![]() ![]() Do you want one small speaker you can easily carry around room-to-room? Do you want a network of speakers connected throughout your house playing the same music? Do you want multiple speakers, playing different music, in different rooms, with multiple people in your home accessing the central system? This is a big question! First, you need to decide how you want to listen to music in your house. What kind of speaker do I need to stream music? Once you have a device and your music lined up, the most important part of enjoying music wirelessly in your home is selecting the right speakers. You can also find a soundtrack or create a video playlist on Youtube and enjoy listening to the audio on any speakers connected to your device. Some music services are free, others require a paid subscription. Depending on the brand of speakers you're streaming to, you may be able to manage multiple music subscription services through one parent app (like the Sonos Controller). ![]() You can also access music streaming services by logging into a service's website, if you don't want to download a specific app. Many wireless streaming services come with their own app, which you can install on your device (Apple Music, Google Play Music, Sirius XM, etc.). However, as music streaming services become more common, you can enjoy the full libraries of these services on your wireless speakers. If you've downloaded music to your computer or device you can play it through your favourite music playing app and enjoy it on a connected speaker in your home. You can wirelessly play music through your house from two sources: music you've downloaded and music streamed through supported services. And, through these devices, you can also connect with a variety of music playing services to expand your audio library! Where can I find music to stream in my home? ![]() Music playback and streaming capabilities are available in most modern tech devices. It is sold on Amazon for around $320.If you own a device with Bluetooth and/or Wi-Fi, it's likely you'll be able to connect to a wireless speaker to build your home sound system. You’ll also find DFI AL051 SBC on the former link, a board similar to AL05P without PoE, but including three display interfaces (mDP++, VGA, LVDS), and adding an M.2 socket, a SATA port, and an extra Gigabit Ethernet port. More information may be found on the products page and datasheet. There are other Intel Apollo Lake Pico-ITX SBCs on the market, including Axiomtek PICO317 and Kontron pITX-APL V2.0, but DFI AL05P is the first one we’ve seen with PoE support.ĭFI AL05P has launched, but the company did not provide pricing information, nor clear availability details, except it will be available until Q4 2031. The company also provides a 15mm thick heat spreader for fanless operation, and support for Windows 10 IoT Enterprise (64-bit) and Linux operating systems. Humidity – Operating: 5 to 90% RH storage: 5 to 90% RH.Temperature Range – Operating: 0 to 60☌, -20 to 70☌ storage: -40 to 85☌.Dimensions – 100 x 72 mm (2.5″ Pico-ITX form factor).Power Supply – 12V DC header or 48V DC via PoE with 0.5KV isolation.Misc – RTC + CR2032 coin cell battery, watchdog timer, system reset.1x Full-size Mini PCIe (PCIe/USB 2.0, optional USB 3.1 Gen1/USB 2.0).USB – 2x USB 3.1 Gen1 ports, 2x USB 2.0 interfaces via 1.27mm pitch.Gigabit Ethernet RJ45 port via Intel I211AT or I210IT PCIe controller.Video Output – Mini DP++ up to 4096×2160 60Hz.Storage – 16GB/32GB/64GB eMMC flash, 128Mbit SPI flash (supports UEFI boot only).System Memory – Up to 4GB DDR4 single channel 2400MHz.Intel Celeron N3350 dual-core processor 1.1/2.4 GHz with 2MB cache, Intel HD Graphics6W TDP.Intel Pentium N4200 quad-core processor 1.1/2.5 GHz with 2MB cache, Intel HD Graphics 6W TDP.Intel Atom x5-E3930 dual-core processor 1.3/1.8 GHz with 2MB cache, Intel HD Graphics 6.5W TDP.Intel Atom x5-E3940 quad-core processor 1.6/1.8 GHz with 2MB cache, Intel HD Graphics 9.5W TDP.The board also comes with 4GB RAM, up to 64GB eMMC, a mini DisplayPort video output, two USB 3.1 ports, Gigabit Ethernet with isolated PoE, a mini-PCIe, and more. Taiwan based DFI has launched the AL05P “Industrial Pi + PoE” 2.5-inch Pico-ITX SBC powered by an Apollo Lake processor that reminds me of last year’s DFI GHF51 SBC based on AMD Ryzen Embedded R1606G processor but with a larger, and more standard form factor that’s also part of the “Industrial Pi” family. ![]()
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