The Squeezebox Boom is a departure for Logitech. Previous Squeezeboxes needed to be plugged into an amplifier or a set of speakers, but the new Boom contains a pair of speakers on either side of the main unit. Both the name and the design are clear riffs on the all-in-one boomboxes of the 1980s.
Like other media streamers it plays music stored on users' PCs, as well as internet radio stations and, if you have the appropriate subscriptions, music from download services. It was very easy to set up – it recognised our wireless network soon after we plugged it in and switched it on, and prompted us to enter the key. This is a little fiddly, as you have to use the dial on the front of the unit, but it's easy to go back and correct mistakes. It can also connect to a wired network.
We then connected it to our PC, which is where the main annoyance came in. Unlike almost all their competitors, none of the Squeezeboxes support the UPNP standard for sharing music and video. The standard means you don't have to install any extra software and if you store all your music on a compatible network hard disk, they can play the tunes from that without any computers switched on, making for the ultimate home jukebox.



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