What would you like to see reviewed in Stereophile?
At <I>Stereophile</I> we often gets requests for product reviews. What would you like to see reviewed?
At <I>Stereophile</I> we often gets requests for product reviews. What would you like to see reviewed?
Jonathan Scull stuffs as many "relatively inexpensive" building tweaks as he can fit into <A HREF="http://www.stereophile.com//finetunes/230/">"Fine Tunes" #21</A>. Find out about basic room and electrical treatments on the relative cheap.
In an effort to smooth the way for websites that wish to legally reproduce copyrighted music, <A HREF="http://www.bmi.com">BMI</A> announced last week that it has now become the world's largest online digital rights management company with the launch of its Digital Licensing Center (DLC) and "Klick-Thru" online copyright licensing system. The company says that the DLC is intended to help Internet companies digitally obtain a music-performance license through BMI.com, allowing them to publicly "perform" any of BMI's 4.5 million copyrighted works from its 250,000 songwriters, composers, and music publishers.
A year after <A HREF="http://www.stereophile.com/news/10445/">introducing</A> the Super Audio Compact Disc player to upscale audiophiles, <A HREF="http://www.sony.com/sel/">Sony Corporation</A> has decided it is time to make the technology available to a wider audience. On May 17, Sony announced that its third-generation SACD player will be launched in Japan in June at approximately $730 US (¥80,000). The company's current SACD players, which debuted last fall, list at $3200 and $5000.
The gold rush is on in the wake of a <A HREF="http://www.ftc.gov/">Federal Trade Commission</A> decision effectively ending the music industry's policy of minimum advertised pricing (MAP) on compact discs. Attorneys in California and New York wasted no time in filing class-action lawsuits against the music industry's major conglomerates, following the <A HREF="http://www.stereophile.com/news/10744/">FTC's announcement</A> May 10 that it had reached a negotiated settlement with them over a longstanding noncompetitive pricing policy.
The <A HREF="http://www.ce.org">Consumer Electronics Association</A> (CEA) reports that factory-to-dealer sales of audio products soared in March, with dollar volume increasing by 14% over March 1999, to a total of more than $721 million. According to the CEA, sales in the first quarter of this year were 10% ahead of first-quarter 1999, at approximately $1.75 billion.
Last week, the <A HREF="http://www.ce.org">Consumer Electronics Association</A> (CEA) announced that it is working to establish a single standard for high-data-rate home networking using the powerlines already installed in consumers' homes. Stating that it is "recognizing the need for a baseline technology standard," the CEA says it has invited integrated-home-systems industry stakeholders to participate in the creation of a standard for residential powerline networks, to be completed by year's end.
The last Lamm product I had my hands on was a pair of M1.1 monoblocks (see Vol.18 No.4, Vol.22 No.7). I liked those hybrid tube/solid-state amps quite a lot.
A long, relaxing listening session can be good medicine. But I've never heard a doctor prescribe, "Listen to your favorite recording three times and call me in the morning." At least, not yet.