2000 Records to Die For

2000 Records to Die For

February 2000&mdash;We are now comfortably past all the millennial hype, which, by New Year's Eve, really <I>had</I> risen to a nauseating fever pitch. But it's hard not to look back to the times, the places, and, most of all, to the faces and personalities that populated the last hundred years.

Are you interested in products that can digitally equalize your system based on an analysis of your listening room?

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Several companies, such as TacT, SigTech, and Perpetual Technologies, are offering products that can digitally equalize your speakers to counteract problems in your listening room. Is this of interest to you?

DVD-Audio Rises Again?

DVD-Audio Rises Again?

DVD-Audio has kept a low profile since its misfired "launch" late last year (see <A HREF="http://www.stereophile.com/news/10620/">previous story</A>), but has popped up again at this week's Audio Engineering Society Convention (<A HREF="http://www.aes.org">AES</A&gt;) in Paris. <A HREF="http://www.pioneerelectronics.com/">Pioneer</A&gt; is demonstrating its latest generation of universal DVD players, <A HREF="http://www.stereophile.com/news/10633/">recently released in Japan</A>, using a new DVD-Audio disc, some of the contents of which were encoded using Meridian Lossless Packing (MLP) technology to enable high-resolution surround sound.

Digital Downloads from EMI

Digital Downloads from EMI

This spring, downloadable digital music from <A HREF="http://www.emigroup.com/">EMI</A&gt; may begin popping up everywhere, if a new arrangement with <A HREF="http://www.supertracks.com/">Supertracks</A&gt; goes as planned. The two companies have created what they believe is a secure system for downloading music to computers, portable players, and to CD burners at kiosks in shopping malls. The news follows by only a couple of weeks an announcement that <A HREF="http://www.warnermusic.com/">Warner Music</A> and EMI will merge their operations under the larger umbrella of AOL Time Warner.

Satellite Radio Companies Work for Unified Standard

Satellite Radio Companies Work for Unified Standard

Satellite radio got a boost toward wider market acceptance on February 16, when <A HREF="http://www.siriusradio.com/">Sirius Satellite Radio</A> and <A HREF="http://www.xmradio.com/">XM Satellite Radio</A> announced an agreement to develop a unified standard for satellite radios. The current batch of satellite receivers can pick up transmissions from one of the providers, but not both. The next generation of receivers will expand the technology's reach by enabling reception of both companies' broadcasts.

Added to the Archives This Week

Added to the Archives This Week

Markus Sauer is in a ponderous audio mood: "When several listeners each play music they like on the system, their reaction should be more uniform. But it isn't. What irks me is that, while we seem to be able to agree pretty well on how a system sounds, there seems to be no consistency of emotional reaction to this sound . . . " Sauer works through this troubling aspect of being an audiophile in "<A HREF="http://www.stereophile.com//features/203/">God is in the Nuances</A>." "This journal has seen a number of thoughtful ruminations on what it is that attracts us to music or to a given audio component, and how we should describe that attraction." Now it's Sauer's turn.

Audio Sales Finish Strong in 1999

Audio Sales Finish Strong in 1999

According to figures just released by the <A HREF="http://www.ce.org">Consumer Electronics Association</A> (CEA), revenues from manufacturer-to-dealer sales of audio products in December 1999 totaled nearly $568 million, a 6.3% increase over the previous December. CEA reports that the strong month's sales pushed year-end revenue totals to their highest mark in four years: total audio shipment revenues in 1999 surpassed the $8 billion mark for the first time since 1995, growing by 2% over 1998.

Wadia Digital and Hales Design Group Join Forces

Wadia Digital and Hales Design Group Join Forces

Merger mania in high-end land: Loudspeaker manufacturer <A HREF="http://www.halesdesigngroup.com/">Hales Design Group</A> and digital audio manufacturer <A HREF="http://www.wadia.com/">Wadia Digital Corporation</A> are joining forces to create what the companies' executives are calling "new digital products for the new millennium." The announcement was made February 14 at Wadia headquarters in River Falls, Wisconsin.

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