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Early reviews are in for Apple's new $350 Echo competitor, the HomePod - and it's getting destroyed

The New York Times' Brian Chen —"tough to recommend"

Early reviews are in for Apple's new $350 Echo competitor, the HomePod - and it's getting destroyed

Verge's Nilay Patel —"you’re better served by other smart speakers"

Verge

The bottom line: "You can’t ask Siri to look up a recipe. You can’t ask Siri to make a phone call. (You have to start the phone call on your phone and transfer it to the HomePod to use it as a just-okay speakerphone.) Siri also can’t compete with the huge array of Alexa skills, or Google Assistant’s ability to answer a vast variety of questions."

Read the full review here.

TechCrunch's Matthew Panzarino — "If you don’t like Apple Music, don’t buy a HomePod."

TechCrunch

The bottom line: "But if you own an iPhone, an Apple Music subscription and at least one HomeKit device, then you are the target market for a fantastic sounding $349 speaker that works best with all of that stuff."

Read the full review here.

BuzzFeed's Nicole Nguyen — "It looks and feels Expensive."

BuzzFeed

The bottom line: "But HomePod, like the audio vacuum it was tested and developed in, exists in a silo that doesn’t seem to take into account how people actually use smart speakers. It works supremely well within Apple’s orbit, but not outside of that. The HomePod’s software, in its current iteration, doesn’t work where many people live — on Android phones or in Spotify — and that keeps a good smart speaker from being a great one."

Read the full review here.

The Loop's Jim Dalrymple — "HomePod offered so much more quality that it was quite literally laughable to hear the others.'"

The Loop

The bottom line: "HomePod is smart, it looks great, and it sounds incredible. I don’t know what else you would want in a home smart speaker."

Read the full review here.

The Telegraph's James Titcomb — "feels a little underpowered"

The Telegraph

The bottom line: But if you own an iPhone, an Apple Music subscription and at least one HomeKit device, then you are the target market for a fantastic sounding $349 speaker that works best with all of that stuff.

Read the full review here.

USA Today's Edward Baig — "can be an exercise in frustration at times"

USA Today

The bottom line: "At the same time, the new speaker can be an exercise in frustration at times, especially when you request something of Siri that Apple’s digital assistant can’t deliver on HomePod. In answering to your “Hey Siri” vocal commands, Apple’s assistant can perform many of the same table-stakes tasks as Amazon’s Alexa on Echo’s or the Google Assistant on Google Home speakers—from setting timers and reminders to informing you of the weather and traffic, turning on smart lights, or solving math."

Read the full review here.

WSJ's Joanna Stern — "HomePod nails the speaker but struggles at smart."

WSJ

The bottom line: "If you’re an Apple Music user, the HomePod is the best matching speaker. There is a very close second though. The Sonos One now comes with Alexa, and Google Assistant is expected to arrive this year ...

It really comes down to what you want your speaker to do. If you want the smartest smart speaker, this isn’t it. But if you prize music above everything else, the HomePod isn’t a dumb choice."

Read the full review here.


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