I bought two play:5 v1s from the Sonos web site in late 2014, so 5.5 years ago. Today they announce the are EOL in May. This wouldn't be so bad except for this part of the announcement:
"Please note that because Sonos is a system, all products operate on the same software. If modern products remain connected to legacy products after May, they also will not receive software updates and new features."
So if I keep my 5 year old speakers the rest of my system will also not receive updates and may become non-functional.
This kind of anti-customer behavior is a great way to ensure your evangelists abandon your brand permanently.
When I bought Sonos speakers for much of my house in 2012-2014 it was selling itself as an alternative to hifi equipment that lasts decades. In retrospect my expectation that Sonos would be longer lived than that was short sighted, I should have known better.
This is planned obsolescence at its finest and I guess I won’t be buying Sonos/other smart speakers again.
There’s no reason to replace perfectly good speakers every 5-10 years because the microcontroller inside isn’t profitable enough to continue to support. Good sounding/looking powered speakers with a small compartment inside for a modular brain would be a pretty good trade off, basically like driving the same TV panel with a different set top box every few years.
More outrage is necessary. I probably don't need their new features. Have a separate build for legacy without the cruft, or provide a means of replacing the logic board.
Luckily I only have two play:5 speakers and a bridge, but the play:1s are going to be next on their chopping block and my house is full of them, not to mention the sub and soundbar.
This, plus Sonos' lack of investment in their software clients, makes me plan on upgrading to something else.
This is crazy - they say the devices were 'introduced in 2011' but they were actively selling them years beyond that. The trouble is I have thousands invested in a house-wide Sonos, and half of them are now declared as 'legacy' -- that means that my whole system now doesn't get updates. And - the legacy products work perfectly
How does this company continue to get worse and worse every time I read about them? People spent a fortune on their products, without ever imagining they would be worthless only a few short years later. Without updates, the 3rd party integrations could stop working at any point - google play, Spotify, etc. And then it would be a brick . This move sends their resale value immediately to almost zero in my opinion, or as soon as people realize the implications.
The sonos system is an extreme example of "engineered to fail". The only issue is lack of memory. All they needed to do was make the memory upgradable (or supply the system with a decent amount of memory to begin with). Sonos intentionally engineered this End of Life.
Listen, we could all make our own DIY Sonos system, but to be honest, a.) We don't have time, and b.) they're software integrated with Spotify/Pandora/etc. (after they fixed major bugs from each release) was actually pretty decent. Instead, unlike my Dad's 1976 RCA reciever/turntable/speakers that still pumps out a sweet sound, my Sonos system will be relegated to the dump.
If someone out there is selling an open source sonos replacement with decent control software, post the link here, I will buy it.
ooof; this is absolute crap. If you have a single 'legacy' product on your network (like say, the 500usd Play 5 i bought 5 years ago); you're entire network loses updates and potentially functionality (if say, a cloud api makes a small change.
"Please note that because Sonos is a system, all products operate on the same software. If modern products remain connected to legacy products after May, they also will not receive software updates and new features."
So if I keep my 5 year old speakers the rest of my system will also not receive updates and may become non-functional.
This kind of anti-customer behavior is a great way to ensure your evangelists abandon your brand permanently.