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Airplay and battery life


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  • Avid Contributor I
  • 15 replies
So far, does anyone find they're getting a lot of battery life loss from using Airplay to stream music?

Personally, I was hoping this would be a way of controlling the Apple Music stream from the speakers using the Music app like it happens with the Sonos app, without streaming through the phone and using up the battery. (Yup, not much of a fan of the Sonos app, would rather use the Apple Music app)
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4 replies

Airgetlam
  • 42910 replies
  • July 15, 2018
You're effectively doubling the amount of streaming that the device has to do. AirPlay 2 doesn't work the same way that the rest of Sonos does.

In a normal Sonos use, the controller tells the computer on the speaker where to go get the data from, and the speaker then does most of the work. The only data that the controller has to do is capture the information about what is being played on the speaker.

In AirPlay, the device you're using has to get the stream from the internet, and then send that stream to the speaker, adding an extra amount of streaming. Which will require extra battery power on whatever device you're using. The streaming is no longer being handed off to the speaker, but it's now actually going through whatever device you're controlling from. The only case in which it wouldn't be a double stream is if the content that you're playing is actually stored on the controller device.

  • 13501 replies
  • July 16, 2018
I also suspect that transmitting a stream needs a lot more power than receiving one.

Airgetlam
  • 42910 replies
  • July 16, 2018
Could be, certainly. I don't have enough knowledge in that area to be sure 🙂

  • 13501 replies
  • July 16, 2018
Just the layman sense that pushing out radio energy will take much more grunt than receiving it, a passive thing. This battery thing is why I don't like streaming from smart handheld devices; as it is they don't hold charge anywhere like my Nokia used to, for 3 days.

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