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Audio specialist Blue promises true hi-fi quality wireless audio by the spring

[vimeo http://vimeo.com/83331745]

I take the view that wires are evil: anything that can be wireless should be wireless. My iOS devices sync via wifi, my keyboard and trackpad are Bluetooth, I have Wemo-controlled lighting, Tado-controlled heating and love cloud services.

But there’s one thing in my living-room that still relies on a wire: the connection between Mac and hifi system. I tried a Bluetooth link, and the quality just wasn’t there. I quickly reverted to the 3.5mm cable that runs around the skirting board.

Enter microphone specialist Blue. The company is teasing a true hifi-quality wireless connection between digital devices and headphones (and presumably hifi systems) under the name Mo-Fi.

Where digital music technology has advanced, headphones have lagged behind. We’ve seen dramatic advances in the quality and convenience of digital music, yet headphones –designed specifically to bring us closer to sound— have failed to bridge the gap from hi-fi to mobile. Headphones are the last barrier between us and the audio trapped in our digital devices. What if we liberated our music from overhyped lo-fi to true mobile hi-fi? We can. Blue is offering the first sneak peek at CES 2014.

We’ll bring you more details when we have them.

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Comments

  1. Gregory Raveen Ramsaran - 11 years ago

    Have you heard of or tried Sonos?
    I don’t have the Connect, but I do have the Bridge, Play:1 and 3 and they’re working wonderfully.

  2. Xac - 11 years ago

    I have tried yet still cannot see how it can get any better than Apple’s own AirPlay – which has been streaming high fidelity, lossless audio over wifi to optical and analog receivers since 2005, all while even matching the time delay between multiple devices at once. (Unless your Apple TV has to run through a built-in DAC in your television’s HDMI, that is.)

    Perhaps I’m missing something, and someone here can proselytize me to appreciate these expensive and seemingly unnecessary, third-party solutions. Any takers?

    • Xac - 11 years ago

      …Okay, obviously besides the headphones bit, which I inconveniently glossed over.

Author

Avatar for Ben Lovejoy Ben Lovejoy

Ben Lovejoy is a British technology writer and EU Editor for 9to5Mac. He’s known for his op-eds and diary pieces, exploring his experience of Apple products over time, for a more rounded review. He also writes fiction, with two technothriller novels, a couple of SF shorts and a rom-com!


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