Apple cares a lot about music. Steve Jobs loved it so much that he invented the iPod and iTunes to let us bring all of it everywhere, and personally owned multi-thousand-dollar Finnish speakers in his sparsely-decorated living room. To this day, Apple Music is one of the best-sounding streaming services you can subscribe to thanks to lossless audio support. The headphones it makes, both itself and via Beats, are largely fantastic.
It’s a shame, then, that the company still fails to make a great full-size smart speaker. Not only is the recently revamped HomePod a near-perfect visual reproduction of the discontinued model from 2018, but it barely has any audio improvements. The new HomePod has less drivers for audio, remains incompatible with Spotify and other popular services, and still can’t communicate with anything but Apple devices when your friends are over. The full-color screen on the top is larger, but it fails to convey more information than an Amazon Echo’s blue stripe.
In 2018, foibles like these were mildly acceptable as long as the voice assistant worked and the speaker could fill your room with sound. But given that so many excellent competitors now exist in so many different shapes and sizes, it’s hard to let the HomePod slide. The smaller HomePod Mini already accomplishes the same Siri voice control (if you prefer that to Google Assistant or Amazon Alexa, which are objectively better), and offers more than enough sound quality for folks who just want to put some music on.
Unless you spend $600 for two HomePods to listen in stereo, the sound quality isn’t that great, with a heavy helping of bass and not much definition in the mid-range. You can get the same “I have music playing” feeling from the smaller model, or from any number of competitors, for less. If you want high-end sound, you won’t find it here.
Physically, the new HomePod is slightly more squat than the older model, a fat little marshmallow of sound that’s about 7 inches high. Otherwise, the main difference you’ll notice is the larger screen on top, with integrated volume up and down buttons. Say “Hey Siri,” and Apple’s voice assistant wakes up, with a splash of colorful plasma showing up on the top screen to let you know she’s listening.



