Mirror, Mirror, On the Wall

Mirror, Mirror, On the Wall

File this under <I>Only at CEDIA</I>: Themeaddicts, Inc. is offering a Magic Message Mirror (also available as a talking pirate skull). The MMM looks like an ordinary mirror, but is integrated with your whole home automation system. It can update you on any changes within the system's ability to monitor.

Rare (or at least rare-ish) opera

I was able to borrow a copy of Alfred Schnittke's Life with an Idiot from my local library and was simply amazed at this opera. The story, in so far as there is a comprehensible one, is told twice, and the whole thing is just about the most grotesque, brutal, and absorbing post-war opera I have yet heard. Mstislav Rostropovich outdoes himself conducting the work, and playing the solo cello and piano (!) parts. Sound is top-notch.

Theta Digital—All Digital, All the Way

Theta Digital—All Digital, All the Way

Neil Sinclair gave me a tour of Theta’s new multi-channel amp, which keeps the signal exclusively in the digital domain from the S/PDIF inputs to the PWM output stage, the latter said to operate at the super-high frequency of 1MHz. Designed by veteran amp engineer Dave Reich, what is in effect a powerDAC&mdash;that’s what it says on the output-stage printed circuit boards&mdash;will find its way, I hope, into some two-channel products in due course.

Shall We Dance?

Shall We Dance?

JA already blogged about the Ultima Salon2 demo we attended yesterday, but I just had to second his praise with an additional rave: These large speakers are incredibly light on their feet. Yes, the bass <I>was</I> impressive, and, yes, they sounded fabulous on vocals, but for me, it was their ability to change rhythmic directions on a tack-head that was most impressive.

The Ethereal PS Audio Connection

The Ethereal PS Audio Connection

PS Audio's Paul McGowan was leaning so comfortably on these nice new AC Power Plants that it wasn't until my second visit that I realized the products carried the Ethereal label, the first fruits of a collaboration between these two companies. In addition to the 1500W Power Plant with its inbuilt harmonic distortion analysers, Paul also has the new surge-protected Power Center tucked under his arm. He looks pretty happy.

Cary's Cinema Processor

Cary's Cinema Processor

I finally got to see the new Cary Cinema II processor ($3000) that had been whispered about at the 2005 CEDIA. Sleek but prodigious, it has balanced analog and digital inputs in addition to single-ended analog, optical and coaxial digital inputs and a true analog bypass 7.1 input. There's balanced and unbalanced outputs as well as analog/digital outputs for a second zone. But get this: it is also Dolby-HD approved!

Hands-On With the Transporter

Hands-On With the Transporter

Slim Devices' Patrick Cosson and OnPR's Marivi Lerdo-de-Tejada pose with the California company's high-end, $1999 Transporter network music player, after granting me a hands-on session with it. The Transporter's Dynamic Feedback control knob is amazing&mdash;choose a function and it becomes a silky-smooth volume pot, an indexed rotary switch, or a velocity-sensitive controller. Better yet, each function feels absolutely "real."

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