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Internet radio: the new Blik?

Jan 31, 2008

Blik Radiostation Angle Crop Not too many life-changing products out there, but the Revo Blik Radio Station could just be one of them, writes Andrew Everard.

In one deeply cool matt black box, with a striking speaker grille and control keypad on the top, you get internet radio, FM radio, DAB radio, wireless music streamer and even a bit more. And best of all it's British! Oh alright then, Scottish - but since when did that do anything but good for a product's hi-fi credentials? Linn, anyone? Or Tannoy?

I first found out about the £150 Blik Radio Station just before Christmas, and was hoping to get a sample to play with over the extended holiday period. Didn't quite work out like that, and an anonymous brown package arrived in the office a week or so back.

Inside, a product that just for once looked every bit as good as the press pictures – not always a given – and seeming like a rather macho clock radio. Which in a way is just what it is: there's not too much you can pick up in the local supermarket electrical section able to wake you up at 6am with what's happening at 1am in Boston. Mass., of course, not Lincs..

Blik Radiostation White Scaled

Life with the Blik – which also comes in white – has been pretty much without complications. It found our home wi-fi network with no problems, and after keying in the encryption key, which involved a spot of menu-shuffling, we were up and running.

The presence of a site allowing the programming of favourite stations – provided by Frontier Silicon, the manufacturer of the enabling technology – makes set-up a lot simpler.

It means we now have preset folders for US stations, Japanese broadasters for my wife, and a whole stack of podcasts including Garrison Keillor's News from Lake Wobegon and the stupidly addictive Car Talk phone-in, all about strange noises on Chevy axles and misbehaving Pontiacs.

The speaker built into the top of the unit is OK, but we rapidly plugged the stereo audio outs into our AV receiver, and thus discovered the amazing AVRO classical music stations streaming at 256kbps out of Hilversum in the Netherlands.

The sound is excellent, and I'm not sure whether we're more hooked on AVRO Film, which plays entire movie music scores, or AVRO Baroque Around The Clock, which does just what it says on the tin. Lusciously enjoyable, and streamed for free at better than DAB quality – kind of puts the BBC's 64kbps stream of Radio 3 in perspective, doesn't it?

Speaking of DAB, the Radio Station works well as a digital/analogue radio tuner with its telescopic aerial extended, proves as sensitive as any other radio when it comes to station-finding, and is also compatible with DAB+.

Problems? Few and far between - the little credit card remote control needs pointing firmly at the unit, and suspicions that it looks very like the one for our Illuminaire TV backlight system were borne out when changing internet radio stations also changed the colour of the backlights(!). Fortunately the TV backlights aren't on too much when listening to the radio.

But apart from that, and the occasional drop-out on those high-bitrate Dutch stations when some hefty video downloading of Japanese TV shows is going on elsewhere in the house, all is fine – and that problem is really down to our wi-fi router and ISP, which both need an upgrade soon, not the Revo.

We've had more than a few wi-fi radio devices at home, but this one looks like it might stay. The bedside clock radio could be feeling the cool draught of obsolescence, I feel...

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Comments

 

haider said:

Hi Andrew,

Looks interesting but did you say that you have to seek out the radio stations and set them in a folder?

Don't all the Reciva based products(Featured in what hi-fi recently) and others all have the stations catalogued already for the user?

Oh and the drop outs are more likely to be due to transmission than your connection. A good radio (internetwise) can lose internet for a few seconds and reconnect without the user noticing. Pick up a Roberts or a Bush or an Intempo and give it a go.

February 1, 2008 9:10 AM
 

Internet Radio said:

Hi,

This radio (DAB/INternt radiobcombo) is based on a Frontier Silicon platform (as highlighted int he article) and not a Reciva platform. Thus do not expect it to be as user friendly as a reciva-powered Internet radio. I also does not have the same comprehensive Reciva station database or access to some of the cool extras that the Reciva platform offers.

The Revo Pico WiFi and Revo Blyk (sans DAB) are based on the Reciva platform.

Cheers

February 1, 2008 1:13 PM
 

Andrew Everard said:

Nope, definitely bandwidth problem. It'll work fine when other computers aren't on the network, or I'm just using one for surfing - but as soon as Mrs E starts doing the massive TV show downloads the whole network slows down, and the Blik can - very occasionally - drop out.

February 1, 2008 5:01 PM
 

haider said:

I stand corrected then. :-)

February 1, 2008 6:23 PM

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About Andrew Everard

Andrew Everard, Audio Editor of Gramophone since November 1999 and What Hi-Fi? Sound and Vision's Consulting Editor, read English at Queens' College, Cambridge a very long time ago! He started his journalistic career in 1982 on Haymarket's photographic magazines, and subsequently worked on What Hi-Fi?, High Fidelity, Audiophile and Home Cinema magazines, as well as contributing a monthly column to Japanese title HiVi.
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