If you still think network streamers live or die by their hardware alone, Eversolo keeps proving you wrong. With the rollout of OTA firmware V1.5.60, the brand is once again showing that smart, consistent software development can meaningfully upgrade the listening experience—sometimes overnight.
This update lands across the Eversolo DMP Series, T Series, and PLAY Series, and it’s a big one. Not flashy for the sake of it, but packed with features that actually matter if you use your streamer every day. Headlining the release: Spotify Lossless via Spotify Connect, streaming at up to 24-bit / 44.1 kHz.
Spotify Lossless via Spotify Connect
This is the update everyone will talk about—and for good reason. For the first time, compatible Eversolo devices can stream Spotify Connect in lossless quality, delivering noticeably cleaner, more open sound without changing how you use the service.
You open Spotify on your phone, tablet, or laptop, hit Connect, and your Eversolo takes over—now feeding your DAC a full-fat, lossless stream. On resolving systems, the difference is immediately audible: tighter bass, cleaner transients, and more space around vocals and instruments.
For Spotify users who previously felt stuck between convenience and sound quality, this update quietly removes that compromise.
Local library upgrades that actually make sense
Beyond Spotify, Eversolo didn’t forget the people who live in their own music libraries—and that’s where this update really shows maturity.
You can now edit metadata directly inside the local music library, which is a huge quality-of-life upgrade if you care about clean tagging, proper album art, and organized collections. It’s the kind of feature you don’t notice until you have it—and then never want to lose.
The local library also gains a built-in UPnP server, meaning your Eversolo can now share music across the network without needing additional software. Bonus points for transparency: when playing UPnP content, the file format is now clearly displayed, which will make detail-oriented listeners very happy.

More services, smoother streaming
OTA V1.5.60 also expands Eversolo’s ecosystem with Navidrome support, giving users more flexibility when running personal music servers.
On the stability front, several long-standing annoyances have been quietly addressed. Qobuz playback has been smoothed out, DLNA glitches (including some Audirvana-related hiccups) have been cleaned up, and overall streaming feels more reliable—especially during longer listening sessions.
This is the kind of “you only notice when it’s gone” improvement, and that’s a good thing.
UI polish, bug fixes, and everyday refinements
Eversolo clearly spent time sweating the details here. The album screensaver has been refined, playback views cleaned up, and additional languages added. Minor but real bugs—like track navigation acting strangely after restarts or app instability in services like Radio Paradise—have been squashed.
Internal storage users will also appreciate improved detection and compatibility with certain SSD models, making internal music storage more seamless and dependable.
Model-specific upgrades
Some nice, targeted extras round out the update:
-
PLAY Series users get a new phono gain setting, making turntable integration more flexible and precise.
-
A10 owners see a fix for a display glitch related to theme switching and the rotary control.
-
The Eversolo Control App adds basic file management tools like copy and paste—small change, big usability win.
As expected, OTA V1.5.60 is completely free and delivered over the air to all supported devices. The rollout is gradual, so availability may vary slightly by region and model—but it’s already on the way.
OTA V1.5.60 isn’t about chasing buzzwords—it’s about making Eversolo’s hardware genuinely better to live with. Spotify Lossless alone is a massive upgrade for a huge portion of users, and the library, stability, and UI improvements make the platform feel more refined and future-proof.
This is how modern hi-fi should work: buy solid hardware, then let smart software updates keep it evolving. With this release, Eversolo once again proves they understand that better than most.
If your streamer just updated, congratulations—you didn’t buy new gear, but it probably sounds like you did.



