Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #59830 in Receiver or Amplifier
- Color: Black
- Brand: Sony
- Model: NACSV10i
- Dimensions: 3.20" h x
8.90" w x
5.20" l,
2.55 pounds
Features
- iPhone / iPod touch dock: iPhone / iPod dock7 that lets you wirelessly stream music stored on your PC. Speaker system is required to enjoy the sound
- iPhone/iPod touch/iPad Remote Control: Download the free app to your iPhone, iPod touch, or iPad and turn it into a versatile remote control.3 Set the volume, browse your music collection and send music from your computer to the Network Speakers
- Share iPod content with Sony Network Speakers: Wirelessly transmit content stored in or streamed through a docked iPhone7 to multiple Sony Network Speakers
- Enjoy your PC music in any room: Free your PC's music library. The dock streams music from DLNA (Digital Living Network Alliance) compatible PCs and storage devices. The dock also acts as a DLNA server, streaming content to compatible PCs, Network Speaker, televisions and more
- Whole-house music: Enjoy music throughout the house. Any music that you can hear on the NAC-SV10i dock, you can also stream wirelessly to additional Sony Network speakers, Sony Blu-ray Disc home theater systems or Sony Blu-ray Disc players
Sony HomeShare NACSV10i iPhone Dock with Wi-Fi Network Services
Product Description
Wirelessly stream music from your iPod , iPhone , or PC, plus listen to Pandora , Slacker and Qriocity from the Internet, when you connect the Sony Wi-Fi Network iPhone Dock to your sound system. This great device even allows you t o share your streamed music to other rooms in your house. Download a FREE app and conveniently control your music location and destination. Synchronize playback with Sony Net Speakers for whole-house entertainment.
Customer Reviews
Most helpful customer reviews
7 of 9 people found the following review helpful.
Not Ready For Prime Time
By Joe Schlabotnik
I've been waiting for Sony to come out with this. I have a Sony credit card, so was able to get this with bonus points (at no monetary cost). However, despite its "freeness", I am considering returning it. I am on Day Four of troubleshooting my installation with no solution in sight. The unit cannot connect to the media on my computer, which was the sole reason I'd bought the thing.Hurdle One: The Homeshare system is not compatible with iTunes. It is made to work with iPhone and iPod but not iTunes. So you will need to access your iTunes library through Windows Media Center. This was relatively simple using a program called MCE Tunes which I downloaded for $30. I've since learned that there are other free ways to do this as well.Hurdle Two: Windows Media Center is a Windows product, which is to say that it doesn't "just work". I've been trying for days to get Windows Media Center to share its media. Sony's help line and chat is useless so far. Windows online help is extensive, byzantine, and directs you into the weeds real fast.The unit itself looks nice, but its menu is incredibly primitive if you are used to iPhones or anything designed after 2002. There is a Sony iPhone remote app that you can download which may be more sophisticated, but since it can't find the unit or the network, I can't tell how it works.I am incredibly disappointed.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful.
Like it, but don't love it yet.
By CDub
This is a solid product. For someone looking for a Ipod dock on steroids this is a great option. Keep in mind this is not a stand alone music solution. It will require a receiver or existing speaker set up to play. But for me that's what I was looking for. I had an old school non-network receiver wired to speakers in the ceiling tucked away in a closet, so I needed to bring the wireless music to the receiver and didn't want to have music paying in the closet. This fit the bill.Pros:-Wireless connection is simple and has been reliable-Wi-fi is built in-A lot of music options: Network radio, Slacker, Pandora, Ipod, DLNA and Aux-in.-The APP for Apple and Android is useful and allows you to control the device throughout the home. No need for line of sight.-Its actually a pretty flexible option (Although not perfect) in a lot of ways. i.e it has a 3.5mm aux in port. For example you can connect a bluetooth receiver to the NACSV10i as audio input and switch between the ipod, Bluetooth or Streaming radio using the App wirelessly throughout the home. But alas no volume control from the APP (But it will control volume on other Homeshare devices with dedicated volume control in party mode).-You can control the ipod functions remotely with the standard remote and App.-It works pretty well with other Homeshare devices. But it can be a little fickle in joining and switching party modes. I think I have found a reliable process connecting with another Sony Homeshare Network Receiver I picked up because I wanted to control my receiver (power, volume and functions) that is in a closet connected to speakers in the ceiling throughout the house. I can also send my Onkyo (Used for the living room surround sound) Zone 2 function into the NACSV10i via the aux-in and stream it over to the Sony in the closet.-It works well with connecting to DLNA servers and devices. But I haven't been able to get all the functionality I'd like, like random repeat ect consistently from all DLNA sources. (I don't use I-tunes so I can't speak to compatibility with I-tunes)Cons:Can't power down with the remote app.Sometimes fickle in Party mode and source switching.Display isn't pretty. In fact it's really basic and hard to read from far away.Can't speak to I-tunes functionalityWithout the app it looses some of its versatility.SummaryIt does a lot of things for a Dock. But it is not a stand alone stereo. At the list price I'm not so sure I'd go for it. But when it can be found around $100 bucks, its pretty slick.
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful.
Could be good
By Fam2012
I've bought this network audio component to send the audio from my tv to my network speaker. Unfortunately, there is a lag between audio input and output that make it impossible to be used to this purpose. At the beginning I thought it was due to wifi connection, but I made a simple test: I wired connected my speaker to the audio output of this device and realized that that lag is due to the audio processing from input to output, so not related to wireless communication!
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