Any comments about using ROON while you are OFF LINE ??


Good Evening,

I understand Roon is meant for a home network that also has internet access for relevant data to your songs, album art, whatever, as well as new songs from streaming services.

I am asking have you ever tried using Roon while your internet is down?  Does it still work fine with your own music that you have stored on the server?  Does it still provide relevant information to support those songs? (I am thinking maybe it stores that info from the last time you played the same song?)  Or would you say that with no internet, the usefulness of Roon goes out the window entirely?

Reason for asking, if i buy a lifetime Roon license and then decide to shut off my internet some years in the future after the price of internet goes up to $200/mo.  how stupid would that be?  Really, really stupid, or just a bit stupid?  haha.

Thank you for your comments.

rop45

You will have to have alocal network...I still don't know if it will work.  the streamer, core, and controller (phone, latptop, tablet) all have to be on the same network.  

I still don't know if it will work.  If my internet goes out some day I will test it.

Jerry

You should still be able to play locally stored music without Internet access. However, without Internet access your Roon core won’t be able to retrieve the metadata that provides much of the Roon experience. Obviously streaming services, Roon updates, etc. will not be available. 

Are you unable to test?

It might work if the Core and the app were running on the same device and hard wired to the endpoint.

The newest release (2.x) of Roon looks for an Internet connection and won’t run reliably without it. You can verify that by checking the Roon forum, where you will find a minority of users up in arms about that. It doesn’t matter enough to me for me to have an opinion.

Also, that is documented on this page. Those who say it should work are, I'm sorry to say, ill informed.

If you are thinking of disconnecting, Roon would not be a good choice, especially a lifetime subscription. Something like JRiver would be better.

@rop45 - You're welcome, and best of luck with your audio journey!

That you are considering disconnecting makes an impression. The Internet is so integral a part of life today, I've never considered it, which in itself is a little disconcerting. Still, most of my favorite hours are spent on trails in near-wilderness, with my cell phone turned off.

Yeah, that's the ideal, isn't it? Yet being in my 70s and seeing friends dropping like flies, I am happy to have the phone in my backpack in case of need. At least some of the places I hike might have data service.