Thứ Bảy, 1 tháng 6, 2019

Grace Digital Mondo+ Classic review: A neoclassical clock radio for the internet age

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Grace Digital dives into the mid-century modern design revival with the aptly named Mondo+ Classic internet radio.

With its buffed warm sound and soft good looks, this glorified $250 (MSRP) table radio evokes vintage 1950s and 60s products from such makers as Zenith, KLH, Grundig, and RCA; radios that stood guard on nightstands and calmed visitors in doctors' waiting rooms. This one comes dressed in a wood (walnut) cabinet, beige metal face plate, and tweedy grill cloth. (Or you can choose a boring all-black look.)

Take a gander at all the old-school radio push buttons: 10 source presets offering a happy throwback for listeners with an eclectic nature—or a short attention span. But this entertainer is young at heart. Instead of tuning in local FM and AM stations, the Mondo+ Classic's twin whip antennas access your Wi-Fi network to connect to the wide world of internet radio—including your local broadcast stations' simulcast streams.

grace digital mondo classic 2 top Jonathan Takiff / IDG

From the top, you can see the large Qi charging panel and a conveniently placed snooze/sleep timer button.

In addition to the excellent onboard and IR remote controls, the newer of two Grace Digital apps ("GD+") nicely works basic radio operations and services on your Android or iOS smartphone and tablet.

It's not entirely a glitch-free ride into the future, though. For some odd reason, the radio listened more attentively to Chromecast and Bluetooth-fed content triggered by an IPad Pro than it heeded signals coming from an iPhone X. And I never got the touted voice control going with Google Assistant devices. A fast Qi wireless induction charger pad built into the top of the radio proved a better match to recent Samsung phones than to the current Apple of my eye.

Still, with a price tag that's $100 less than rivals such as the Como Audio Solo and the Tivoli Audio Model 1 Digital (the model in walnut, that is), you just might find the Mondo+ Classic to be the bedmate of your dreams.

All this and more

Grace Digital has been serving up streaming music radios longer than practically anyone else in the game. When the maker jumped into the fray 12 years ago, its major competitors were Roku (which would later shift focus to video streamers) and Slim Devices (later acquired by Logitech). Slim introduced such innovations as touch-screen tuners, but Logitech gave up on streaming hardware in the wake of its $100 million bad bet on Google TV (the Logitech Revue).

grace digital mondo classic 4 remote Jonathan Takiff / IDG

An excellent remote control offers direct access to 10 presets, plus clock and sleep timer settings, full menu options, track pause and skip, and volume control. You can also tweak EQ settings with the remote, although that is one of the speaker's less-impressive features.

In fact, Grace Digital was into internet radio so early it had to cultivate its own database of 40,000 web radio stations and streams from around the world. These days, channel aggregators V-Tuner and TuneIn do the heavy lifting for most internet radio makers. Grace's ever-in-flux list now includes an additional 60,000 channels from Europe's Receiva. "We're adding, adjusting about 200 listings every day," said Grace Digital co-founder and CEO Greg Fadul.



PCWorld Reviews

Read more useful articles at: Tech Deeps

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