Skip to main content

The Sonos-Audi partnership isn’t as exciting as we’d hoped

Sonos Speaker inside 2022 Audi E-Tron
Audi

On March 9, Audi released a series of interior photos of its 2022 Q4 E-Tron, and observers were quick to take note of the fact that when you look very closely at the car’s speaker grilles, you can see an unexpected company logo: Sonos. The partnership was confirmed later that day by Sonos CEO Patrick Spence during a call with investors. But the details of the integration of Sonos sound into Audi vehicles weren’t discussed by either company, which led to all kinds of speculation.

Would Sonos bring its Trueplay tuning software into the mix? Would you be able to access the Sonos Radio and Sonos Radio HD streaming music services from the Q4 E-Tron’s entertainment console? Would it be possible to use a Sonos Roam speaker to transfer a listening session from the car to the Roam, or vice versa?

Now we know the answers: No, no, and no. Today, Sonos went into more detail about its partnership with Audi, though there really wasn’t that much to say.

“Our ambition is to be the world’s leading sound experience company,” said Spence in an emailed statement. “That means giving listeners the ability to experience great sound wherever they go. We’ve found in Audi a partner that shares our vision and approach — a company that values innovation and design in the same way Sonos does. We are proud today to introduce this Sonos-tuned premium sound experience in the cabin of the Q4 E-Tron.”

All that said, the only Sonos technology in the E-Tron is the speakers themselves. “The Q4 features 10 expertly tuned high-performance speakers, including a center speaker and subwoofer,” a Sonos representative told Digital Trends.

The E-Tron won’t be the only Audi with Sonos audio. The two companies plan to partner on the Audi A1, Q2, and Q3 as well.

While I have mad respect for Sonos when it comes to designing speakers that sound great, the company’s real strength lies in its software. This is the digital heart of a Sonos home system, and it enables a host of awesome features like universal music search, multiservice favorites and playlists, and the ability to choose your preferred voice assistant on the company’s smart speakers: Google Assistant or Amazon Alexa.

It seems like a real missed opportunity that none of these technologies have made their way into the Audi partnership.

Simon Cohen
Simon Cohen covers a variety of consumer technologies, but has a special interest in audio and video products, like spatial…
The 83-inch Samsung S90C OLED TV is $700 off today
The Samsung S90C in a living room environment.

What are the best kind of TV deals? Ones that combine fantastic TVs at exceptionally good prices. Right now, you can get one of those at Best Buy. The Samsung 83-inch S90C OLED TV is currently $700 off, so it’s briefly $2,800 instead of $3,500. Easily competing with the best OLED TVs around, this is one you really don’t want to miss out on. Here’s what to expect from it.

Why you should buy the Samsung 83-inch S90C OLED TV
Samsung is one of the best TV brands out there when it comes to developing the best TVs that money can buy. With the Samsung 83-inch S90C OLED TV, you get an exceptional OLED picture with 8.3 million self illuminating pixels providing virtually limitless contrast. HDR OLED means you get fine tuned brightness with optimized contrast. It’s also Pantone-validated so images look extra incredible and realistic.

Read more
Sonos needs a new CEO
Sonos CEO Patrick Spence at the Sonos One launch in 2017.

Let’s just come out and say what many people are thinking, and more than a few are saying: Sonos needs a new chief executive.

I’ve written previously that I don’t particularly care who runs Sonos. I don’t know Patrick Spence. (I think I’ve been in the room with him once, at the Sonos One launch event in October 2017 in New York City.) I don’t own Sonos stock. I do, however, own a number of Sonos speakers and have enjoyed the system for years. Until this year.

Read more
Sonos, software, and Stockholm syndrome: what went wrong in 2024
The Sonos app on an iPhone in front of Sonos speakers and headphones.

There’s no worse feeling when it comes to tech than that sense of hopelessness that we’ve all felt at one time or another. When your phone won’t connect. When your screen shatters through no fault of your own. When your printer is … being a printer. When you still love that product but are stuck waiting for it to work.

Sonos owners have been in their own special circle of hell since mid-May, when a now-infamous update to the Sonos app and the platform as a whole went very, very wrong. Not helping matters is that the upgrade-that-wasn’t has hit folks in different ways. Some have reported few problems. Others have serious issues getting their Sonos system -- which until now had been mostly rock solid in its ability to play music wirelessly throughout a house -- to do anything at all.

Read more