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AudioTron Ethernet Digital Music Player for Home Networks
 
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AudioTron Ethernet Digital Music Player for Home Networks

by Turtle Beach
3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (17 customer reviews)


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Technical Details

  • Familiar "look and feel" of a home stereo component
  • Streams digital audio from any PC connected to an Ethernet network
  • Listen to Internet Radio broadcasts and digital music in other parts of your home
  • Supports MP3, Windows Media, and WAV file formats
  • Remote control lets you assign playlists and songs to "favorites" buttons
  See more technical details

Product Details

Product Manual [12.28mb PDF]
  • Item Weight: 3 pounds
  • Shipping Weight: 3 pounds
  • Shipping: This item is also available for shipping to select countries outside the U.S.
  • ASIN: B00006Y0DQ
  • Item model number: TBS-3506-01E
  • Average Customer Review: 3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (17 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #208,111 in Electronics (See Top 100 in Electronics)
  • Date first available at Amazon.com: October 5, 2002

Product Description

Amazon.com Product Description

Compatible with networked home and business computer systems, the Ethernet Digital Music player lets you enjoy the digital audio you have stored on your computer in MP3, Windows Media (WMA) and WAV formats through your conventional stereo system. The player streams digital audio over an Ethernet or HPNA network and supports music libraries of more than 30,000 songs. This lets you consolidate your CD and MP3 collection into a single digital music library on your networked PCs. Since it works through your stereo, the player is also equipped to optimize the digital sound via analog and digital optical S/PDIF audio outputs, for potential audiophile music quality. And it fits right in to the rest of your rack, with familiar controls including random play, repeat play and song grouping.

The device also comes with an integrated Web server, controlled by your PC control via its Web browser. You can also play Internet radio streaming audio in MP3 and Windows Media formats. The included remote control lets you assign up to 20 preset buttons for instantly accessing your favorite songs and Internet radio stations. Additionally, you can use multiple AudioTron players in one location, allowing several people can listen to different music or Internet radio stations.

The unit measures 17 x 1.75 x 10 inches, and weighs 5.2 lbs.

Product Description

Pump Your Networked MP3s To Your Home Stereos Tired of listening to MP3 music or Internet concerts on tinny-sounding plastic PC speakers? AudioTron connects to your PC through an ethernet connection and is designed for use with even the highest quality stereo components, wherever you want to put them. AudioTron gives you all the versatility of Internet digital music with the ease-of use and convenience of a standard audio component, complete with remote control. Sit back, relax, and with the click of a button you're listening to all your favorite music! Join the growing community of satisfied Audiotron users. The manufacturer is very responsive to feature requests and you can download (for free) the latest firmware updates for your audiotron which give it a bunch of great features, including: web interface to control everything the Audiotron can do from any PC on your network! full support for streaming Internet Radio stations, which you can fully customize. clock functionality so you can use your Audiotron as an alarm clock to wake up to your favorite MP3's or playlists (the clock will even sync up with the Atomic Clock) Much much more, check out the AudioTron knowledge base for more info...


 

Customer Reviews

17 Reviews
5 star:
 (8)
4 star:
 (4)
3 star:
 (1)
2 star:
 (2)
1 star:
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Average Customer Review
3.8 out of 5 stars (17 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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36 of 38 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Best Network Audio Appliance for Sound Quality, July 11, 2003
By 
This review is from: AudioTron Ethernet Digital Music Player for Home Networks (Personal Computers)
I settled on a network audio appliance to play back my digital music for the convenience of being able to control the jukebox software from the appliance itself, from the remote, or from any web browser on the network, as well as the convenience of having an independent LCD display of track information.

I settled on the Audiotron because it allows me to pipe full CD-resolution wave files (16 bits, 44.1KHz samples, 1.4Mbits/second) through an optical S/P-DIF jack to my A/V receiver (Harman Kardon 325, also highly recommended). It also allows MP3 files to be passed through in the same way. The full resolution CD files sound exactly the same from the CD player with digital out, through the computer's digital out, or through the Audiotron. I was less than thrilled with the analog output piped into my A/V receiver's anlog amplifer; thus I suspect the headphone jack is similarly low quality.

The ripping software provided is OK, and has the advantage of having a really speedy (re-)tagging system for wav files (using the Microsoft standard RIFF info chunks; standard ID3 tagging is used for MP3s). It also rips fast. But I found the freeware Exact Audio Copy (EAC) program to do a much more accurate job of error-correction on hard-to-read disks, as well as putting in the right amount of between-track spacing (which is perfectly carried over when played back through the Audiotron). Used in conjunction with a freeware EAC plugin script called ATWavTag, I was able to use EAC to rip my entire CD collection with tags appropriate to the Audiotron. Without tags indicating the track number, the Audiotron will default to playing tracks in alphabetical order.

My only complaint about the Audiotron is that it's slow. With wave files, it takes about 5-10 seconds or so to skip a track, and if too many tracks are skipped at once, the buffering gets confused. That's slower than my CD player (which is now gathering dust) and way slower than doing it from the computer on which the tracks live. The web server takes 5-10 seconds to load a page when a track's playing. I would've been willing to pay more for a bigger buffer and faster processor. Finally, it takes a long long time for the Audiotron to find all the music files on the network; around 15 minutes for the 200GBs of music I have (about 5500 songs). The author of ATWavTag also supplies some useful utilities for creating tables of contents which are read in almost instantly over the network and allows the discovery process to be bypassed.

Setup was pretty straightforward, but it's hardly trivial. I had to create a Windows account for the Audiotron to get it going, and all the permissions had to be right. Then I had to figure out how to log into the administrative part of their web server (user/pwd is admin/admin, though it took me forever to figure that out, and I'm a compulsive manual reader). After that, it's just worked. If you're using Linux, you'll need the additional step of setting up a Samba server or the like to emulate Windows networking for the Audiotron's benefit. Like other non-NT-derived Windows OSes, the Audiotron's WinCE on a StrongARM processor is not the most robust. I've had to reboot it twice in as many months. Turtle Beach regularly supplies firmware upgrades, and there's a huge enthusiast community writing scripts and FAQs on how to use the Audiotron.

It also looks just like a standard audio component, though it's NAD-grey, so it doesn't match my black or silver components.

As for general usability, it's pretty easy once you get the hang of their selection system. But scrolling through a large music collection linearly by artist, especially with a lot of various artists collections, can be painful. And there's no way to drill down from artist to album or from genre to artist, on the device, though it can be done through the web interface. The remote adds some functionality like fast-forwarding through tracks, that is not available (at least in a way that I can find) through the front panel. I find the scrolling display easy to read, and I really appreciate having track information on random play; it fixes the problem with huge CD changers and never knowing what's playing.

Note: There is also a slightly more expensive version of the Audiotron that adds HPNA (home phone line) networking to the mix.

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19 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Discovering Years of Music, January 29, 2003
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: AudioTron Ethernet Digital Music Player for Home Networks (Personal Computers)
I have gone in spurts buying CDs. I have changers in my car and at home. But I find that I rarely change the CDs - too much hassle.

After installing the AudioTron system, I loaded up several hundred CDs. I was amazed at the memories of CDs from 5,10,15 years ago: I missed this music, but it would have been buried on the shelf.

Now, with AudioTron, I can run my own "stations" with music I like. I can listen 24 hrs a day for well over a week with no repeats.

Interestingly, this device has me buying more CDs! I have bought more since purchasing it than I had in the prior couple years. So much for the music industry's fear of digital media. MAKE IT EASY TO USE AND DEMAND WILL INCREASE....

The Turtle Beach AudioTron.
I am pretty good at networking, so I tried to do the advanced setup first with a direct connection to a test PC. Seemed like the best-success approach. I failed. I even reverted to reading the manual. Nothing worked. Frankly, I still don't know why, but suspect that it was a network security permissions issue (I am atypical, with a corporate level network in my home)

After setting it aside, I decided to take it to my "lab" where I could debug someone else's product. I did a factory reset, plugged into my network and everything just worked. My recommendation here: used a home gateway with DHCP (virtually all do) and use defaults.

This device installs very simply when using the defaults.

Once installed, I used Windows Media Player 9 (With copy protection turned off - fully compliant the copyright laws) to capture my CDs. With a 40x CD, capture takes a little over a minute per CD. My TDK drive uses hardware error correction to work through the scratches in some of my old CDs. I have not yet heard a defective track.

The AudioTron can scan my network for new music. Once I did that, I found over 2500 songs had been transfered. (All of these reside on my PC, not the AudioTron player. Hence the need for networking)

The user interface is very intuitive. Rotate to a selection, push to select, rotate for sub-menu. Example: Rotate to select "Play by Genre", Push. Rotate to "POP"/push (Selects POP music) Select Random and you are playing all of your POP songs. Or select by artist/album right down to the title.

Sound quality is very good. Much better than the high end speakers combinded with my PC audio card. My PC will occasionally drop out if I start a heavy disk task. But the Audiotron appears to pull in the entire song before playing. After the temporary installion, I needed to re-route the LAN network cable. While playing a song, I disconnected the cable, re-routed it and plugged it back in without, may I say, ever skipping a beat.

I would like to see this product succeed. It has been around a while. I only bought for the last Christmas as a present to my wife. At CES 2003, I checked out the competition. Yamaha has an interesting product, but at [$$$] per room. And it does not seem as good as this one. (They do use RF instead of a wired link).

I am buying a second system for my office/game room.

Overall, a very good value. You do need either wired LAN or HomePNA (a phone jack near the audio system and near the PC) plus a PC. 10GB of spare disk on a PC will store a lot of CDs. I use 128Kbps for very high quality. Each CD takes about 50 MB so 10GB will store 200 CDs.

Final PLUS.... Turtle Beach gives you free non-commercial internet 'radio' stations. Kind of like having X-Radio built in.

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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars This is my favorite gadget right now., February 2, 2004
This review is from: AudioTron Ethernet Digital Music Player for Home Networks (Personal Computers)
The Audiotron (AT) performs as advertised and then some. My current configuration consists of the AT-100, ethernet hardwired to a Linksys BEFSR41 10/100 router/switch with all the music stored on a Tritton Tri-NAS 120 network drive. With this setup, I can play music whether my computers are running or not, which, I have not seen as a feature on any of the comparable devices which all require server side software to be running on the computer (somebody feel free to correct me if I am mistaken).

BEFORE YOU BUY, I highly recommend (especially in light of some of the critisisms listed in other reviews on the AT) that you read the user's guide (available as PDF on Amazon or Turtle Beach websites) to familiarize yourself with the capabilities and limitations of the AT. That way, there are no surprizes when you get it home. THEN, read them again while you set the AT up. While the AT works pretty much right out of the box, there are a number of tweaks that will expand it's capabilities. I also made use of the extensive knowledge base on the Turtle Beach Website to find the info for configuring the AT with my NAS drive.

Also, taking the time to ensure that your MP3/WMA, file tags are fairly complete and consistent as far as Track #, Artist, Album, and Genre will make search and playback functions much more intuitive. This is accomplished quite easily if you are ripping your own but may take some time to re-edit downloaded files (which can be done with included Audiostation software or any number of shareware/freeware programs). This may seem pretty obvious, but it is apparent that some persons are having trouble with the AT's playback order. So far, I have had no problems with getting songs to play in their correct album order.

I am using the optical output and the sound is excellent. I have read in other places that the sound from the analog outputs is less than stellar so if your receiver does not include optical inputs, you may want to consider an outboard D/A converter.

All in all, I am very pleased with my Audiotron. If you READ THE USER'S GUIDE and do a little work up front to properly tag your audio files, you will have a very versatile and capable digital jukebox system.

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