Traveling Tunes

We took a look at three popular players: D-Link's DSM-120 MediaLounge Wireless Music Player, Roku's SoundBridge M1000, and Slim Devices' Squeezebox version 3. The SoundBridge and the Squeezebox have slick interfaces, great sound quality, and robust features. Though the Squeezebox's extras make it our favorite, the SoundBridge and the MediaLounge have the digital rights management (DRM) support required to play Napster and Rhapsody files.
D-Link DSM-120
This stylish, $210 music streamer (all prices in this story are street) has a digital optical output jack for higher-quality audio with compatible receivers, as well as standard analog outputs and support for most unprotected music formats. It doesn't handle iTunes AAC files, but it does support Windows DRM-10 audio playback, as well as protected Napster and Rhapsody music, via Windows Media Connect (available for Windows XP SP2 here).
A USB port on top lets you play tunes from a flash drive, and you can install a 2.5-inch hard disk. You also get an alarm clock feature, which will play music on cue from an installed (not a flash) drive.
A few things left us less than tingly, though. The companion PC software for music-folder and playlist setup isn't very friendly, and the number-pad remote control makes entering song titles or other alphabetic information painful. Also, Live365 is your only Internet radio option.
Roku SoundBridge M1000
For $200, we'd go with the SoundBridge, a sleek player with a big, bright fluorescent display. It has digital optical and coaxial outputs, and it supports Windows DRM, iTunes, and unprotected AAC music formats.
Interestingly, the SoundBridge has no PC software to install. Instead you use Windows Media Connect, or one of several popular software music players--including iTunes, Musicmatch, Napster, and Rhapsody--in its music-sharing mode. Or you can use Roku competitor Slim Devices' excellent open-source SlimServer software, which includes support for FLAC and Ogg Vorbis playback.
We loved the SoundBridge's visual display, excellent Internet radio interface, and wide range of supported stations, including Rhapsody. But as with its MediaLounge counterpart, its remote control could use text-entry buttons.
By the time you read this, Roku plans to ship an alarm clock version of the SoundBridge--the R1000--with 18 Internet radio presets, for an expected $399.
Slim Devices Squeezebox
The $300 Squeezebox is our top pick. The elegant device uses 802.11g Wi-Fi (the SoundBridge uses 802.11b), and is the only one of the three to support WPA encryption, the more-secure successor to the WEP encryption in the other products. An alarm clock and a headphone jack make the Squeezebox a fine bedside companion.
Getting the Squeezebox to work with the convenient remote (which has an alphanumeric keypad for easier navigation) took just a few minutes; on the PC side, the useful SlimServer software was simple to install and set up.
SlimServer can play pretty much every unprotected digital music format, including AAC, but not DRM-coded tracks. It can handle Live365, Radioio, and Shoutcast Internet radio streams, as well as MoodLogic mixing. The company says Rhapsody support is coming soon.
One last bonus: You can read RSS news feeds on the Squeezebox's display without going through your computer.




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