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LATEST ADDITIONS

The Return of Fried Products

One of audio's true originals, Irving "Bud" Fried first made his mark in the late 1950s by becoming an early US importer of Lowther corner horn and Quad electrostatic loudspeakers. By 1975, he had established his own company and began releasing speaker models under the Fried nameplate.

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Added to the Archives This Week

The audiophile Rosetta Stone? From the December issue, Kalman Rubinson goes looking for the perfect all-purpose audio player as he reviews the <A HREF="http://www.stereophile.com/digitalsourcereviews/1203linn">Linn Unidisk 1.1 universal disc player</A>. As KR notes, "Even more important than comprehensive compatibility will be any truly universal player's ability to optimally play back all of these formats without robbing Peter to pay Paul."

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CES Debutantes

Audio manufacturers love to make big announcements at the annual Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas (which runs January 8&ndash;11, 2004), and the upcoming show is no exception. In addition to Fried Products' aggressive relaunch (see <A HREF="/news/122203fried">related story</A>), several other companies are heading in new directions.

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Sony SCD-XA9000ES SACD player

Sony's first flagship Super Audio CD player was the two-channel SCD-1, <A HREF="http://www.stereophile.com/showarchives.cgi?180">reviewed by Jonathan Scull</A> in November 1999. (The $5000 SCD-1 had balanced outputs; the cosmetically different but otherwise identical $3500 SCD-777ES had unbalanced outputs and was <A HREF="http://www.stereophile.com/showarchives.cgi?346">reviewed by Chip Stern</A> in April 2001.) Sony's second-generation flagship player, the $3000 SCD-XA777ES, was <A HREF="http://www.stereophile.com/showarchives.cgi?491">reviewed by Kalman Rubinson</A> in January 2002, and added multichannel capability with channel-level adjustment and bass management. Sony's third-generation flagship is the SCD-XA9000ES, also priced at $3000, which adds time-delay adjustment for its multichannel analog outputs and is presented in a smart new styling that Sony calls "Silver Cascade." The disc drawer and the most frequently used controls are on the angled top half of the brushed-aluminum front panel; in the lower half are the display, the headphone jack and its volume control, and the multifunction control knob.

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Krell SACD Standard multichannel SACD player

With the exception of dCS and Accuphase, you don't see anyone jumping on the bandwagon of $15,000-plus SACD players&mdash;and for good reason. Despite enthusiasm for the format within the relatively small audiophile community, high-resolution audio isn't exactly making waves on the front pages&mdash;or even the back pages&mdash;of the mainstream news media. And while ABKCO Records has sold millions of Rolling Stones hybrid SACD/CDs, and Sony is looking to repeat that phenomenon with the recent Dylan hybrids, what's being sold in both cases are CDs, <I>not</I> SACDs. The higher-resolution layer is simply going along for the ride.

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Linn Unidisk 1.1 universal disc player

The manufacture and marketing of so-called "universal" digital disc players should have been a no-brainer right from the start. I recall the first demo of SACD I attended, when both SACD and DVD-Audio were little more than promises and contentions. That prototype Philips player consisted of several cubic feet of hardware controlled by a computer, even though mockups of more marketable SACD players were arrayed around the room. After the demo, I asked one of the Philips engineers if it were possible to make a player that could handle CD, SACD, <I>and</I> DVD-A. His reply: "Sure, if <I>they</I> let me do it."

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