In the 1990s in Sweden a university research project blending professors and PhD students began looking to digital signal processing to address sonic degradation – the distortions added to an audio system by the equipment and especially the room itself. The thinking was: if you can measure these distortions and remove them using acoustic processing, you quickly and easily improve the sound of a system without having to resort to equipment upgrades or inconvenient room treatments.
The fruits of this scholastic endeavour became Dirac, founded in 2001. The company took its name from English physicist/Nobel laureate Paul Dirac – a statement of intent given his theories on quantum mechanics even had Einstein scratching his head.
Ten years and counting
Dirac Live is the company's room correction software, first introduced on Datasat's RS20i AV processor in 2013, before being adopted by other high-end names such as Bryston, Lexicon and Storm Audio. It's also trickled down to mid-range brands like Arcam and NAD, and more recently Onkyo, Pioneer, Denon and Marantz.
Esta historia es de la edición Spring 2023 de Home Cinema Choice.
Comience su prueba gratuita de Magzter GOLD de 7 días para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9,000 revistas y periódicos.
Ya eres suscriptor ? Conectar
Esta historia es de la edición Spring 2023 de Home Cinema Choice.
Comience su prueba gratuita de Magzter GOLD de 7 días para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9,000 revistas y periódicos.
Ya eres suscriptor? Conectar
AV Avenger
You should think twice before accepting an invitation to play Resident Evil 4 with spatial audio in a haunted prison, warns Steve May
Catalogue classic Star Wars: Ep. VI - Return of the Jedi → Ultra HD Blu-ray, Disney
Forty years on from the movie's cinema release, Anton van Beek ponders what might have been if things had gone a little diff erently during the making of Return of the Jedi…
Feedback
Got an axe to grind? Need to comment on current tech? Want to share your knowledge with our readers? Team HCC is here to help
M&K Sound V12
TIME ON TEST: Three years REVIEWER: Steve Withers
Sony 'bar demands to be upgraded
This well-specified Dolby Atmos soundbar may have a mid-range price tag, but you'll soon want to spend more, cautions Steve May
Short and sweet
Marantz's compact AV receiver returns with a new look and boosted features – Jamie Biesemans slips it into his AV rig
Discreet delivery
A slim, stylish Scandinavian on-wall system impresses Mark Craven with its handling of the sweet stuff
One project, two rooms
Dan Sait reports on a custom install where a JVC PJ/ Atmos system is joined by a stylish media den
THE KING OF B RDA HOLLYWOOD
Three of his movies have taken over $2billon at the global box office, he's pioneered SFX and 3D technologies, and he's been to the very bottom of the Pacific Ocean. That's James Cameron by the way, not Anton van Beek
System selector!
Given three similar budgets, Mark Craven, Steve May and John Archer assemble three different AV setups focused on movies, streaming and gaming