Product Introduction: 1、The airmusic can be easily connected to your exsiting home WiFi network. Once connected, it will extend the WiFi signal wherever it is placed.It is also accessible by any devices connected to your home WiFi network including airmusic. 2、Which means any device, anywhere in WiFi rang of your home, can stream music to this airmusic. 3、You are also able to browse the internet at the same time as streaming audio to the this airmusic. Functions: 1、Qualcomm Atheros solution 2、Compliant 802.11b/g/n standard(Max 150Mbps) 3、Supports iOS/Android devices sharing music to airmusic through WiFi. 4、Supports mp3, aac,ape,wma etc. 5、Audio sample rate: up to 96kbps 6、Supports to play the music from local uDisk or Internet. 7、Free App for Android OS. Supports iPhone, iPad, iPod touch and Android devices.(Google play Store Search Airmusic) Specifications: 1. New Product 2. Weight: about 158g (include accessories) 3. Color: Black 4. Power adapter input: 110-240V 5. Working distance: up to 10meters/ 30ft 6. High-quality sound 7. Play music via your home stereo wirelessly 8. Connect to stereo or stand-alone speakers 9. Convenient and comfortable airmusic is a wireless portable WiFi Player that iPhone, iPad, iPod touch and Android devices can wirelessly streams music to. then can directly play the music. airmusic can play the online music and local usb disk(under developing) Package including : 1 x Airmusic 1 x USB Cable 1x Aux Cable 1x User manual
E**N
Works flawlessly once you get it connected using the iOS app -- except in high noise wifi environments
This works flawlessly as an Airplay adapter for a stereo system that doesn't already have that capability (but does have Aux inputs, either analog RCA or digital optical SPDIF). Setup is a bit of a chore and not well documented in the almost-English manual:1. for iOS devices you must download the A+music app from the app store (which works fine for me on an iPhone5 on iOS 8.1.1), then2. connect directly to the wifi access point that the airmusic device creates when it is first booted up, then3. select your home's wifi network from the iOS app and input the security password if you use one.4. the airmusic will then reboot, connect directly to your wifi network, and be visible as an airplay device within iOS or on your MacOS.Audio quality even from the analog outputs is crystal clear, and the unit has not dropped off my wifi in two continuous weeks of use.The only thing to be aware of is that this unit does NOT ship with a power supply. It runs off USB (a USB cable is included, as is an analog audio patch cable), 5V, and the current requirement is low (not actually listed--but I estimate less than 500 mA). So what I've used to power it is an old iPhone 4 charging adapter (the little white ones). This works fine.Update Feb 21 2015:This device is still working well. In the time since I installed it, it has had only one network drop where I had to re-enter the wifi password for my home network using the procedure above. Also, I believe the current requirement for this unit is about 1 amp. Any phone charger with micro USB will power it (I'm now using an old Kindle charger).An important security note with this device that is not well documented in the manual: factory default settings leave an open, unencrypted wifi network (name airmmusicXXXXX) on all the time from this device. Even if your own wifi network is protected, the airmusic network will allow any user to connect and gain full internet access (once you follow my instructions above). This is easy to fix with the A+music app. Attach to the airmusic wifi network using your iOS device, go to Wifi Hotspot Settings, and enable the encryption protocol and password of your choice.Update March 15, 2015: I purchased one of these for my girlfriend, who lives in a high-rise apartment bldg. The wifi environment is very crowded in her apartment, especially in the 2.4 GHz band, which is the only band this unit can receive on. I am sad to report that under these circumstances, this unit really struggles to maintain a continuous music stream. Other devices in her apartment manage just fine (Roku, for example) on the same band, so I suspect the wifi receiver on this unit is just not very high quality and is subject to frequent dropouts at intermediate signal to noise ratios. For that reason I've downgraded it to a four star rating.
R**H
may be an issue with the firmware.... IMPORTANT UPDATE BELOW:
I installed this in my Jeep 4 days ago. I have it hooked up to an always on port and have it connected to my home Wi-Fi when I am home. for some reason when I want to use the dlna streaming, the Wi-Fi from the unit is not registering on my phone. to remedy this issue I have to unplug the device and wait about 4 minutes for my phone to see it. I have the delay on the unit and my phone set to 0% delay but yet it still has a 2 second delay.audio quality is about the same as having it plugged in via 3.5mm jack, but can hear some instability in the higher frequency ranges just like a2dp streaming on Bluetooth. im sure its a user error on the issues im having but there shouldn't be a Wi-Fi adapter stand by option in the firmware that can not be seen or un-hidden._________________________________________________________________________UPDATE: after hours of tinkering with this unit, I have been using 2player upnp free version which is limited to 48 hours of use.the unit is definitely not a great product, but has a few kill me now "features".if you intend to use this as an audio streamer, forget it, the audio lags behind by at least 3 seconds. my main use will be via the usb port, which is a lot better at 1 second delay between commands. the unit supports usb hubs. yes, hub"S". I have successfully tested 4 usb drives as well as an external audio card. not sure if its the airplays code or if its my ancient creative SoundBlaster usb card, but the usb audio seems more like the treble is lower then the songs treble level and it sounds slightly "choppy".the app that I have had the least amount of frustration with is 2Player upnp. its so simple compared to the others. and the app is very easy to navigate, it has very similar features like Google music does with a slight windows media player v7 features.... id assume the app is in development for a facelift.I am currently working on the FLAC quality versus wav or mp3 quality. I want to see if there's any noticeable difference between the 3 on the unit. the audio codec in the airmusic player isn't all that great, possibly at 16 bit at worst, id be lucky if it were 24 bit 44100Hz.
D**.
Three Stars
Stopped working properly after 2 years
N**K
Nice for bathroom streaming
Your browser does not support HTML5 video. It works pretty well. Connects automatically from my computer itunes to my bathroom. I suggest watching my video, not for the views, but because you can see the distances of the products and some hopefully helpful information. I won't lie.. I do like it, but it does cut out sometimes... not frequently and not that long. It is barely an issue. I have so many times where it plays perfectly that I can't count the few moments that it had some skips and I am sure they were caused by nonsense on my crappy wifi connection. The way that my bathroom is setup is that the power turns on and off with the light switch. Once I turn on the light switch, the airmusic is ready to connect within 30 seconds. I actually hear an audible pop (not annoying) and that signifies that its ready to connect. The sound quality is good.
J**N
Works but many steps to operate
Half the price of Apple Air Play but, twice as difficult to operate and set up...
K**1
Save your money!
Worthless!
Trustpilot
3 weeks ago
3 weeks ago