Sonos CEO John MacFarlene Steps Down From the Company He Helped Found (techcrunch.com)
An anonymous reader quotes a report from TechCrunch: After nearly a decade and a half as the chief executive officer of the hardware company he cofounded, John MacFarlane has announced his resignation as the head of Sonos. The move had reportedly been planned for some time, with the executive citing a number of personal reasons. That decision was delayed, however, due in part to increased and unexpected competition by Amazon's line of Echo speakers, which cut into Sonos' bottom line. "The pivot that Sonos started at this time last year to best address these changes is complete, now it's about acceleration and leading," MacFarlane wrote in an open letter published on the Sonos site. "I can look ahead and see the role of Sonos, with the right experiences, partners, and focus, with a healthy future. In short, the future of the home music experience, and the opportunity for Sonos has never been better." The role of CEO will be filled by Patrick Spence, who is currently serving as the company's President, after four years as COO and stints at RIM (BlackBerry) and IBM Canada. MacFarlane will be staying on at the Santa Barbara-based streaming hardware company in a consulting role, but will also be resigning his job on its board of directors, telling The New York Times, "I don't want to be that founder who's always second-guessing."
Yeah, I had to do something like that last year. Campus environment, the wifi was off a Ubiquiti controller two firewalls upstream, and the wired network was a mess because of PCI compliance. It took nearly two days to make a single Sonos system work because a whole network edge had to be rearchitected with a slow man in a boat ferrying packets across the river Styx. The next time I had to do it, I just slammed in a rogue wifi router.
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Why not just get a Google Audio Puck ($35) or a BlueTooth transceiver ($25) ... for your existing speakers.
What does Sonos do and why should I give a shit about this John MacFarlane fellow? A little context goes a long ways, Slashdot editors.
Anons need not reply. Questions end with a question mark.
I love Sonos too, but their current line up is several years old. Have speaker and wireless technologies not moved on at all?
Not to mention the state of the app. Despite the open letter from their CEO over a year ago accepting that they might have missed the boat on streaming technologies and need to catch up there is still no AirPlay support. No Chromecast audio either. No bluetooth. If you're going to pay twice as much as the competition, then it would be nice if you could actually use your speakers with the main technologies out there.
But that's okay, because they've been concentrating on the local music capability right? For example, acknowledging that 4 people in the house might have completely different music tastes and do not want to merge their music library into one big pool? Nope, nothing has changed.
In the last couple of years they've launched their TruePlay app, added Apple Music and allowed Spotify users to control the music from the (superior) Spotify app. That doesn't seem to be very much to me.
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