Online Sales of Consumer Electronics Will Reach $14 Billion by 2002

Online Sales of Consumer Electronics Will Reach $14 Billion by 2002

Last week, the <A HREF="http://www.cemacity.org">Consumer Electronics Manufacturers Association</A> (CEMA) announced its forecast that Internet sales of traditional consumer technologies to online households should reach at least $14 billion by 2002, representing 13% of total industry volume. CEMA also revealed that <A HREF="http://www.eBrain.org">consumer research</A> shows interest in buying consumer technologies online should grow by at least 135% in the next two years. The study found that the vast majority of online shoppers opt to consummate the purchase online instead of at a retail store because of price.

Audio Business News

Audio Business News

In a tersely worded press release, Carver Corporation announced that on Wednesday, May 12, 1999 it filed a voluntary petition under Chapter 11 in United States Bankruptcy Court for the Western District of Washington. The cause of the filing was "an accumulation of unpaid debt and resulting legal actions filed by creditors. These actions created the prospect of an inequitable distribution of payment to creditors and prevented the Company from being able to operate as a functioning business entity. In October of 1998, the Company ran out of working capital and laid off the remainder of its workforce. Subsequently, at the invitation of the Board of Directors, Robert W. Carver, the founder of the Company and former CEO, stepped in to take over."

AstroJams Back in Action with Grateful Dead MP3s

AstroJams Back in Action with Grateful Dead MP3s

Houston, Texas-based <A HREF="http://www.astrojams.com/">AstroJams</A&gt; is back online with Grateful Dead MP3s. The site <A HREF="http://www.stereophile.com/news/10430/">shut down</A> its offerings of Grateful Dead and Jerry Garcia Band downloads after receiving a cease-and-desist order from attorneys for Grateful Dead Productions in April. At issue was the site's use of advertising to generate revenue. GDP claims the sole legal right to commercial benefits stemming from the use of the band's music and logos, but had "<A HREF="http://www.stereophile.com/news/10440/">never objected</A>" to the free sharing of music in the Dead tradition, according to Dennis McNally of GDP's publicity department.

Cello's New HQ Features Fine Dining

Cello's New HQ Features Fine Dining

C<A HREF="http://www.cello-us.com/">ello Music and Film Systems</A> is not merely one of the world's most prestigious names in audio and video. This week, a plush restaurant is opening at the company's new headquarters at 53 East 77th Street (212 517-1200) on Manhattan&rsquo;s Upper East Side. Cello, as the bar/restaurant/garden is appropriately named, will serve dinner by invitation only until mid-June, when it will be opened to the public, according to Florence Fabricant in the May 19 edition of the <A HREF="http://www.nytimes.com/"><I>New York Times</I></A>.

Would DVD-Audio copy-protection schemes alter your view of the format?

Category

One of the hang-ups preventing DVD-Audio from moving forward is the fear that high-quality digital signals make piracy too easy. As a result, the format will likely incorporate various copy-protection schemes---possibly including watermarking. Does this matter to you?

HI-FI '99, Day Three: New Products, Technologies, and Companies

HI-FI '99, Day Three: New Products, Technologies, and Companies

Plenty of noteworthy new audio products are making their debuts here at HI-FI '99. EveAnna Manley has unveiled her prototype DAC/preamp, the Wave, featuring an UltraAnalog-based 20-bit D/A converter and a tube line-stage. With four digital inputs, four analog inputs, a processor loop, and three variable outputs, the fully remote-controllable unit should appear at dealers in late summer at a suggested price of $7000. Manley says an optional 24/96 pop-in circuit board is in the works.

Fine Tunes #11 Page 2

Fine Tunes #11 Page 2

Sometimes you have to sweat the details, sometimes they just fall in your lap. Take Victor Tiscareno. Victor's company, AudioPrism, has been making electronics, accessories, and power-conditioning products for quite some time. While he was visiting and installing a pair of his Mana Reference tube amplifiers for an upcoming review, Victor and I got to talking about power---the kind that comes out of the wall. Victor studied electrical engineering and is very au courant in such matters. During these ruminations he shared with me a recipe for what he calls The Poor Man's Dedicated Line.

Fine Tunes #11

Fine Tunes #11

Sometimes you have to sweat the details, sometimes they just fall in your lap. Take Victor Tiscareno. Victor's company, AudioPrism, has been making electronics, accessories, and power-conditioning products for quite some time. While he was visiting and installing a pair of his Mana Reference tube amplifiers for an upcoming review, Victor and I got to talking about power---the kind that comes out of the wall. Victor studied electrical engineering and is very au courant in such matters. During these ruminations he shared with me a recipe for what he calls The Poor Man's Dedicated Line.

HI-FI '99, Day Two

HI-FI '99, Day Two

Following the Sony/Philips jump from the starting line with Wednesday's <A HREF="http://www.stereophile.com/news/10445/">SACD announcements</A>, the DVD-Audio camp quickly came up to speed at the HI-FI '99 press luncheon with their plans for players and discs to appear this fall. First up at the podium was Jordan Rost from the Warner Music Group. Contrasts with the SACD position were established from the start when Rost made it obvious that, unlike SACD, DVD-Audio seeks to embrace not only high-end audio, but also various forms of video, and even Internet interactivity. Rost even went so far as to say that DVD-Audio discs could "play on CD players if a hybrid disc is feasible and desired," thus possibly deflating Sony's insistence that backward-compatibility is what sets SACD apart.

Acarian Systems Alón Circe loudspeaker Bob Reina, September 2004

Acarian Systems Alón Circe loudspeaker Bob Reina, September 2004

<I>Who knows not Circe,<BR>The daughter of the Sun, whose charmed cup<BR>Whoever tasted, lost his upright shape,<BR>And downward fell into a groveling swine?</I><BR>&mdash;John Milton, <I>Comus</I>

Acarian Systems
181 Smithtown Blvd., Suite 104
Nesconset, NY 11767
(516) 265-9577
www.alonbyacarian.com
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement