Jon Iverson

Microsoft HD Audio

As we <A HREF="http://www.stereophile.com/news/010904ces/">discovered earlier</A> this year, Microsoft is trying to make friends with audiophiles. Need more proof? The software behemoth recently announced broad support for what it has termed the "Universal Audio Architecture" (UAA) initiative, which, the company claims, "will help to ensure an improved audio experience and improved audio device driver support for users of Windows."

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The Audio Powered Home

Running audio signals around a home's AC power wiring has been a <A HREF="integrated
Integrated http://www.stereophile.com/news/10754/index.html">consumer electronics goal</A> for several years. The reasoning goes that most folks live in homes that cannot be easily rewired for multiroom audio or multichannel surround, so why not use the AC wires that are already in the walls? Think of it as the ultimate solid-core interconnect.

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Digital Tune-Up

Audiophiles are faced with a sonic and musical quandary: Are we looking for an absolutely faithful reproduction of a recorded work, regardless of its inherent defects, or are we willing to tune our component choices and room to euphonize everything across the board&mdash;at the expense of over-glossing the better titles in our collection?

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Perreaux Hooks Up With Sanibel

New Zealand's <A HREF="http://www.perreaux.com">Perreaux Industries</A> began creating audio products 30 years ago, starting with the GS 2002 integrated transistor amplifier in 1974, and landed in the US in 1980 with the PMF 2150 amplifier. <A HREF="http://www.perreaux.com/backcat.php">Dozens</A&gt; of new audio products have been developed since then, many of them groundbreaking, and the latest designs are again available in the American market.

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Radio, Radio, Everywhere

Radio has been getting a new lease on life, with Sirius and XM satellite services, DAB (Digital Audio Broadcasting), and Internet "stations" popping up in the tens of thousands. With the Clear Channelfication of North America's FM and AM airwaves, many would argue that the timing couldn't be better for launching new broadcast technologies.

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