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Following a delay from the HomePod’s originally promised December 2017 release date, Apple today announced that its smart speaker will debut in the U.S., U.K., and Australian stores on February 9, with preorders starting this Friday, January 26. Customers in France and Germany will be able to purchase the HomePod this spring.

Apple describes the $349 HomePod as offering a “magical new music experience,” combining high-quality audio with Siri voice controls. At 7 inches tall, with one woofer, 7 tweeters, and 6 microphones, it is a monaural speaker that can — in the future — be paired with another speaker for stereo sound. HomePod will initially be available in white and space gray, each combining a fabric mesh speaker chassis with a plastic body, with a Siri waveform display on top. Speakerphone functionality is promised for iPhones.

Above: Credit Apple

Apart from music features, HomePod’s Siri functionality is notably limited at first. Apple says that Siri will “deliver deep knowledge of artists, songs, albums, and more” when used with Apple Music. Philip Schiller, Apple’s marketing chief, notes that the Siri “team has worked to give Siri a deeper knowledge of music so that you can ask to play virtually anything from your personal favorites to the latest chart-topping releases, simply by saying ‘Hey Siri’.”

In addition to playing songs and podcasts, Siri will be able to send voice-dictated messages, control HomeKit home accessories, “set reminders, create a new list, mark items as complete, or create and modify notes.” Apple has debuted development tools called SiriKit for HomePod to permit expansion of Siri’s capabilities, but the official announcement doesn’t reference any third-party features.

HomePod was announced in June 2017 as a challenger of sorts to Amazon’s increasingly popular Echo speakers and was intended to be released in time for the holidays. Delays were blamed on challenges integrating the hardware and software. Apple is notably shipping the HomePod without multi-room audio and stereo support, promising that the feature will arrive “this year in a free software update.”

While many smart speakers boast Bluetooth functionality for broad compatibility with various devices, HomePod’s list of supported products is somewhat surprising: It requires iOS 11.2.5 or later, which means that it will only work with recent iOS devices, described by Apple as the iPhone 5s or later, iPad Pro models, iPad Air or later, iPad mini 2 or later, or sixth-generation iPod touch.

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