Tough Times at Bose

Bose Corporate headquarters, Framingham, Massachusetts

There have been layoffs at privately-held Bose Corporation. They stopped producing home stereo loudspeakers a while ago, with the model 301 being the last one. I won’t be surprised if the unique Wave Music System is discontinued.

Something I didn’t know until reading this article is that MIT has majority ownership of the company, but it has no say in management.

https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/companies/layoffs-hit-bose-as-the-company-focuses-on-its-most-popular-products/ar-AAWTjzY

A Real Trouper Caught in the Webb

Today’s Google Doodle features a famous song that was written by Bobby Troup.

Originally treated as a Jazz tune, “Route 66” was made famous by Nat King Cole, who was an unknown studio musician playing piano before he was known as a singer.

Route 66 was the inspiration for a TV series with Martin Milner and George Maharis.

Milner later got behind the wheel again, as co-star of Webb’s series Adam-12. He had first worked with Webb in the original 1950’s Dragnet TV series.

With Milner in the above picture is Allene Roberts, who passed away a few years ago.

A Sweet Southern Belle

The Rolling Stones turned “Route 66” into a Rock and Roll number.

Bobby Troup also wrote the title tune to the Rock and Roll movie The Girl Can’t Help It, that Little Richard made famous. The movie was directed by Frank Tashlin, who was known as Tish Tash when he was a Warner Brothers cartoon director.

For Troup, Route 66 doubled-back to Jack Webb. Bobby married Jack’s ex-wife, singer and actress Julie London. No hard feelings, Webb hired Bobby and Julie to appear in his Adam-12 follow-up, Emergency! With Troup’s songwriting royalties, I wonder if he really needed the work?

If you look at the link above to my post about Allene, you will see Julie is there as well. And finally, let’s give a nod to Boss Radio 66, which you will always find over in the Links section.

What a crazy Tish Tash mish-mash of a post this is, inspired by a Google Doodle.

Recast

Here is yet another post about Google Chromecast for audio. The eBay seller who sold me a new Chromecast Audio player for $50 started charging $75 for them, and now they’re sold out. So I was lucky to get one when I did, at the price I did.

Considering the utility and quality of this inexpensive product, it’s a shame it was discontinued by Google. Amir at Audio Science Review had high praise for the technical quality of Chromecast Audio, especially when used with a Toslink cable connecting to an external DAC. And he had no complaints about its internal DAC, which is how I use the player.

https://www.audiosciencereview.com/forum/index.php?threads/review-and-measurements-of-chromecast-audio-analog-performance.4562/

When I started testing my Onkyo receiver’s Chromecast Built-in feature, I noted the difference between the behavior of the SiriusXM app on my phone and the TuneIn app.

Cast Away

The tech site reviews I’d read agreed on one point about Chromecast Audio. That it establishes a direct Internet connection between the audio renderer and streaming services. The app doing the controlling is just that, a remote control. The reviewers should have done some deeper digging.

It was very curious to me that TuneIn had some success with the Onkyo, but the SiriusXM app didn’t, requiring the workaround of using the Google Home app. I wanted to know exactly what was going on. To my satisfaction, the excellent HiFi Cast app not only revealed why SiriusXM failed — which turned out to be the Onkyo’s broken Eventing Mode — but also why TuneIn had some success. The answer is in this screenshot.

Casting has an option the reviewers missed — that it can play through an app. The stream comes to the phone and is then redirected to the audio renderer in the player. Switching to “Via Hi-Fi Cast” causes the same sputtering effect I hear when casting with the TuneIn app. The sputtering disappears when I use the Google Home app to do the casting. The implication is the TuneIn app is redirecting by default. That’s why it was somewhat successful with the Onkyo, whereas the SiriusXM app apparently runs in direct mode.

That’s enough for now. To the exasperation of at least one of you, there is even more about Chromecast Audio that I will explain later.