Woody
Active member
I've been really enjoying my WiiM Amp since I received it on Christmas Eve.
Yesterday I used the voice remote and ask it to "Play some music" which normally prompts the Amp to play tunes from Amazon Prime Music.
This time no music so I turned up the volume a couple of notches and still no sound, but I noticed the power light flashing red for a few moments. I went to my PC to look up the meaning of the flashing red light only to find that my internet was down from my ISP.
It was down for many hours, and I left home for a while. In the meantime, my ISP resolved their issues, and the internet was back online for the WiiM Amp.
The unexpected behavior was that when I returned home the Amp was playing uncomfortably loud and I imagine that it had been playing since the ISP came back online.
I suppose that it remembered the voice commands from hours ago and was playing at the volume I had set it to when trying to see if it was working initially.
Since I use several Echo Devices to play music around the house, I expected the WiiM Amp to behave in a similar way and not buffer the voice request like it did.
I'm not sure if buffering is needed for another purpose, but it seems it could be a bit problematic in the situation that I encountered and could be a concern for the speakers.
It also had to have come out of standby on its own too, which I guess is desired for some inputs but maybe not needed for streaming?
I just wanted to share so others may not be surprised like I was.
Yesterday I used the voice remote and ask it to "Play some music" which normally prompts the Amp to play tunes from Amazon Prime Music.
This time no music so I turned up the volume a couple of notches and still no sound, but I noticed the power light flashing red for a few moments. I went to my PC to look up the meaning of the flashing red light only to find that my internet was down from my ISP.
It was down for many hours, and I left home for a while. In the meantime, my ISP resolved their issues, and the internet was back online for the WiiM Amp.
The unexpected behavior was that when I returned home the Amp was playing uncomfortably loud and I imagine that it had been playing since the ISP came back online.
I suppose that it remembered the voice commands from hours ago and was playing at the volume I had set it to when trying to see if it was working initially.
Since I use several Echo Devices to play music around the house, I expected the WiiM Amp to behave in a similar way and not buffer the voice request like it did.
I'm not sure if buffering is needed for another purpose, but it seems it could be a bit problematic in the situation that I encountered and could be a concern for the speakers.
It also had to have come out of standby on its own too, which I guess is desired for some inputs but maybe not needed for streaming?
I just wanted to share so others may not be surprised like I was.