Sony helped Google improve wireless audio quality in Android O
Google just announced Android O
and revealed a preliminary list of features and changes that consumers
should start seeing on phones this fall. The update doesn’t sound earth
shattering at this (very) early stage, but among the surprising tidbits
is just how much work Android partners are putting in to help
improve the overall OS. The standout, according to Google, is Sony
Mobile. Sony has so far “contributed more than 30 feature enhancements
and 250 bug fixes,” a Google spokesperson said.
Chief among Sony’s priorities seems to be helping Android
become a better platform for wirelessly enjoying high-res audio. Or at
least something close to it, and substantially better than what
Bluetooth does right now. Sony has contributed its LDAC wireless audio
coding technology to Android O. LDAC can transfer much more data over
Bluetooth — up to a bitrate of 990kbps — than what’s typically possible
from smartphones. Here’s one explainer from Sony, and here’s another.
LDAC is already built into Sony’s expensive Walkman
players, its high-end wireless headphones (like the excellent
noise-cancelling MDR-1000x), Sony-branded wireless speakers, and Xperia
smartphones. But now other Android phone makers will be able to
wirelessly transit higher quality audio using LDAC to speakers and
headphones that have the technology included. This stands to mostly
benefit Sony’s own products right now, since no one else is using LDAC
and would likely have to pay a licensing fee to put it in a speaker or
wireless headphones. It’s free to integrate into mobile devices, as
Google confirmed LDAC is now part of the Android AOSP base code.
Will LDAC matter to most consumers listening to music on a
$99 Bluetooth speaker? Nope. But as music services continue to push
into lossless and high-resolution streaming (Spotify’s experimenting
with it right now), this sort of thing will help audiophiles enjoy much
improved audio without having to plug into the headphone jack — if their
phone even has one. That’ll still be necessary for true 24-bit/96kHz
listening, but this is a decent step up until Bluetooth 5 makes it out the door.
The article was published on : theverge
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