Posted on September 17th, 2009 by Barry Collins
Pure Sensia digital radio: first look
The iPhone has a lot to answer for. Ever since it lit a stick of dynamite under the mobile phone industry, technology companies have been itching to, shall we say, “borrow” its magic dust. Now, with the Pure Sensia, two of the iPhone’s key features are arriving in an internet radio.
The Pure Sensia has two standout features: a 5.7in capacitive touchscreen and apps, combining to produce what Pure describes as the “Radio for the Facebook generation”.
The device breaks from the boxy blueprint of previous Pure radios, such as our Recommended award winner, the Pure Evoke Flow. The unusual oval unit is certainly eye catching, even though my MacUser colleague Nik Rawlinson rather cruelly christened it “a noisy rugby ball”. The unit houses 30W stereo speakers that delivered commendable punch and clarity, even in a crowded demo room with plenty of background noise.
The unit sits on a tilt stand, allowing you to rotate the radio and keep the 640 x 480 screen in your line of sight – although there weren’t any noticeable issues with viewing angles on the demonstration units I saw this morning.
The touchscreen menus are smartly designed, with radio stations listed down the left-hand side of the screen, with the right-hand side devoted to information from the radio stations (such as “now playing” boxes and interactive slideshows from stations such as Absolute Radio and Heart) and the new apps.
Internet apps
The apps are similar to those found on devices such as the Chumby and the O2 Joggler: information-led internet widgets. At launch their will be apps for both Twitter and Facebook, as well as a photo slideshow from Google Picasa and widgets showing the weather and news headlines. Pure will soon release an SDK so developers can build their own apps for the Pure platform, although whether they’ll do so with the same enthusiasm as they have for the iPhone is questionable.
While it’s handy to keep an eye on your social networks from the radio on the sideboard, there’s no way to update your status or issue new Tweets from the Sensia, which rather cramps its utility. The Twitter app we saw this morning was also using an unbearably small font (smaller than the one pictured here), which means you’d need to be practically sitting on top of the device to read it.
It wasn’t the only problem we noted with the screen. There was often a notable half-second delay between touching the screen and the device reacting, with even Pure’s staff struggling to keep the demonstration units running smoothly. Pure explained that the firmware was still at an early stage, and that such snags should be ironed out by the time the device goes on sale in late October.
If Pure does manage to iron out the glitches, the touchscreen interface has considerable promise. Scrolling through radio stations (either DAB, internet or FM) with the familiar flick of a finger is particularly pleasing, and instead of leaving you to jab at tiny icons at the foot of the screen, a fly-out wheel appears to help you move between the different radio modes. A matching RF remote control is also at hand.
Added extras
There are several other nice touches on the Sensia. A light sensor means the screen auto dims in accordance with the ambient light, which means the screen won’t shine like a beacon if you’re planning to use it as a bedside radio. There’s an optional battery pack (£35) that lets you take the radio down the garden (with the other rugby balls?), although Pure wouldn’t divulge expected battery life figures. And the option to turn the device into a pseudo digital photo frame while playing music is a welcome extra.
But then, the Pure Sensia needs as many nice touches as it can get, because at £250 it’s going to be at the top end of the digital radio range. Are Pure’s trademark superb sound quality, a smattering of web apps and a potentially impressive touchscreen interface enough to warrant that kind of outlay? We’ll reserve judgement until our full review.
Tags: digital radio, iphone, Pure Sensia
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13 Responses to “ Pure Sensia digital radio: first look ”
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September 17th, 2009 at 11:28 am
HOW MUCH ??????
[Splutters coffee all over monitor]
Don’t get me wrong, I’d not averse to expensive home gadgets (my own home being stuffed full of them), but £250 for an upmarket clock radio is surely taking the pi$$?)
September 17th, 2009 at 11:54 am
It’s a bit better looking than that design abomination, the Pure “Bug”. But if it’s “Radio for the Facebook generation” then it will pass me by…
September 17th, 2009 at 12:02 pm
Dear whoever,
Please put a DAB chip in the iPhone.
That is all.
Thanks.
September 17th, 2009 at 2:24 pm
The UI looks like a bastardisation of early UNIX graphical shells and Windows 2000… It looks very dated.
September 17th, 2009 at 3:50 pm
That’s netbook money for relatively little/almost no functionality…
September 17th, 2009 at 4:59 pm
Maybe the Sensia’s appearance will encourage 3com to relaunch the Audrey, which rather led the way as curvey touchscreen devices/radios/web apps go.
September 19th, 2009 at 12:39 am
As I said in the later Sensia based post, this uses http://radiodns.org – what’s effectively become an industry standard for displaying visual radio content. The Sensia is the first radio to use it.
@Paul Ockenden – it’s the same price as the Avanti Flow, which got a very good review from this website… and it’s far more tempting to get this than the Avanti.
@John Gray – “Radio for the Facebook generation” is how the radio industry is heading – take a look at the various iPhone apps (e.g. Absolute Radio) and you’ll see very little difference between that app and the one for the Sensia. And the current Facebook generation will become the new ABC1C2’s that the advertisers love…
@Dubber – you’ve got a point there – I can only find Cowan having bothered with the iAudio D2 +DAB variant – DAB won’t hit mass market until Apple adopt it and considering that digital Britain is suggesting a 2015 digital upgrade for radio (i.e. all BBC/commercial radio will move to DAB, voluntary to FM with MW being phased out) they’d better move fast if radio is to survive long-term. At least they’ve finally adopted FM…
September 20th, 2009 at 5:51 pm
@John Grey
Just had another look at the Pure website – the homepage currently loads details of the Sensia and says in big letters as the sub-headline, “Radio for the facebook Generation” so I guess it may well pass you by…
September 27th, 2009 at 10:36 am
@ Daniel:
I agree, but so far I couldn’t find a really user friendly touch screen OS. Does anyone have a recommendation for a touch linux distribution or any other OS? To build such a thing yourself with based on a Netbook would be a neat modding project.
December 12th, 2009 at 12:00 pm
Nice looking nice sounding, couldn’t get it to pick up radio 1. It then froze when downloading software (it give a prompt to do so) and as I needed a USB cable to connect to PC I decided. Not worth it its going back!
December 14th, 2009 at 7:56 pm
If you are looking to use it with your media server, check which codecs it uses. It also arrived with the battery missing.
January 31st, 2010 at 5:24 pm
Battery wasn’t missing, its an optional accessory.
In conjunction with a WD MyBook World Edition the Sensia works fantastically as a streaming client. It was bit flaky with a pc as a music server.
This one clever rugby ball, I love it.
I just wish the power button wan’t right on the top, I tend to turn it off every time I put the aerial up or adjust the screen angle and it takes ages to start up again.
Also the sole clock icon on the screen in standby is very confusing for new users – they tend to touch it to start the device and wonder why all they can access is the alarm clock. I know, the assistant in the shop I bought it from did this for 10 minutes before finally managing to switch it on!
January 31st, 2010 at 5:27 pm
Oh, one more thing – it would be nice if the unit would continue playing the last selected source while you search for another. It just stops playing as soon as you hit the Source icon.