Allo, and the Pi, and any other DIY stuff, they are great options for hobbyists. And the results are beyond what you’d expect for the money. In this case, we’re looking for ready to run. Many of our customers just want a simple solution.
Oh, I missed that you are a dealer. The Allo can be bought pre-assembled and is pretty easy to set up and use, yet still, it doesn’t have the polish of more commercial products.
I’m going to look at the Songbird myself. People ask me for recommendations, and like you, I’d like to have something inexpensive, reasonable quality, and not tweaky.



For $600 the Audiolab 6000N ( no display) does a good job with DTS Play Fi and has a pretty decent internal DAC  For $180 the Audio Engine B1 links easly to your phone via the higher quality Bluetooth for streaming and has toslink out to bypass it's internal DAC 
I have the Arylic S50 Pro.  it is 200.00 from Amazon.  It is ok as long as all you are doing is streaming.  In their own materials they state that they are focused on the streaming and the support of digital files is secondary.  As to streaming I have clung onto AmazonHD which is a very good product and there is a discount as i am already an amazon prime customer.  For AmazonHD, there are some features that you can't use while streaming (adding music to your library or playlists for example).  I think I want a 200 product to work like a 1,000 or more product.  Another thing that annoys me is that the best it will ever play is cd quality regardless of the source.  
I'm really not into the whole streamer/DAC concept per se.

What I fear most is not that DAC's will improve (they won't) but that streaming services come and go and the need to keep up with them.  It's more of a software and interface thing than hardware.

For this reason I went with Roon as my streaming ecosystem, and like you mentioned, I'm runmning a Pi/Ubuntu streamer talking USB to my DAC, but I could also get a Mytek Manhattan II with a network card.  No built in streaming, but Roon aware.