CES 2012: Apt-X Bluetooth Update

We've talked a bit over the past year about CSR's apt-X Bluetooth audio profile; while we've been impressed with the performance of the receivers we've been able to listen to, and at CES we found apt-X in a wide variety of products, including Monster's new boombox, affordable DACs from Arcam and Cambridge Audio, NAD's iOS dock, and even Burmester's audiophile-only ultra-high-end 113 "super DAC."

While previous apt-X implementations like the Creative system we'd reviewed had depended on a transmission dongle, the profile has finally begun turning up in a few sources: Motorola's Droid Razr; the Samsung Galaxy Tab 7.7 Plus, and - more importantly - the Mac OS (originally just the Mac Mini was said to support, but CSR tells us that all Intel machines running 10.6.5 and up should be able to broadcast apt-X).

CSR's Sarah Thornbury tells us a little about the current state of apt-X and the new low-latency version (currently at 30ms, CSR's trying to reduce that considerably to eliminate lip-sync issues that'll make it possible to use wireless Bluetooth to connect speakers or headphones for watching video) that's in development.

 

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