Rio Receiver
LAME Encoder
ReactOS
NT 3.51 NewShell
README.TXT
🔊 Rio Receiver / Dell Digital Audio Receiver
Now Playing: Your MP3 Collection
About the Rio Receiver
Quick Facts
Release2000
MakerSONICblue / RioAudio
StorageNone (streams)
ProtocolEthernet 10BaseT
Display2-line VFD
FormatMP3, WMA
OEM versionDell Digital Audio Receiver

The Rio Receiver was a networked digital audio player introduced around 2000 by SONICblue (formerly S3/Diamond Multimedia, makers of the original Rio PMP300). Unlike portable MP3 players, the Rio Receiver was designed to live next to your stereo — a thin, set-top-style box that pulled music from a PC on your home network over 10BaseT Ethernet.

It communicated with a lightweight server application running on a Windows PC, which served up your MP3 and WMA files on demand. The receiver itself had no local storage — it was purely a streaming terminal. This made it one of the earliest consumer "whole-home audio" devices, years before Sonos or AirPlay were household names.

Did you know? The Rio Receiver's server protocol was reverse-engineered by the community, leading to open-source server implementations like Receiving and later support in SlimServer (now Logitech Media Server).
Dell Digital Audio Receiver

Dell licensed the hardware from SONICblue and sold it as the Dell Digital Audio Receiver (DDAR), bundled with select Dell desktop PCs in the early 2000s. The DDAR was functionally identical to the Rio Receiver, differing mainly in branding — it wore a Dell badge and came in a slightly different bezel color to match Dell's tower cases of the era.

This OEM arrangement helped push the concept of networked home audio into living rooms that might never have encountered the Rio brand. Many Dell customers found themselves with a curious little box and a copy of the server software on a CD in a sleeve at the bottom of a big cardboard box.

The Protocol & Open Source Legacy

The Rio Receiver used a custom UDP-based discovery protocol and HTTP for content delivery. Enterprising hackers documented the protocol thoroughly, and alternative server software emerged:

  • Rio Receiver Server (official) — Windows-only, required the bundled CD
  • receiving — An early open-source Unix server
  • SlimServer / Logitech Media Server — Later added Rio Receiver support as a plugin
  • vTuner & community forks — Various community patches kept the hardware alive long after SONICblue's 2003 bankruptcy

Today, Rio Receivers and DDARs show up on eBay occasionally, and dedicated retro-audio enthusiasts still run them with Linux-based servers. The hardware's simplicity — just a CPU, a DAC, an Ethernet jack, and a VFD display — makes it an appealing project box even now.

Objects: 1
SONICblue, 2000–2003
🔊 12:00 PM