Bose made the consumer friendly move to open source its SoundTouch speakers

AudioSpeakersBose made the consumer friendly move to open source its SoundTouch speakersThe devices are set to stop receiving official support in May.Lawrence BonkContributing ReporterThu, January 8, 2026 at 4:34 PM UTCBose recently announced the pending end of cloud support for its SoundTouch line of home speakers.This will, in effect, turn the smart speakers into dumb speakers as they will no longer have access to many features and any related software updates.Well, there's a spot of good news for SoundTouch owners.

The company is turning to an open source model for the software, allowing third parties to keep the music playing.The company has already begun mailing out the API documentation to customers so "independent developers can create their own SoundTouch-compatible tools and features." This will take some time, so Bose is also extending the end-of-life (EoL) date for the SoundTouch speakers.They were set to stop receiving cloud updates in February, but that has been moved to May 6.It made a couple of other changes to make life a bit easier for SoundTouch owners.The speakers will still be able to use AirPlay and Spotify Connect after EoL, which was something that had been in doubt.

The app will also continue to work in a stripped-down format.That app was originally set to stop working altogether, so all of those angry customer comments on Reddit must have done the job.The SoundTouch speakers were introduced in 2013 and were on the expensive side, starting at $600.Nobody likes spending hundreds of dollars on something only to have it become a useless brick several years later.

Good on Bose for listening to their customers on this.

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