Morphy Richards internet radio review

An addictive slice of radio pie

TechRadar Verdict

The latest internet radio irons out a few problems with the technology, leaving us creased with listening pleasure

Pros

  • +

    Access to over 4000 stations

    Excellent connectivity

    Ease of use

    Audio quality

Cons

  • -

    Wireless only

    Lacks bass

    Design

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There's something surreal about listening to Radio Dum Dum's lilting Hindi film tunes before tuning into a documentary on Native American Indian burial sites on Yellowstone Public Radio. But don't mistake this for a world radio. It's only able to tune to stations that already have an online presence, and those with a PC or Mac will already be able to listen online to everything this unit can supply.

It may have access to over 4,000 radio stations, but that's not all that's under the hood of this two-tone silver and black tabletop radio. On its side is an SD card slot that's capable of playing back MP3 files, although given the amount of faffing about that's needed to transfer files from a computer, it's a feature too far.

Low profile

Sound quality varies because of the different bitrate of stations - a lot are abysmally low, even some BBC stations - but there is also an FM tuner for audiophile quality. In any case, the speaker lacks bass but is able to play even the lowest quality material in a quality that's humbling given the raw material. The problems with this unit centre around design.

The dial is too small and scrolling through long lists of radio stations is a fiddly process, especially when looking for US radio stations (surely a state-by-state list would be better). The blue LCD screen is set too far back into the unit and occasionally hard to read if the radio is positioned direct line of sight. Despite some foibles we were sad to part from this Internet radio: the world awaits.

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