![]() ![]() I think we can say goodbye to any innovation under the Pioneer name or Onkyo for that matter. Built around BirdDog’s custom NDI ® silicon chip and housed in an aircraft grade aluminium case, Studio NDI has been engineered from the ground up for real-world users. I've worked for a company that wasn't doing well and they decided to sell out to one of these types of companies with promises of huge investment and reinvigorating the brand and more R&D, but it was just all motivation rubbish and PR, and the company was further divided up, sold on and what remained was run down and never given any change at all, it was depressing for everyone working there. Studio NDI is the world’s flagship NDI ® Encoder and Decoder. This is a addon that implements the emulation of the C64's SID chip (MOS 6581) and CPU (6510) by. If you look at their website it's all geared for investors and their patents. Sidplay Audio Decoder Sound Interface Device (SID) is a format that houses Commodore 64 and 128 music. Voxx doesn't strike me as a company interested in products or innovation, they have too many brands, they just seem to be one of those companies that just keep buying up the dregs when they can get a bargain, and it's more of a portfolio of audio related brands and patents they are growing in the hope they don't have to do very much for that portfolio to just grow by itself on the back of general market increases. Keep the speaker channel map and volume readouts on the default on screen display, as they are very useful information as well.Ĭurrently defaults the on screen display to Input. Leave the input displayed by default, but in the AVR setup home screen or in the on screen display menu, give the enthusiasts the option to toggle the audio codec/format as the default on screen display display. If Pioneer/Onkyo/Integra made this change due to some users wanting the input to be displayed by default, then that is fine. We would much rather have the audio codec/format displayed instead. We already know what input the AVR should be on because we just pressed the button to get there or we turned the system on and we hear the correct audio output. In multiple enthusiast forums and community discussions, this change has not been received well by a large number of people since it has taken away our ability to quickly see what audio codec/format is in use. This was always helpful as you could do a quick glance over to the AVR and see what codec was being played to make sure that you were getting the bet sound possible with any given content.Ī few AVR generations ago, Pioneer/Onkyo/Integra switched the default on screen display to show what input is currently selected. ![]() Examples of this where Dolby Digital, Dolby Digital Plus, Dolby TrueHD, Dolby Atmos, DTS, DTS:MA, etc. ![]() Through the home theater years going back quite a while, most of the AVR brands defaulted the on screen display to display the current audio codec/format in use. ![]()
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