Apple HomePod review – in pictures
This Siri speaker’s smarts don’t quite match its stunning sound...
WELCOME HOME, POD
Still, it’s a bit different this time. Amazon’s Echo army and Google Home’s family are already great voice-controlled speakers that can organise your digital life. The Sonos One, meanwhile, mixes Alexa smarts with great sound quality and multi-room tunes. But guess what? Apple thinks it can do better. And in some ways, the HomePod, does outshine its fellow party guests. It’s swept into the room with Apple’s signature hauteur, refusing to speak to nerdy Android phones or go beyond polite conversation with Spotify. But if you’ve got an iPhone, subscribe to Apple Music and prioritise sound quality over A.I assistance, it might just be your new smart soulmate…
SLICK AND SIMPLE
The HomePod is a 7in tall cylinder that is both charming and unremarkable. Its mesh fabric gives it a friendly and homely feel, while the white and space grey colours mean it’ll blend in nicely with pretty much any decor (aside from your Angry Birds wallpaper). The result is a speaker that is eminently more strokable than an Echo or the almost identically-sized Sonos One. But also one that’s not hugely distinguishable from the furry speakers Libratone has been making for years.
BELLS AND WHISTLES
On the top you’ll find some basic touch controls that you can use with, gasp, your fingers. How quaint. There are volume up and down buttons, while a series of taps in the middle will control your music: one tap for play or pause, two for next track and three for previous track. Say ‘hey, Siri’, and a ghostly waveform will light up between the buttons to show she’s listening. This is all very lovely, but one slight shame is that, unlike Google Home and Amazon Echo, there’s no mute button for the microphone. You can mute Siri in the HomePod’s settings, though, if you’re worried she’ll blare out ‘sure, let’s continue playing Michael Buble’ during your dinner party.
EASY LISTENING
The HomePod is one of the best standalone speakers I’ve heard. Now, there are lots of reasons for this, ones that include buzz-phrases like ‘real-time modelling’ and ‘spatial awareness’. But all you need to know is that the HomePod has basically got a little sound engineer inside, who constantly analyses both the music that’s playing and your room, so he can tweak your tunes in real-time accordingly. Combine these A8 brains (yep, the same chip that’s in your iPhone) with the HomePod’s seven tweeters and formidable bass driver, and you have a speaker that you genuinely want to just sit down and listen to. Rather than just have on in the background while you do the ironing.
RICH SOUND, POOR FEATURES
The HomePod’s bass is incredibly rich and deep, yet it never feels in danger of overwhelming the clear vocals or crisp treble. The most impressive thing is the sheer size of its sound – stand back a few feet, and it often feels like the music is coming from various parts of the room rather than a 7in speaker. Onlookers will swear you have a subwoofer secretly stashed away under the sofa. But, and it’s a big one that Sir Mix-A-Lot would be a fan of, the HomePod’s voice controls and ‘musicologist’ knowledge only work with Apple Music. That’s okay, you’ll just Bluetooth some tunes over to it, right? Nope, you can’t do that either. What you can do is stream the likes of Spotify over Airplay from your phone, and basic voice controls (play, pause, skip) will work. But it’s clunky, and less than ideal.
MUSIC MOGUL
Apple claims the Siri on the HomePod is a ‘musicologist’. Clearly, Nathan Barley has been consulting at Cupertino. But is there any merit to these claims of musical clairvoyance? A little, but that’s all so far. What you get are some impressively specific playlists (for example, ‘play me some ambient electronic music for studying’), the ability to quiz Siri about a song or band that’s playing, and the chance to teach Siri your tastes by saying ‘I like this’. Siri usually answers basic questions well, like ‘what year was this recorded?’ and ‘which album is this from?’. But she couldn’t handle ‘which band is Jamie XX in?’. Come on, Siri, handed that one to you on a plate.
SELECTION BOX
While the number of genres you can choose from is impressive, it’s not yet encylopaedic. Siri didn’t understand my request for ‘garage rock’. My yearning for ‘chamber pop’ was greeted with the pleasantly unexpected sound of a classical orchestra. And grime was interpreted (or perhaps misheard) as ‘crime music’, which seems a little harsh. In the main, though, Siri on the HomePod proved to be a more knowledgeable musical companion than Alexa or Google Assistant, if not quite the super-nerd I was hoping for. The ‘play something I like’ function, sure enough, played songs I like. But what I really want to ask is ‘play something I’ll eventually like’ and be greeted with a mix of impossibly tailored new songs that don’t feel quite like the ragbag that Spotify Discover Weekly often is.
SMART HOME AMBITIONS
The HomePod’s list of smart home skills is growing nicely, but it’s still nowhere near as long as the number of accessories that play nicely with Amazon’s Alexa or Google Assistant. Some notable absences include Hive, Nest, Samsung Smartthings and Logitech Harmony remotes. Still, if your smart home ambitions extend only to some Philips Hue bulbs, a Tado thermostat and some Nanoleaf lights – and to be fair, this is probably most people – then the HomePod is a perfectly decent voice-controlled hub. Siri has also stepped up his or her overall smart assistant game too. You can do many of the staples popularised by Alexa and Google Assistant, such as set reminders and add things to your shopping list. As long you don’t mind these notes only going to Apple’s equivalent iOS app, rather than your favourite third party ones.
ANY REQUESTS?
Other common requests that work perfectly well are playing podcasts, getting the weather forecast (most easily accessed by asking ‘will I need an umbrella today?’, if in the UK) and getting an estimate of how heavy the traffic is on a particular route. But in other ways Siri is like Santa’s Little Helper compared to the Laddie-like collies of Alexa and Google Assistant. For example, on the HomePod you can’t yet set an alarm to play a song or radio station, only a jingle. Which currently rules it out as a bedside clock radio replacement. Siri also can’t yet read audiobooks or directly make phone calls. You can pass off phone calls from your iPhone and the microphones will pick up your natural speaking voice from a few feet away, but it’s still a little short of what Alexa can do.
LIMITED ASSISTANCE
Sending texts did also work fine, but when I tried to send a WhatsApp message (which is supported) Siri said I’d need ‘to continue that on iPhone’. Apple’s assistant lacks the depth of the Google Assistant’s general knowledge too, and it’s hard to see that changing soon. You can’t, for example, ask for recipes or flight information. There is an argument that this is because Google is far happier to mine your anonymised data, with Apple underlining that all HomePod requests are both anonymous and encrypted. In the end, you have to decide whether ceding some access data is worth the benefits of something like Google Home. One final big miss for the HomePod, though, is that it can’t yet recognise different voices. This is particularly helpful for flatmates or families who want to get personalised responses from Google Assistant or Alexa.
SPEAKER FIRST, ASSISTANT SECOND
The HomePod is, by Apple’s own admission, a music speaker first and a smart assistant second. That’s fine, but it’s also not really a complete music speaker either – it’s a home Apple Music player for iPhone owners. That makes it very niche and restrictive compared to its rivals from Amazon, Google and Sonos. What it does better than any of those three, though, is muster incredible sound from one, very pretty speaker. It’s better than a Sonos One (if not twice as good, as the price tag suggests) and it’s in another league to the Echo and Home. Siri is also, if far from the best all-round home helper, the most knowledgeable and intelligent virtual music assistant around.