Around a decade ago, Apple helped bring about the mainstream's acceptance of the separation of design and function. Just think of how your telephone, email, airline boarding passes, and sepia-toned photos of your brunch now all exist inside a slim, rectangular box made of glass and metal.
Given familiarity of this concept, it's easy for us to quickly warm to Libratone's Loop, a speaker with an exterior devoid of classic hi-fi aesthetics. No boxy shape, no wood, no buttons or knobs, no speaker wire.
Libratone's products, with their trademark fuzzy fabric exteriors and Danish geometry, are right at home in Apple Stores — specially since Libratone builds speakers that utilize AirPlay, Apple's proprietary wireless music protocol. The Loop follows that tradition; it's a fuzzy, pretty AirPlay speaker. But the reliance on Apple's streaming technology does not always work to the device's benefit.
The Loop is a circle about the diameter of a small steering wheel, with a flat front covered by colored fabric and a thin dome for a back. Its tripod stand will position it upright on a flat surface, or you can use the included wall-mount kit to hang it like a portrait (assuming you can elegantly hide the power cord). Either result adds a subtle, functional sculpture to your room. The question is whether $500 is a fair price for beauty, especially when the device becomes a bit homely when you turn it on.
For years now, the simple setup and decent quality of Bluetooth audio has been a boon for speakers like the Jawbone Jambox, which still sells extremely well even three years on. I have yet to meet a Bluetooth speaker for which setup required reading the manual. And while the sound quality might offend audiophiles, for listening to a podcast while cooking, or putting a bass-heavy musical coda on the end of a house party, Bluetooth speakers are fantastic. As a consequence, the consuming public has, for better or worse, become accustomed to the easy setup and stable connection that you get from a Bluetooth speaker. Speakers like the Loop, however, use AirPlay, and our aforementioned reasonable expectations from wireless speakers have kept Apple's format from being worth the protocol's expense and unreliable playback.




