Product Design | Audio Electronics | Acoustics | DIY | Audio Innovations
|
|
Sony Electronics Introduces LinkBuds TWS Ring Design with Audio Transparency
|
Sony Electronics is exploring new avenues in earbud design with its latest LinkBuds, allowing users to enjoy music, content, and experiences – all at once. With the LinkBuds, Sony introduces an open diaphragm ring design that delivers improved audio transparency, ultra-small super fit, and crystal-clear sound and call quality. By leveraging this unique design, sensors, and spatial sound technologies, Sony says the LinkBuds will also be a new platform for augmented reality (AR) content, navigation, and work-from-home. Read More
|
|
|
|
Masimo Corp. Acquires Sound United to Expand Consumer Channel
|
Sound United announced that it has entered into a definitive agreement to be acquired by Masimo Corp., a global medical technology company that develops, manufactures, and markets a variety of noninvasive monitoring technologies for hospital and home settings. Sound United will benefit from Masimo’s expanded organizational resources, while Masimo gains access to Sound United’s consumer-centric brands and distribution channel. Read More
|
|
Universal Audio Introduces Complete UA Microphone Series Strategy
|
Just a few months since Universal Audio announced the acquisition of microphone modeling pioneer Townsend Labs, it seems there is a clear path forward for the California company - and it's certainly exciting. Universal Audio just announced the introduction of a full microphone lineup to complement the original Townsend Sphere L22. The new microphones include the SD-1 Standard Dynamic microphone for streamers and podcasters, the SP-1 pencil condenser microphone pair, and three classic studio UA Bock Series Microphones designed by David Bock. Read More
|
|
|
|
Crestron Announces DM NAX 4-Zone Streaming Pre-Amplifier and In-Wall Subwoofer
|
Crestron Electronics announced the launch of two new residential audio products, the Ultimate In-Wall Subwoofer, developed in partnership with Origin Acoustics, and the DM NAX 4-Zone Streaming Pre-Amplifier for high-performance Audio-over-IP (AoIP). Native to Crestron Home, Crestron’s new subwoofer and new DM NAX 4-Zone Streaming Pre-Amplifier will both play major roles in filling out the company's increasingly comprehensive suite of residential audio solutions. Read More
|
|
McIntosh Announces MX180 AV Processor with RoomPerfect
|
McIntosh Labs just announced its latest MX180 AV Processor, delivering everything needed for the home theater of today and tomorrow. This MX180 is basically the ultimate home theater hub, which is able to accommodate all formats, standards, and services, from 8K UHD image content with HDR and Dolby Vision to Dolby Atmos, DTS:X Pro, and Auro-3D immersive audio. For the best results, McIntosh even added RoomPerfect room correction technology licensed from Lyngdorf. Read More
|
|
|
|
Knowles Introduces New Balanced Armature Receiver Targeting Over-The-Counter Hearing Aid and TWS Market
|
Following a recently proposed ruling from the US Food and Drug Administration, the over-the-counter (OTC) hearing devices are intended to broaden access to hearing aid technology for millions of Americans. Knowles Corp. announced the RAQ-33862-000, a new medium-power, full-range balanced armature receiver developed for high volume hearing health and TWS products. The balanced armature receiver’s small size and high output delivers up to 116dB sound pressure level (SPL) at 500Hz, making it optimally positioned to meet the performance requirements for both hearing health and True Wireless Stereo (TWS) products. Read More
|
|
Pro Audio Design to Showcase TAD Evolution-Two Speakers at Florida Audio Expo 2022
|
The forthcoming Florida Audio Expo, happening at the Embassy Suites by Hilton, in Tampa, FL, from February 18–20, will be a unique opportunity to listen to the new TAD Evolution Series E-2 floor-standing speakers. Following the recent announcement that Pro Audio Design was appointed the official US and Canada distributor for Technical Audio Devices Laboratories (TAD), the company will have a dedicated demonstration suite showcasing the impressive new Evolution Series of hi-fi audio components. Read More
|
|
|
|
State of Adoption of Networked Audio, Video and Control Products
|
Audio networking experts RH Consulting have been counting networked audio products and licensees since 2013 in an effort to chart the adoption of audio networking in the pro audio, AV and broadcast markets. Recognized as the benchmark for tracking trends in networked audio, the 10th edition of the annual report covers all the major protocols including Dante, RAVENNA, AES67, AVB, Milan, and others. This year, for the first time, the report has broadened its scope to include networked video and control products using AES70, SDVoE, and ST 2110, among others . Read More
|
|
HEAD acoustics Expands VoCAS Speech Recognition Testing Software
|
HEAD acoustics continues to perfect measurement and analysis solutions in the field of speech and communication quality, expanding from a vast range of hardware platforms and tools - including its HMS II.3 full-band artificial head - all the way to dedicated software that adjusts to the quickly evolving needs in this field. The German company continues to expand VoCAS, a sophisticated software tool for performance evaluation of automatic speech recognizers, addressing real-life conditions in the lab. Read More
|
|
|
Editor's Desk
J. Martins
(Editor-In-Chief)
|
The MEMS Microphone Book
What's Different (And So Promising) With MEMS Microphones
|
|
|
I connected with Mikko Suvanto on Linkedin in the early months of the pandemic, when we were all adjusting to being locked down and working extended hours from home. Living in Finland, Mikko worked for Nokia for 14 years, and in 2013 moved to US to work for Akustica Inc. The Pittsburgh, PA company was one of the main suppliers of silicon microphone products and a pioneer in microelectromechanical systems (MEMS) microphones, acquired by Bosch in 2009 to become part of its MEMS division, Bosch Sensortec GmbH.
MEMS microphones are today embedded in all the devices that we have learned to recognize as essential - in particular during these last two years, while forced to communicate with the world via Skype, FaceTime, or Zoom. MEMS microphones are the invisible devices that faithfully capture our voices in our notebooks, smartphones, and smart speakers, enabling a quality and level of convenience that would be impossible to imagine before 2005, when Knowles brought its SiSonic MEMS microphone to the market for use in cell phones. Later in 2006, Akustica launched the first single-chip digital-output MEMS microphone, designed to replace electret condenser microphones (ECM), then already a 50-year-old technology. Founded in 2001, Akustica perfected acoustic system-on-chip solutions based on the work of Dr. Ken Gabriel during his tenure at Carnegie Mellon University from 1992-1996.
I am quite certain that not many people expected to see MEMS microphones evolve to being used in measurement applications, for example. And I also bet that no one could see how quickly the MEMS microphone landscape would evolve since the product category emerged, particularly since 2010, with voice-enabled applications becoming so widespread.
|
|
The MEMS Microphone Book is available to order on Mosomic, the author's consulting company website, and contains all the essential knowledge on MEMS microphones, accumulated over the course of a successful 20-year career in the field.
|
|
In 2016, after nearly five years, Mikko Suvanto left Akustica/Bosch to return to Finland and create his own consulting business, Mosomic ( www.mosomic.com), where he provided support in MEMS and miniature ECM implementations for multiple companies. When COVID-19 hit, Mikko decided it was time to take on a project he always had in mind. Earlier he had started the ambitious Mosomic MEMS Microphone Guide video series, available on YouTube and sponsored by Infineon. Then he decided to use the time at home to write and produce that content, and eventually turn it all into a book. It took him 18 months to realize that vision - proving that some people in the world actually made good use of the time at home!
"This book took 21 years to make: the first 18 years was a time of figuring things out, listening to people smarter than me, and taking notes," Mikko wrote in his book foreword. "During my time dealing with microphones - first in the shoes of a customer buying components, then as a part of an organization that manufactures microphones, and now as an independent specialist - I have encountered quite a few things related to miniature microphones. I've reached a pretty good understanding of what they are, how they work, and how they should be used."
And he used that accumulated knowledge to fill the pages of his book. The MEMS Microphone Book, "A practical guide to reliable high-quality sound capturing with miniature microphones" (ISBN 978-952-94-5660-4) was released just last week, and Mikko kindly sent me a copy for review. I have spent quite a few hours this week exploring this fascinating work (which I hope I'll eventually take with me to read during some imaginary vacations). I decided that I should write about it here ASAP, because I believe that the work deserves attention and I'm confident enough on the quality of the work to recommend it to The Audio Voice readers. Mike Klasco also received his own copy, knows a lot more than I do about MEMS microphones, and will be writing a more technical review for audioXpress and the AES Journal.
When I started exploring the whole book, at first I was slightly surprised by its structure, with individual paragraphs and lots of bullets points. It’s like the whole book was written as an expanded index. This can be extremely practical in a reference book - which is exactly what this book is. As a magazine editor, this type of structure is the opposite of what we ask from authors: Use your own "voice," tell a story, don't use bullet points. In fact, bullet points are only allowed once per article, either to introduce talking points or for the summary. And I always recommend that authors convert those bullet points in another paragraph.
This book, is the opposite of that. It follows an encyclopedic structure, with countless entries and an infinite number of expansions for each entry. Which in a way makes it easier to explore, also because there's an excellent index and 10 pages of table of contents. I confess I was not familiar with the Mosomic MEMS YouTube videos (magazine editors are not allowed to spend time on YouTube...). Still, after reading the book's foreword notes I felt the need to explore the MEMS Microphone YouTube series (29 long episodes - but all well-structured and edited), and suddenly I could understand the book structure much better. The videos are the rehearsal. The book is the definitive reference.
|
|
Mikko Suvanto exploring the basics of sound and acoustics in the first episode of his Mosomic MEMS Microphone Guide video series, on YouTube, which formed the basis for the expanded work in the book.
|
|
I asked Mikko to confirm my impressions of that process and he shared the following: "Yes, if I had started the project as a book, not a video series, the structure would probably have been significantly different. When I started making the videos, I had no intention of writing a book. When I had just about finished and released the videos, COVID hit, agreed big (for me) projects got shelved by customers, and suddenly I had time on my hands. So I thought I’d turn the scripts of the videos into a book, just clean the text a little, add drawings, and be done with it. This was in ~March-April 2020 and I thought it would take a few months to do this. Then, the project took on a life of its own: I started adding a little information here and there, and one day I realized that my goal was now to make a comprehensive book on MEMS microphones and sound capturing with miniature microphones. So I included pretty much everything I know that’s worth knowing. I also educated myself on a few extra subjects that I wasn’t that familiar with, to be able to write a little about them too. Simple directional arrays are a good example of that. As a result, there is a lot more content in the book than in the videos. I just checked: the video scripts (that I repeated in the videos mostly word for word) dumped into one file was 77,784 words; the final book is 194,570. That is a factor of 2.5. In other words, my Corona project got a little out of hand..."
Well, considering the result, I would say it was a great accomplishment. The book is certainly enlightening in many ways, and it includes as much technical information as anyone working with MEMS implementations might need, while providing reading material for anyone interested in sound capture and microphone technology in general.
More important, in just two days of exploration, I could find a lot of information that I have never found elsewhere, detailing the differences between MEMS topologies, designs, interfaces, and strengths and weaknesses. Things I had not found anywhere else. Mikko was very aware of that. "Aside from microphone manufacturers' application notes, there aren't too many publicly available sources for practical knowledge about sound capturing with miniature microphones that teach you how to utilize them in real-life devices," he says in the book.
|
|
Mikko Suvanto with a different haircut, 18 months later, more books and new guitars, recording one of the last episodes of the Mosomic MEMS Microphone Guide on YouTube. Glad some people used the pandemic time in such a disciplined way. And absolutely nothing wrong with buying more guitars!
|
|
Without getting into detail, I would just mention that the MEMS Microphone Book contains "every important piece of knowledge" the author was able to gather while working with leading microphone suppliers, covering the internal structure of a miniature microphone, and all the specifics of a MEMS microphone, as well as what determines its performance and value. That in itself makes this work invaluable.
Any industry professional looking for guidelines on how to implement MEMS microphones to reach the best possible sound capturing performance will find the fundamental knowledge here. From my personal perspective I have greatly enjoyed what I could read in more general chapters covering the key characteristics that affect sound capture with miniature microphones, comparing MEMS microphones to traditional microphone technologies, wind noise mitigation, and even the basics of directional microphone arrays.
With more than 600 pages of content, the MEMS Microphone Book is a reference source for fundamental knowledge about this technology. I strongly recommend exploring all the content while it remains the most complete guide on the topic. I can assure Mikko Suvanto that the value of his work will remain thanks to his encyclopedic effort - even knowing that this is a fast-evolving field and that the technology has already advanced since the book file was sent to the printer.
The only thing I couldn't find in this book and that I missed is an historical perspective and timeline of the technology. I believe that would greatly benefit the work and help the reader situate the technical progression. Particularly because, while most of us will be catching up to absorb all the knowledge contained in this book, to be directly involved with the ongoing research and industry activity is the only way to fully understand what remains pertinent and what will soon be of pure historical value.
Probably because he understands this better than anyone else, and feels the need to remain up to date on the technology, since January 2022, Mikko Suvanto returned to Bosch Sensortec as Senior Product Manager. "So, it just so happens that I got a real job. I’m still contemplating the haircut. Sometimes, opportunities that cannot be passed present themselves. This is one of those occasions, just like Akustica was 10 years ago," he wrote recently on LinkedIn.
|
|
Click here to see how to order The MEMS Microphone Book.
|
|
SPL Phonitor One d Headphone Amplifier System
By Stuart Yaniger
|
|
Stuart Yaniger shares his impressions and measurements of the intriguing Phonitor One d Headphone Amplifier System, designed by SPL of Germany. This product uses the company’s unique 120V circuitry, and also features an acclaimed AKM premium USB DAC and balanced stereo line output, effectively enabling it to function as a combination DAC and preamp. An interesting design also because of its Phonitor Matrix, a unique feature designed to electronically create a crosstalk signal and generate something similar to the effect of acoustic crosstalk around our head when listening through headphones. This is one of the first models in a new Series One product line from SPL that combines the sound of the company’s studio-oriented designs at an affordable price. This article was originally published in audioXpress, November 202. Read the Full Article Now Available Here
|
|
Virtual Height Filter for Reflected Sound Rendering Using Upward Firing Drivers
By James Croft
|
|
This review discusses a patent that applies to speakers designed for immersive, multichannel audio formats in home theater applications and Dolby Atmos, in particular. Not surprisingly, the patent was awarded to Dolby Laboratories Licensing Corp. As the patent application was published, Voice Coil provided an extensive and informative review - recommended reading for anyone considering entering this important home-theater market segment. The final US patent was granted in 2017 with the number 9648440B2. This article was originally published in Voice Coil, February 2016, and was updated accordingly. Read the Full Article Now Available Here
|
|
Audio Product Design | DIY Audio Projects | Audio Electronics | Audio Show Reports | Interviews | And More
Don't Have a Subscription?
|
|
Industry News & Developments | Products & Services | Test Bench | Acoustic Patents | Industry Watch | And More
|
|
Advancing the Evolution
of Audio Technology
audioXpress features great articles, projects, tips, and techniques for the best in quality audio. It connects manufacturers and distributors with audio engineers and enthusiasts eager for innovative solutions in sound, acoustic, and electronics.
Voice Coil, the periodical for the loudspeaker industry, delivers product reviews, company profiles, industry news, and design tips straight to professional audio engineers and manufacturers who have the authority to make powerful purchasing decisions.
The Loudspeaker Industry Sourcebook is the most comprehensive collection of listings on loudspeaker material in the industry. Purchasers and decision makers refer to the guide for an entire year when making selections on drivers, finished systems, adhesives, domes, crossovers, voice coils, and everything in between.
© 2022 KCK Media Corp. All Rights Reserved.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|