Samsung is bringing a massive wireless speaker and its own audio algorithms to CES
Every company flirts with some variation of talking
about the future in its promo materials, but Samsung has decided to be
more direct by announcing it’s bringing "the future of audio" to CES 2017.
The Korean company has developed a proprietary audio upscaling
technology, which it is calling Ultra-high Quality Sound, or UHQ. It’s
supposed to take 8-bit to 24-bit audio signals and convert them up to
32-bit for "delivering sound that brings each note to life with
incredible clarity." Not to be a downer, but digital upscaling — which
is done by filling the gaps of information with a best guess — has been
done a whole bunch of times both with video and audio, and the results
have tended to be underwhelming. In any case, there’s little evidence to
suggest that the average listener can detect, let alone cares, about
the difference between 16-bit and 32-bit recordings, even if Samsung’s tech works quite as well as advertised.
In any case, Samsung is giving the world its first
opportunity to experience UHQ sound at CES with the new H7 Wireless
Speaker. This is quite the chunky box, like an old school hi-fi that’s
all speaker, but it’s also got a very minimal, refined look that’s
frankly still a little unusual among Samsung’s home products. The
company itself acknowledges that its 2017 devices "reflect a total
paradigm shift for both the company and the industry [with] sleek,
simplistic designs."
One fascinating addition of what could be very clever
engineering is a feature Samsung calls Distortion Cancelling. This is an
algorithm that "can intelligently predict a woofer’s movement, control
it, and play more solid and stable sound at low pitch." Especially
useful for reining in imprecise subwoofer vibrations, it should deliver a
more composed and effective bass punch. It sounds like Samsung’s being
practical about the limitations of its speaker technology and figuring
out software solutions to working around them.
Joining the H7 speaker at CES will be a new MS750 sound
bar, which Samsung touts as the first in its range "to embed subwoofer
performance directly into the primary unit." Like the H7, it can’t be
accused of being especially minimal in size, but it too has a very basic
design that won’t offend anyone’s eyes or, hopefully, ears. The MS750
also supports UHQ 32-bit sound.
To complete the home entertainment upgrade, Samsung will
also have a new Ultra HD Blu-ray player at CES, which it calls the M9500
UHD. It’s optimized for HDR and automatically makes video and audio
adjustments in accordance with the particular content source being
played, whether it be HDR, Dolby Atmos, or DTS-X. Looking at its utterly
spartan control scheme, Samsung is indeed emphasizing the minimalist
look, and its subtle curve at the front makes it just different enough
from the standard black box to stand out and have a unique look.
Samsung isn’t yet announcing the specs, prices, or
availability dates for these — because it’s still 2016, after all, and
some news has to be preserved for CES itself — but all will be revealed
during the Las Vegas show starting early next week.
The article was published on : theverge
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