Home audio






This home cinema satellite speaker provides high-quality audio when watching a concert on the flat screen television.


Home audio systems are audio electronics intended for home entertainment use, such as shelf stereos and surround sound receivers. Home audio generally does not include standard equipment such as built-in television speakers, but rather accessory equipment, which may be intended to enhance or replace standard equipment, such as standard TV speakers. Since surround sound receivers, which are primarily intended to enhance the reproduction of a movie, are the most popular home audio device, the primary field of home audio is home cinema.




Contents






  • 1 History


    • 1.1 Monaural


    • 1.2 Stereo


    • 1.3 Quadraphonic


    • 1.4 Surround sound




  • 2 Player equipment


  • 3 See also


  • 4 References


  • 5 Sources





History



Monaural


Home audio dates back before electricity, to Edison's phonograph, a monaural, low fidelity sound reproduction format. Early electrical phonographs as well as many other audio formats started out as monaural formats.



Stereo


Stereophonic sound was invented as a means of creating a sound stage, a more realistic reproduction of the sound as recorded live. Stereo sound usually refers to two-channel audio, but technically it refers to anything better than monaural audio, as the term literally means "solid sound."



Quadraphonic


Quadraphonic sound was a four-channel reproduction system, which is considered to be the origin of surround sound. It was recorded on phonograph, tape, and a few CDs, and required a quadraphonic player for playback. The format was released in 1970 and never gained much popularity.



Surround sound


Surround sound formats were used in movie theatres dating back to Disney's Fantasia, and became available to consumers in the late 80's. There are many formats of surround sound, differing based on the type of decoding processor they used. Dolby Pro Logic is one of the oldest processors, creating four channels, and Dolby Pro Logic IIx is one of the newest, creating seven or eight discrete channels. Competing technologies have complicated the purchasing decisions of consumers.[1]



Player equipment


HiFi equipment was available to consumers followed by boomboxes becoming popular in the 1980s due to availability of cheaper batteries.



See also


  • Home cinema


References





  1. ^ Downtime, Home Theater: Rival Sound Formats Mean Consumer Static Downtime By Lawrence B. Johnson March 5, 1998 Technology section New York Times https://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9C03E0DB1331F936A35750C0A96E958260




Sources


  • "Breaking the Sound Barrier" theage.com



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