LATEST ADDITIONS

Fred Manteghian  |  Nov 04, 2006  |  6 comments

It only takes five seconds with the earpieces Apple gives you with their iPod to make you wonder how the portable music market ever took off in the first place. Another five seconds watching my wife's cousin listening to a Bob Dylan MP3 over the <i>built-in speaker</i> in his Chocolate cellular phone was all it took to remind me that for most people, sound can't possibly matter.

Fred Manteghian  |  Nov 04, 2006  |  0 comments

When my favorite work lamp (relegated to laundry room duty – harrumph!) bit the dust electrically, I pulled it out of the trash and set it aside as a future project. But last weekend when I was out to replace the Grado Reference Sonata cartridge, a cartridge whose interaction with my VPI Aries turntable motor is legion, at least in my mind, the lamp lent a helping hand. I'm about to embark on a series of blogs about converting vinyl to various forms digital, I couldn't have any hum. Or buzz.

Al Griffin  |  Nov 03, 2006  |  0 comments

the listSony used to be king of the direct-view TV biz, churning out high-performance tube sets for which discerning viewers happily paid extra.

Daniel Kumin  |  Nov 03, 2006  |  0 comments
As much fun as a monster truck and almost as imposing (but with better bass), the Klipsch RF-83 home theater speaker system is big, heavy, and powerful. It's also unusual in a couple of ways.
Al Griffin  |  Nov 03, 2006  |  0 comments

Photo Gallery

Ian G. Masters  |  Nov 03, 2006  |  0 comments

HDMI Plus

Q. What benefits does the new HDMI 1.3 standard provide, and what's its value in making a new equipment purchase? Robb Lazarus Oakland, CA

 |  Nov 03, 2006  |  0 comments

Q. I recently bought a 42-inch LCD that I'd like to mount over my gas fireplace. The bottom of the monitor will be 27 inches from the top of the fireplace. The fireplace has a small heat deflector built into it, and there will also be a mantel 8 inches wide mounted about 6 inches below the monitor.

Jamie Sorcher  |  Nov 03, 2006  |  0 comments

Powerful portable speakers can transform a digital music player into a stereo system or change a personal video player into an on-the-go mini-cinema. The speakers shown here look good, sound better than you'd think by looking at them, and are surprisingly inexpensive. I sampled JBL's latest gear while at CEDIA.

Mark Fleischmann  |  Nov 03, 2006  |  0 comments
For my money, the first-generation shuffle was the most boring iPod ever. Somehow, though, the absence of a screen seems more forgivable when the player shrinks to the size of a slightly obese postage stamp. That's the second-generation iPod shuffle and it shipped today after having been announced in September. It runs its one gigabyte of flash memory for 12 hours per charge. The one available color is silver and the price is $79. Even those of us who already have an iPod (I'm trying to hold the line at one) may be sorely tempted to add another one. You might want to keep one in your other suit. Or your second-favorite handbag. Or in all dozen pairs of faded, ripped, stained Levis. Or something.
 |  Nov 02, 2006  |  0 comments
Custom installers might disagree on things like the best speakers and the slickest control interface, but they all agree that the place to see the latest and greatest gear is the Custom Electronic Design & Installation Association's annual Expo.

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