During the AMA, in response to a question about the need to make the new app cloud based, a certain Diane from Sonos said this:
There are many advantages to using the cloud, but I’ll highlight one. With our new content services, we are able to provide a richer experience for discovering music to listen to. Our previous app was built on APIs that did not provide enough metadata to make that rich experience.
Some unknown time in the future, all issues causing the present firestorm will be addressed, for the above promised pot of gold for Sonos users via this richer experience of music discovery, to be available to the sufferers of today.
Can someone with any insight answer these two questions relating to this promise?
What will the new app do that S2 cannot, that will make the discovery experience richer?
What will the new app do to make the experience of discovery richer, that services like Spotify, Apple Music and the like, do not provide in their native apps?
As an S1 user I am not affected by the present dislocation, but as a Sonos user I would like to know what I will be missing out on by staying in a Sonos backwater, casting to Sonos via the Spotify native app.
And I expect this to be of more interest to those that are suffering today - what is the golden tomorrow in return for a painful today?
One Sonos devotee keeps saying that the present dislocation is not a big deal because the speaker hardware is not affected, and the app is after all just a mere remote. I agree that this what the app should be, but the obvious question then is how is just a mere remote going to transform the user experience of music discovery, that promised pot of gold?
I thought I will tag Corry and others from Sonos on this but I did not because either they will not know the answer or will be under gag orders, so I have not done this.