Handcrafted Ceramic Speakers are almost too pretty to blast

Joey Roth blew our collective minds way back in 2007 with his conceptual Felt Mouse, but now the designer is taking his creations to the next level by actually shipping a few. The simply named Ceramic Speakers boast only 10 watts of output per channel, though each 4-inch full-range driver is housed in an acoustically dead porcelain and cork chamber that should do quite a lot with quite a little. We can’t say we’re totally fond of the expected $400 to $500 price tag when these go on sale in October, but toss in a similarly designed subwoofer and we just might bite.

[Via Cool Hunting]

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Handcrafted Ceramic Speakers are almost too pretty to blast originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 14 Aug 2009 06:27:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Logitech Debuts Two iPod Speakers

LogitechS315i.jpg

It’s got to be difficult to stand out in the competitive world of iPod and iPhone speakers, but Logitech has a reputation for style and quality. Today, the company announced two new portable solutions. So how do they stand out?

The Logitech Rechargeable Speaker S315i (shown above) can play music for 20 hours (in power saving mode) when fully charged. It looks like a great solution for cookouts or camping, anytime you’re outside and away from an outlet for a long time. Besides working with iPods and iPhones, you can connect any other music player through the 3.5mm audio jack. It’s available for preorder for $129.99, and will ship this month.

The Logitech Portable Speaker S125i is a smaller model, but it still offers a big sound thanks to the one-button bass boost. It doesn’t have an internal battery like the S315i, but requires four AA batteries (for 10 hours of playing time) or an AC outlet. It works with iPods, not iPhones, and offers a 3.5mm audio jack for connecting other types of music players. Preorder it for $69.99 and it will ship in September.

PCMag‘s own audiophile, lead analyst Tim Gideon, says he’ll likely be reviewing both in the near future, so watch for that.

Transmission Audio Ultimate speakers — $1M for the best monophonic sound ever

Transmission Audio Ultimate speaker, woofer panel

We didn’t think anything would top Goldmund’s $190,000 Telos 5000 amplifier, but we should have known better. Bloated excess knows no bounds, so coming in at a cool $1,000,000 per side, we’ve got Transmission Audio’s Ultimate speakers. Each channel consists of six, 7-foot high panels (one supertweeter ribbon, two tweeter/midrange ribbons, one 24×8-inch woofer, and two 10×15-inch subwoofer); taken together, a stereo pair of the Ultimates will eat up a modest 37-foot swath of your living room airplane hangar. Even people with more money than sense like convenience, though, so the Ultimate takes a page from the HTIB crowd and bundles in six 500-Watt dual-mono amplifiers and a preamp. At these prices, you’d think Transmission Audio could afford some bandwidth, but the company website has been stripped of photos at the moment, so hit the read link for more eye candy.

[Via CNET]

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Transmission Audio Ultimate speakers — $1M for the best monophonic sound ever originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 06 Aug 2009 22:37:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Paper desktop speakers rock you like a handcrafted hurricane

Like my grandmother always says, sometimes the best gadgets are the ones you build yourself — with kits imported from Japan, purchased at places like Fred Flare. Princeton’s Paper Speaker kit comes with a pair of 1W stereo speakers, a USB connection, paste, and a paper template for building a retro desktop sound system. Three designs are available — take your pick from a cabinet record player, a component stereo system, or an old school boom box. Check ’em out below, and then get yours when it becomes available in early July for ¥1,980 (approximately $21).

[Via Akihabara]

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Paper desktop speakers rock you like a handcrafted hurricane originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 29 Jun 2009 18:21:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Teensy Weensy eggshell speakers, perfect for all the king’s men

This is one waste not, want not, DIY project that caught our eye. Tiny little speaker housings made of carefully cut (and, we assumed, cleaned) eggshells, with small stands of clay. The final product apparently has “narrow” sound, but they sure look cuter than any homemade speakers we’ve ever seen before.

[Via Wired]

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Teensy Weensy eggshell speakers, perfect for all the king’s men originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 30 May 2009 01:11:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Cheap Geek: Flip Videocam, Canon EOS, Bomb Speakers

FlipUltra.jpgIf your homemade computer includes parts scavenged from the neighbor’s trash, you might be a cheap geek.

1. Pure Digital’s Flip Video made videocameras affordable, but this is ridiculous. Amazon is selling an older model, the Flip Video Ultra, for only $59.99, and you get free shipping. That’s an incredibly cheap price for a pocket-size cam that shoots up to 30 minutes of VGA footage. It has a 1GB hard drive and comes with software for easy YouTube uploading. At this price, you can get one for the kids to play around with too.

2. Photography buffs, this one is for you: Canon is offering big instant rebates on select EOS cameras, lenses, and accessories between now and July 11. Check here for a full list of qualifying products.

3. This deal is the bomb! I say that because it’s for a speaker called the Bomb, and because it’s a very hip urban reference. (Going by the picture, I think the speaker should be called the Bowling Ball, but whatever.) The Bomb is a compact speaker made by iFrogz for portable music players. It regularly sells for $39.99, but is now on sale for 40 percent off. Use the code BOMB09 (good through tomorrow) and get an additional 10 percent off.

Cheap Geek: Kodak EasyShare, Indoor/Outdoor Speakers, Laptop Mouse

KodakEasyShare.jpg

If your digital camera has a little bird inside that chisels the picture on a slate, you might be a cheap geek. But you’re probably a Flintstone.

1. Slip this little beauty in your pocket, and you’ll have great pictures wherever you go. Best Buy is selling an 8MP Kodak EasyShare digital camera for $89.99, which is so low they must be insane! The camera offers 3x optical zoom, a 3-inch LCD, face detection, and image stabilization. It would make a good Mother’s Day gift, too, I’m thinking, since it looks like it costs more than $90.

2. Get a little music going in your garden so you can enjoy some songs while grilling or entertaining guests. Buy.com is selling Audio Unlimited 900MHz wireless indoor/outdoor speakers for $77.81 (plus $12.20 for shipping). I’d recommend hiding them behind the shrubbery, because they’re pink and they’re not the slightest bit attractive. Still, it’s a good deal and they’ll make your yard a little more fun.

3. Microsoft makes great mice, and this Notebook Optical Mouse 4000 is a beauty. It includes a receiver that snaps onto the bottom of the mouse when not in use. It works with both Windows and Macintosh laptops. Amazon has it for $19.99.

Bonus Deal: Order a select movie from Best Buy and get a coupon for a free Domino’s medium pizza.

Contest Announcement: Panasonic is giving away an HD product every day in May.

Podio Bike Speakers Turn Cycling into “Enjoyable Melodious Tour’

podio-bike-speaker

Poor cyclists. Not only do they sustain indignity every time a car parks in a bike lane, or a moronic taxi passenger flings open a door in their path, the poppets have to brave their journeys to a soundtrack of car horns and abuse shouted by other, less civilized road-goers.

Podio, a neat, handlebar-mounted MP3 player from Japan, aims to ease their pain. Here’s what it does, scooped directly from the product page, itself rendered in beautifully sonorous Japlish:

Moreover, mounted by a special bracket over a bike handlebar,Podio Audio is transformed into a bike audio, and from then on, bike hiking is not mere exercising, but also an enjoyable melodious tour.

Irresistibly  adorable, I think you’ll agree, although delving into the specs we see a different, less appealing story. The speakers, once charged and loaded with up to 2GB of MP3 or WMA tracks via USB, pump out a thunderous 1.5 watts, enough to be heard above the squeak of an un-oiled wheel but little more. The battery life is fine, stretching to nine hours for speakers (although shrinking if you actually turn them up loud enough) and a magnificent 60 hours for headphones, although if you’re using headphones you may as well stick with your current MP3 player.
Do visit the site, especially the “applications” page which lists (with photos) the activities you can enjoy whilst using the Podio. These include “Working”, “Others”, “Beauty” and the all encompassing “Living Life”. Currently, the price is undisclosed, as is the release date.

Product page [Mini-Speaker]


Thin-Film Speakers Add Big Sound to Big TVs

Flexible Speaker

As high-definition TVs get cheaper and bigger, many people are discovering that the joys of HDTV aren’t always matched by similarly high-quality sound.

In fact, the sound from TV sets’ embedded speakers has arguably gotten worse. The cathode-ray tube sets of old had plenty of room in them for high-quality speakers, whereas today’s flat sets have much less space. Less space means less room for the air displacement needed to make big, beefy, well-rounded sound waves, and that means if you want good sound, you’ll need to add a couple hundred bucks to your TV purchase for a nice pair of external speakers.

Now some companies say they have a better way: Transform the front of the TV screen itself into a vibrating membrane, making it in effect a giant, high-fidelity speaker, giving your HDTV an acoustic range that would make Pavarotti proud.

Emo Labs, a Waltham, Massachusetts startup, has created flat, transparent “speakers” that go in front of the display. And it is not alone in its plans to put good sound right on the face of your TV.  Warwick Audio and NXT Technologies, two British companies, and a Korean firm, Plasma & Ion Beam Corp., have similar plans.

“People are spending a lot of money on these TVs expecting to get great video and audio,” says Allan Evelyn, vice president of business development for Emo Labs. “And when they get their HDTV they are disappointed to discover their old CRT TV had much better sound.”

“It’s a question of physics,” says Aldo Cugnini, a digital technology consultant with AGC Systems, “and physics usually dictates that the bigger speakers have higher fidelity.”

Not anymore, says Emo Labs. Wheeling in at least six boxes that contained cables, a prototype 32-inch TV and a notebook computer, Jason Carlson, CEO of Emo Labs joined Evelyn in showing Wired.com an impressive demo. Every note of Diana Krall’s Live in Paris coming straight from the HDTV sounded like it had been piped through a Bose speaker system. “With our flat embedded speakers the sounds come from the screen, almost like what you get in motion picture theaters,” says  Carlson.

Traditional speakers have three fundamental components: a cone that pushes the air, a voice coil that is an electromagnet and a permanent magnet that can attract or repel the voice coil. When the coil moves, it pushes and pulls on the cone. This, in turn, vibrates the air in front, creating sound waves.

But with thinner or smaller displays there is not enough room to create that displacement resulting in a ‘tinny’ and weak sound.

“Manufacturers are challenged for real estate on a display and they want it to be as thin as possible,” says Cugnini.  “That means they can put the speakers behind the display or at the bottom, both which are not ideal.” The best sound field, say experts, comes from the spaces in front of the speaker and the screen.

For HDTV buyers, this can be a significant annoyance.  HDTVs larger than 50 inches are usually connected to external speakers to create a home theater system. But smaller screens tend to be standalone, forcing users to accept poor audio as part of the package, says Evelyn.

The problem is also a result of how most consumers buy their HDTVs.  Retail stores currently hook up rows of HDTVs in a bid to compare the picture quality.  There’s no place there to determine the sound quality on each. “Quite often the video is running on as many of these screens simultaneously and the sound isn’t,” says Cugnini. “And even if it is, it’s not a good determination of how that audio will translate in your bedroom or living room.”

Emo Labs's Edge Motion Speaker Promises Better Sound for Thin Displays

Emo Labs's Edge Motion Speakers Promise Better Sound for Thin Displays

Emo Labs uses a thin membrane made of polyethylene terephthalate (or PET, a plastic used in bottles) and two piezoelectric actuators. The actuators vibrate the membrane along the side, creating a force that is perpendicular to the motion. Emo Labs says it is negotiating with display manufacturers to embed its technology that users can see in TVs in the next nine months to a year.

Meanwhile, researchers at the University of Warwick hope to commercialize their flexible speaker technology by the end of the year.

Warwick Audio has created ultra-thin (0.2 mm thick) laminate panels that can be used to replace traditional magnet-and-cone speakers. Unlike Emo’s, Warwick’s speaker panels are not transparent. The company hopes to use them largely in public address system and displays.

The better sound quality will, however, come at price. Having a membrane in front of the display will result in about 4 percent loss in brightness, says Carlson. And then there’s the additional cost that stems from making the switch to the new tech. Eventually customers will have to pay more for their enhanced audio TV sets.  “Newer technologies cost more to implement so the street price of the TV will go up,” says Cugnini. Emo Labs estimates its speakers would add a 10-15 percent premium to cost.

But wouldn’t that be a small price to pay if Matt Giraud can sound better on American Idol, or Jack Bauer’s car chases on 24 boom just that much louder?

Top Photo:  University of Warwick creates flat, flexible speaker/ University of Warwick


Kenwood lights up your life with prototype OLED-illumed speakers

Details are scarce on these new speakers from Kenwood, but if you find yourself frequently faced with a lamp-or-noise dilemma, we might’ve just stumbled upon the solution. The prototype flat speakers, developed by Junji Kido of Yamagata University in Japan, are inexplicably surfaced with white Lumiblade-style OLED lights — we’re not sure what that does for the sound, but we probably won’t be trading in our studio monitors in anticipation of this brightly lit conjectured future.

[Via OLED-Info]

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Kenwood lights up your life with prototype OLED-illumed speakers originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 27 Apr 2009 16:19:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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