01/10/2009, 2:35pm, EST
Saturday, January 10thfrom: www.electronista.com
Sony shows bass-heavy earphones, PC speakers
All of the MDR-XB devices ship in February and come at prices of $50, $80 and $130 for the over-ear models while the in-ear examples sell for $40 and $60.
A handful of PC speakers has been unveiled at the same time. The SRS-Z50 at $50 is the starter model and offers basic two-channel sound; the SRS-Z100 adds three discrete speakers per channel for $100; the SRS-D25 moves to a stylized 2.1-channel setup for $70; and the SRS-DF30 ($200) adds a built-in FM radio. All of the computer speakers arrive in March.

MDR-XB40EX

SRS-Z100

SRS-D25

SRS-DF30

Filed under: iPod, iPhone, peripherals, audio
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FI-DEL-I-TY
I really f-ing object to the idea that speakers/headphones should be tailored to "suit" specific music types. Sound reproduction should be about accurate reproduction of the recording, as the sound engineer intended. The sound engineer has decided how much bass the music should have. Good headphones or speakers can reproduce that accurately. There is no need to "improve" on the recording.
For the same reason I disapprove of equalization for music type. An EQ should only be used to correct flaws in the speaker and listening environment.
A good pair of headphones should reproduce classical 100% as accurately as rap or heavy metal.
The emphasis on "bass boosting" will result in engineers adjusting for that effect, which will further degrade accurate reproduction.