Updated memory graphic

  • 25 January 2020
  • 26 replies
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This is controlav’s chart.

 


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Its a shame they can’t provide a service to upgrade the memory. I’d gladly pay for the part, labor and shipping. You’d think the bigger memory would support a larger local music library index also.

I would think the cost of such a service would outstrip the cost of a new speaker, due to the (perceived) manual labor involved. And, for all I know, the memory and COU might be soldered in, rather than socketed, increasing the complexity of replacement, and the circuit board and power supply might not be sufficient. 

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Upgrading the memory is likely to need a new logic board, not going to be cost effective. The labor in trying to re-work the original board is probably worse.

The new board could also upgrade the CPU and radio but I just can’t see an economic case.

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if anyone can tell me how to turn a 0/1 value in Excel into a nice icon in a graph, I can update the chart with more info like Voice and Airplay, but it looks ugly as 0 and 1s right now. My Excel skills were pushed to the max to create this chart!

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There are two Sub's??? How can you tell which one you have?

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By the first four digits of the serial number (YYMM) or by the internal Zone Player Info screen’s model info.

I don’t have what the differences are but that is what you are looking for.

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My point is that there are two Sub's version on the diagram.  How do I know which one I have?

My point is that there are two Sub's version on the diagram.  How do I know which one I have?

 

Shouldn’t really matter, the storage is what limits what can be loaded into memory, and the storage is the same for both.  In truth it matters even less for the Sub, which doesn’t have much smarts, it simply plays the one channel it’s given.  No playlists, no music index, no account info, etc., so the Sub should be good for decades.  

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This new chart has two subs, one with 64/64 and one with 64/128

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This new chart has two subs, one with 64/64 and one with 64/128


Yup, there’s an A100 and an A100.2 - I was surprised by this discovery too.

Since the SUB is always a “slave” device, i.e. bonded to another Sonos device, I wonder what difference it makes. I’ve always assumed a “bonded” device doesn’t need the full code set. 

Its a shame they can’t provide a service to upgrade the memory. I’d gladly pay for the part, labor and shipping. You’d think the bigger memory would support a larger local music library index also.


Imagine if all players had originally been designed like some Android phones with an SD memory card slot that could be exchanged for a bigger card!

Can you run the current version of Android on these devices? I’m an Apple iPhone user, so I’m a bit more accustomed to this limited memory issue. 

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The SD option on Android is only storage space, not for ROM or RAM which is what legacy gear is short of.

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Thanks for sharing the chart! 
 

The connect amp difference are easy to spot because of the play pause button, but how can we tell the difference between which Play1, Play3 and Sub we were sold?

 

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You can read the device xml directly - if you go to my Facebook page listed n the graphic you’ll see the details on how to do that.

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Excellent ty

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@Stanley_4 

Can you update the chart to include the Arc, Five and Sub(gen3)?

Cheers!

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Sure, I was having some trouble with Excel but I’ll have another go.

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@controlav 

Oops… my bad 🤥 I thought it was @Stanley_4‘s work. No offense Stan. Thanks @controlav 

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I had that old version of the chart by controlav saved to my local drive but hadn’t saved who did it. I went back and credited the image which I should have done earlier.

Hi @controlav - I noted that your chart shows no Play:3 512mb model. Ifixit did a teardown of a Play:3 in 2013 and found 512mb NAND and RAM chips.

https://www.ifixit.com/Teardown/Sonos+Play:3+Teardown/12475

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Hi @controlav - I noted that your chart shows no Play:3 512mb model. Ifixit did a teardown of a Play:3 in 2013 and found 512mb NAND and RAM chips.

https://www.ifixit.com/Teardown/Sonos+Play:3+Teardown/12475


My chart is based on devices in the wild, that declare their capabilities. I don’t have telemetry that matches the hardware you describe. It is also possible that Sonos simply bought larger memory devices (because they were cheaper than the older, smaller devices) and don’t use that extra memory.

How interesting- I wonder then if they have software-limited the memory and could open it up in future. I wonder what the real range of possible devices is out there.