Home A/V at CES 2006
iPod lifestyle comes home The high-end market will see plenty of drool-inducing speakers, preamp/processors, amplifiers, and hand-tooled turntables that cost as much as a BMW. But the overwhelming majority of mainstream home audio and home-theater products will be cheaper, more affordable, and more full-featured versions of what we've seen in 2005. That's not a bad thing--you'll get more and better products for your home audio dollar than ever before--just don't expect a deluge of groundbreaking or radical departures from the current generation of home audio.
Ironically, Apple doesn't have a direct presence at CES. Nevertheless, the white wonder will be a palpable presence throughout Las Vegas. Everyone wants a piece of the iPod action. Look for enhanced iPod compatibility to be touted on everything from speakers, home-theater systems, and A/V receivers--and that's not counting the deluge of portable audio iPod accessories that will no doubt flood the show. And don't be surprised to see plenty of audio products that ape the iconic white color and rounded edges--even if they're not explicitly iPod compatible. Of course, whatever iPod-related products are a hit at CES, look for them to be upstaged by whatever Steve Jobs announces the following week at Macworld Expo in San Francisco. Focus on lifestyle design
Radio: Sirius, XM, and HD
Back on Earth, radio is going digital as well. HD Radio made a splash at CES 2005, but compatible home-based products are only now beginning to trickle onto the market. Look for HD Radio as a standard feature on more products, from car radios to A/V receivers, at CES 2006. HD Radio already has one major advantage over satellite: Just like AM and FM, you need only a compatible receiver to listen, not a satellite-style paid subscription. The HD Radio industry is gearing up for a big year, highlighting the rollout of real-time traffic updates and "multicast" stations that broadcast exclusive content not available on analog airwaves. (Some stations will even be commercial-free for an indefinite time.) Those are exactly the sort of features that the service will need to eventually supplant AM and FM on your dial. DTS-HD and Dolby TrueHD Barring some sort of 11th-hour compromise, 2006 will be the year that HD-DVD and Blu-ray go to battle to determine which format becomes the high-def successor to current-generation DVDs. On the audio front, though, things are more alike than different. Both next-gen disc formats will support the next iteration of surround formats from Dolby and DTS. And despite the jockeying for bragging rights from both companies, both surround formats have quite a lot in common, right down to their names: Dolby TrueHD and DTS-HD (formerly known as DTS++). Each uses the additional space provided by the higher data capacities of HD-DVD and Blu-ray for lossless coding, delivering eight or more discrete channels of 24-bit/96kHz audio. The result should be a soundtrack that makes today's admittedly great-sounding DVDs play like a tinny MP3 file by comparison--at least to discerning listeners. Those growing weary of planned obsolescence and forced upgrade cycles can rest easy, though; HD-DVD and Blu-ray media are expected to include legacy audio tracks (or downmixes), so you'll be able to hear a surround track on your standard, current-gen Dolby Digital or DTS-compatible receiver. Built-in networking and HDMI go mainstream
HDMI (High-Definition Multimedia Interface) was the bleeding-edge connection at last year's CES, and it's been showing up in a trickle of A/V products released this fall. But the digital jack--which can pass multichannel audio and high-definition video over the same single cable--has been poorly implemented in some early products, often preventing its potential and convenience from being fully realized. Look for HDMI to begin appearing in more midprice receivers and HTIBs at CES 2006 that follow the lead of the US$800 JVC RX-D702B, which delivers multiple HDMI inputs and full upconversion from analog A/V sources to a single HDMI output--meaning there's only one wire you'll need to snake to your HDTV. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
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