Tech Spec Showdown: Apple HomePod vs Amazon Echo vs Google Home

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Apple says its HomePod smart speaker is about high quality audio, and not a countertop voice assistant device. That’s not, however, stopping practically the entire internet from comparing HomePod to Amazon Echo and Google Home. Since Apple wants the focus to be on their speaker’s audio quality, we decided to look at the hardware specifications and see how they stack up against Amazon’s Echo and Google’s Home.

HomePod, Echo, and Google Home Similarities

Apple HomePod, Amazon Echo, and Google Home are similar in that they’re all canister-shaped streaming music speaker systems. They all support Wi-Fi network connections and offer some form of voice control.

They support audio in from streaming music services like Spotify—in the case of HomePod, that’s only Apple own Apple Music and iTunes Match—and streaming from third-party apps. For HomePod, that’s limited to streaming from another device over AirPlay.

HomePod, Echo, Home Tech Comparison

Here’s how the three smart speaker’s tech specs stack up on paper.

HomePod: 7 tweeters, 1 high excursion woofer, 6 far-field microphones, direct and ambient audio beamforming, Bluetooth 5.0. Price: US$349

Apple HomePod smart speaker
Apple HomePod

Echo: 1 0.6-inch tweeter, 1 2.5-inch woofer, 7 far-field microphones, beamforming, 3.5-inch audio out, Bluetooth 4.0. Price: $99.99

Google Home: 1 2-inch high excursion speaker with dual 2-inch passive radiators, 2 far-field microphones, beamforming, Bluetooth 4.2. Price: $129

Google Home smart speaker
Google Home

Smart Speaker Feature Comparison Table

Device Tweeter Woofer Beamforming Microphones Wi-Fi Bluetooth Audio Out
HomePod

7

1

Y

6

B/G/N/AC

5.0

N
Amazon Echo

1

1

Y

7

B/G/N/A

4.0

Y
Google Home

1

0

Y

2

B/G/N/AC

4.2

N

What is Beamforming

Beamforming uses multiple microphones to focus on audio, like someone speaking or music. For a person using a smart speaker that means their voice will be picked up and heard no matter where they are in a room, and even when they’re moving through a room, with HomePod and Echo. It also helps HomePod “listen” and optimize its audio output based on where it’s placed in a room.

What is High Excursion

Individual tweeters and woofers have a physical range of motion when they vibrate to create sound. In simple terms, if they have a very wide travel range, that’s high excursion. That should translate into better sound quality for HomePod and Google Home—again, keeping the technical explanation very simple.

Which Has Better Sound Quality?

Picking the best sounding speaker based only on technical specifications isn’t fair because a lot more than just numbers goes into audio quality. Sound is also, as Dave Hamilton points out, subjective. What sounds great to you may not to someone else.

It’s no secret that Apple put a lot of time and effort into designing HomePod. Odds are it’ll sound really good, and early reviews are backing that up. Whether or not that’s worth a $349 price tag is up to you.

2 thoughts on “Tech Spec Showdown: Apple HomePod vs Amazon Echo vs Google Home

  • Subjectivity is typically overcome by blind testing; audio tests are usually A vs B vs X (where X is a gold-standard version of the channel).

    So you set up devices, tune them to the room (where appropriate), make sure their volumes are very carefully matched (louder “sounds better”) and have a person not communicating with the test subject swap between the three, e.g., perhaps a fixed time with just lights to say which source.

    Additionally, you can put microphones in listeners’ areas and confirm the relative strength of different frequencies (“flat” or equal means the speaker changes the music the least), as well as the amount of extraneous sounds created—say, how much 3000Hz sound there is when you feed it a pure 1000Hz tone, which will turn a flute-like purity raspy.

    Finally, you can be sure that the engineers at every speaker company don’t just trust their subjective sense of what makes music sound better; they make the difficult quality/range/volume/efficiency/cost/durability/etc decisions using specs and measurements that give a good understanding of what sounds good.

    There IS art to speaker design, but it’s not the same art as a Henry Moore sculpture. Speakers are meant to faithfully RE-produce musicians’—or at least the recording producers’—musical sense, not make up a new sound of its own. The challenge is to get out of the way, to let the listener focus on the music. Not for the listener to say, “that speaker sounds good,” but “I LOVE this music!”

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