ARIS: The wireless speaker designed for Windows users
The ARIS wireless speaker for Windows plays music streamed from a Windows PC
While there seems to be an unending stream of wireless speakers designed
primarily to stream audio from iOS or Android mobile devices using AirPlay or Bluetooth,
Oregon-based Aperion Audio is showing Windows-using music fans some
love with the ARIS wireless speaker. The unit is designed to work with
Windows 7’s “Play To” feature that makes it easy to stream content from a
PC over a home network.
Instead of Bluetooth or AirPlay, the ARIS uses the DLNA (Digital
Living Network Alliance) protocol, which is supported on many new HDTVs
and Blu-ray players, but up until now hasn’t really been embraced in the
wireless speaker space. After connecting the ARIS to a home network via
Ethernet or Wi-Fi, the unit will show up as a device on a networked PC
running Windows 7 or Windows 8 Consumer Preview.
Mobile devices can also connect to the device using a DLNA app, but
Aperion plans to release its own ARIS Music Apps for iOS, Android and
Windows 8 mobile devices in the future. But if you’ve got a device that
can’t connect wirelessly, the ARIS also has a 3.5 mm auxiliary audio
input jack for connecting any device with a headphone or line-out jack.
The unit’s six internal drivers (2x 4-inch woven fiberglass drivers
and 2x passive radiators for the midrange and 2x 1-inch Neodymium,
soft-dome silk tweeters) and four 25 W Class D amplifiers with DSP,
combine to pump out a total of 100 W RMS power with a frequency response
of 65 Hz to 20 kHz (+/- 3 dB).
Featuring a single-piece brushed aluminum enclosure, the ARIS
measures 6.5 in (16.5 cm) high, 6.5 in deep, and 14.75 in (37.5 cm)
wide, and weighs in at 11.3 lbs (5.1 kg). It’s Windows compatibility
comes courtesy of the included ARIS Wireless Card for Windows, but this
can be swapped out to help ensure compatibility with a change in
networking protocols in the future.
The ARIS wireless speaker for Windows is priced at US$499 and is due
to ship mid-June 2012. Pre-orders are currently being taken on the
company website.
Source: Aperion Audio