Antec wants to rockus with its new soundscience 2.1 ‘3D’ speakers

Yesterday it was Corsair, today it’s the turn of Antec to step into the world of PC audio components. Best known for building cases and power supplies, the company’s aiming to make a splash in this unexplored pool with its all-new soundscience brand and first product, the rockus 3D|2.1 speakers. We’re guessing capital letters weren’t high on the priority list here, with Antec instead opting to focus on delivering “immersive 3D soundscapes,” the supposed aural equivalent of three-dimensional visuals. Beyond the marketing exaggerations, you’ll find anodized aluminum satellite speakers, both digital and analog input options, and that cute little control pod for adjusting volume and toggling between stereo and Antec’s proprietary 3Dsst mode. This rockus 2.1 set certainly looks stylish enough, but the asking price of $250 makes us think we’ll probably have to make do without one this fall.

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Antec wants to rockus with its new soundscience 2.1 ‘3D’ speakers originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 02 Sep 2010 17:44:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Corsair sails into gaming headset waters with noise-isolating HS1 cans

For some people, the association of Corsair and quality PC components is so strong that they’d buy anything that bears the triple sail logo. It makes perfect sense, therefore, for the company that made its name by producing memory sticks to diversify its portfolio even further, this time into gaming headsets, with the introduction of the HS1. It’s a USB headset offering multichannel audio via 50mm drivers, a noise-isolating closed design, noise-cancelling and articulating mic, and inline volume and microphone mute controls. Aside from the larger than usual drivers, we’re not seeing anything particularly unique here, but that ethereal quality component is rarely apparent on black and white fact sheets. Availability is said to be immediate, though our quick pricing investigation threw up only a UK pre-order for £84 ($129). So yeah, Corsair’s certainly pricing the HS1 as a premium product.

[Thanks, Mark S.]

Continue reading Corsair sails into gaming headset waters with noise-isolating HS1 cans

Corsair sails into gaming headset waters with noise-isolating HS1 cans originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 01 Sep 2010 01:14:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Sony Speakers In a Cup

sony_srs-v500ip-540x405.jpg

Sorry, that’s not your cup of joe. While it looks very much like a travel mug, the Sony SRS-V500IP is actually an iPod player dock with a speaker.

The “mug” is a 360-degree Circle Sound Stage 16W stereo speaker. Designed so that everyone around you can enjoy the music, the speaker distributes sound evenly without sticking anyone “behind” the speaker.

When driving, pop the mug into the car’s cupholder, and use the in-car power adapter to keep treating your passengers.

The dock comes with a an iPod/iPhone cradle and a 3.5mm stereo audio input for non-Apple devices, whether it’s a computer or another MP3 player.  A remote control can switch between two input sources and adjust volume. Adapters for the iPhone 3G and iPhone 3GS are also included.

Priced $239.99, the Sony SRS-V500IP is available in black, orange, or pink, from AudioCubes.

Microsoft set to up bit rate on Xbox Live voice comms, pwners everywhere rejoice

This might not be as sexy as its recent physical redesign, but the Xbox 360 is about to take what might be a major leap forward for many gamers. The console’s voice chat codec is going to be tweaked in an upcoming system update to allow a higher bit rate, and consequently better audio, through. Originally put together to run on 64k internet connections with the original Xbox, the codec’s finally catching up with our broadband times and should see itself renewed some time this fall, potentially alongside the retail launch of Kinect. Great, now when 12-year old kids destroy us in Halo, we’ll be able to hear their high-pitched gloating with crystal clarity.

Microsoft set to up bit rate on Xbox Live voice comms, pwners everywhere rejoice originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 27 Aug 2010 03:21:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Gefen TV Auto Volumbe Stabilizer Adjusts Sound on TV

gtv.jpgI always suspected that commercials are much louder than my umpteenth episode of Law & Order, but other than preemptively hitting mute before the commercial break, there wasn’t much I could do about it. Until the Gefen TV Auto Volume Stabilizer, came along, that is.

The volume stabilizer has to be physically near the TV and the stereo receiver for this to work. The stabilizer’s input port is plugged in to the TV’s audio output (analog or optical port), and the stereo receiver’s input is connected to the stabilizer’s audio output port. Since the sound from TV has to pass through the Gefen box before heading out to the speakers, it won’t work with the TV’s built-in speakers.

It is not restricted to just the TV, either. You can connect the stabilizer to the DVD player, Blue-Ray player, or any other multimedia source.

The device uses Dolby Volume technology and to maintain a steady volume. In case you don’t want sound to be adjusted, there is a Bypass button on the front that stops the stabilizer from modifing any audio input.

Gefen claims that the device controls the volume so subtly that you won’t even notice that it is doing it. All I care is that it does.

It is available online at Gefen for $179.

Logitech Announces the Z623 Speaker System, THX Certified

Logitech Z623 Speaker SystemIf you’ve been looking for a space-saving set of speakers for your computer or to drop next to your HDTV and plug in to your receiver, the new Logitech Speaker System Z623 is designed for you. The 2.1 system is THX certified, which is remarkable enough for such a small package. You get 2 small speakers and a subwoofer for the $149.99 retail price, but don’t let the size fool you, Logitech has a long history of releasing small speaker systems that deliver impressive sound.

The Z623 features both RCA and 3.5mm stereo inputs, so you can plug it in to your desktop PC just as easily as the receiver in your home theater setup. Logitech says that the new speakers will be available in the United States and Europe starting in September, although they’re not taking pre-orders just yet. 

Prius gets optional underhood, zombie-deterring noisemaker, sounds appropriately futuristic (video)

Prius gets optional underhood, zombie-deterring noisemaker, sounds appropriately futuristic (video)

Electric vehicles and hybrids are here to save the environment (or at least kill your fuel bill), but if you listen to some people they’re also here to mow down our pedestrians thanks to their ninja-like ways. Nissan’s Leaf has already gone the way of sci-fi by offering a Blade Runner-inspired exterior soundtrack to make sidewalk replicants take notice, and now the Prius is joining in on the fun with its own under-hood speaker system. Curiously, this one will be optional, Toyota apparently expecting that purchasers are so philanthropically minded that they’ll pay an extra 12,600 yen (about $150) to protect poor pedestrians. You can see how it’s supposed to work in the image above, in which a Prius is shown emitting sound waves to deter a toupee-wearing zombie. But, if you’d rather watch a flashy presentation and hear it for yourself, check out the thrilling video after the break. It’ll make you wish your auto sounded like a hovercar.

Continue reading Prius gets optional underhood, zombie-deterring noisemaker, sounds appropriately futuristic (video)

Prius gets optional underhood, zombie-deterring noisemaker, sounds appropriately futuristic (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 24 Aug 2010 10:21:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Sony’s Ultimate Weapon Gaming headsets are as macho as the name suggests

According to Sony, your Ultimate Weapon when it comes to schooling fools on the FPS battlefield is a 3D surround sound headset. Just like its newly minted DR-GA500 above, what a coincidence! Coming with a separate box to process your computer’s audio into a 7.1-channel surround sound environment, this mic-equipped set of cans is targeted squarely at gamers looking to optimize every last inch of their fragging experience. There’s also a GA-200 model that makes do without the extra audio processing. Both variants share the super special “triple enfolding” padding design, which is intended to make the headgear comfortable for prolonged use. Prices and retail dates aren’t yet available, but just to underline that gaming connection one extra time, Sony will be bundling a free copy of the latest Medal of Honor with these ‘phones starting in mid-October.

Continue reading Sony’s Ultimate Weapon Gaming headsets are as macho as the name suggests

Sony’s Ultimate Weapon Gaming headsets are as macho as the name suggests originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 17 Aug 2010 04:41:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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LG debuts washer and dryer that play ‘tunes’ for problem diagnosis

LG‘s just outed an updated washer-dryer combo that might get us interested in learning how to do our own laundry yet. Equipped with a new tech called SmartDiagnosis, the appliance (when not functioning properly) prompts the user to punch in a specific combination sequence on the device. The washer or dryer then plays aloud a series of tones, which a technician can use over the phone to determine what the problem is. This method, it would seem, trumps having to describe what’s going on to someone over the phone, and can help troubleshoot any issues that might be solvable sans housecall. They’re not the cheapest laundry machines we’ve ever seen — about $2,000 each — but we’ll take two, please.

LG debuts washer and dryer that play ‘tunes’ for problem diagnosis originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 11 Aug 2010 08:08:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Fibers That Can Hear and Sing Could Power Electronic Textiles

The clothing of the future could be more than just fashion. MIT researchers are working to develop fibers that can hear and produce sound, and someday those could take the form of wearable electronics.

“The ancients used clothes for the same reason that we do, which is thermal insulation and aesthetics,” Yoel Fink, associate professor of materials science and principal investigator at MIT’s Research Lab of Electronics, told Wired.com. “What we have done is start thinking how fibers go beyond that and change their properties.”

Fink and his team hope their latest research will result in fibers that can be fashioned into clothes capable of capturing speech, textiles that can measure blood flow in the capillaries or nets that can double as sound sensors.

“It’s a very significant breakthrough on the level of the material used and the structure that was fabricated,” says Ayman Abouraddy, a professor at the College of Optics & Photonics in the University of Central Florida.

“Line a whole wall with these fibers and you could get a very interesting surround-sound system,”  says Abouraddy, who isn’t involved in the research.

Fibers, whether they are for clothing or telecommunications, have always been static, incapable of doing more than one thing: Hold fabric together, or transmit optical signals, for instance. The key to electronic textiles is fiber that can change its properties over a wide range of frequencies, says Fink.

The acoustic fibers have been created from a plastic called polyvinylidene fluoride (PVDF) that’s commonly used in microphones. The researchers tweaked the plastic to ensure its molecules are lopsided so all the fluorine atoms line up on one side and hydrogen atoms on the other. This asymmetry of the molecules makes the plastic piezoelectric.

Piezoelectricity is the key property here that allows the fibers to react to a range of frequencies, giving them the ability to function as both a microphone and a speaker.

“The important aspect of it is maintaining the crystalline form in the fiber,” says Abouraddy. “Usually the crystal melts if it is heated sufficiently, which happens when the fibers are being manufactured, but the new technique seems to have solved that problem.”

To manufacture the fibers, the piezoelectric molecules are all aligned in the same direction by applying an electric field that’s about 20 times as powerful as those that cause lightning during a thunderstorm.

So far, it has worked well enough that you can actually hear through the fibers. Researchers connected the fibers to a power supply and applied a current to make it vibrate at audible frequencies to generate sound.

The next major step will be to reduce the dimensions of the fiber so it can some day be woven into clothing.

“Right now the width of the fiber is around 2.5 mm, while in clothing today, the fibers are at around 50 microns,” says Abouraddy. “So they will have to reduce the width by a big magnitude.”

That’s one of the things that researchers will be working on over the next few years, says Fink. Eventually, he hopes, the manufacturing process will be perfected enough for the fibers to be affordable.

“Am I going to be able to sell this for a buck a meter in San Francisco soon? The answer is no,” says Fink. “But we should be able to get good economies of scale.”

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Photo: Research Laboratory of Electronics at MIT/Greg Hren