Last year about this time, I was looking forward to CEDIA because I thought we might see an announcement from OPPO Digital about Blu-ray. (Sure enough, the BDP-83 showed up in ABT's booth as a static display.) This year, though, I have no particular interest in 3D HDTV so didn't know that I was going to pay much attention to CEDIA. Then something interesting crossed my path: an announcement from Atlantic Technology about a radical new take on speaker design. They're calling it
H-PAS . Based on this press release, they're going to demo a speaker at CEDIA that achieves 29Hz (-3dB) from a pair of 4.5" drivers in a 1.4ft^3 cabinet. Atlantic Technology plans to have their first H-PAS product on the market by the end of this year.
My curiosity is two-fold. First, it sounds pretty slick. After all, small speakers can be really convenient but normally involve a compromise in low-frequency punch. Second, the announcement includes several posts from Atlantic Tech's president, some guy named Peter Tribeman. That's the same Peter Tribemen who is president of Outlaw Audio. Clearly, while he and other other Outlaws have been pestering Sherwood to get the 997 platform ready, Peter's been finding other ways to keep himself busy. And since Atlantic Tech will be licensing the H-PAS system (which appears to be a design process incorporating several existing speaker design techniques, not any sort of "black box" electronics), dare we wonder if one of those licensees might end up being Outlaw?