Neil Young Pono slated for 2014 release

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Anyway, the Meridian/Neil Young collaboration portable player should see light of day in 2014. If this Facebook posting is on track, it's time to lube up.

Hearing PONO for the first time is like that first blast of daylight when you leave a movie theater on a sun-filled day. It takes you a second to adjust. Then you enter a bright reality, of wonderfully rendered detail.

Either it is going to sound crap (and therefore will require you to adjust) or it will sound good (and you will be able to lay off the lube). Whichever it turns out to be, I think it is safe to say that portable audiophile is on the rise. 

 

イヤホンGeek's XBA-H3/H2/H1 hand's on

Earphone Geek is a pretty well-known audio blogger here in Japan. Rightly, he got a short but good ear on Sony's new earphones. Here are a few notes from his review
 
XBA-H3 Highlights: ohmage

  • Wide sound stage
  •  Good high frequency extension
  • Powerful, well-resolved 30-50Hz detail
  • Great sound balance for a hybrid dynamic / balanced earphone

XBA-H3 Highlights: porridge

  • Vocals should step out further

NOTE: MMCX connection
  

XBA-H2 Highlights: porridge

  • Balance is poor
  • Same confused high range as EX1000
  • Cloudy high range of Sony's previous XBA series
  • Too much bass for such confused high range

NOTE I: Sound that mimics the worst of the EX1000 and the worst of the previous XBA series.
NOTE II: Earphone geek notes NO good points.
 

XBA-H1 Highlights: ohmage

  • High range is a clear improvement to the cloudy presentation of the previous XBA series
  • High range still not perfect; some defects from the XBA series remain
  • Beautiful bass reproduction
  • Most mature-sounding of the new H series

NOTE: Among the new, bass-blessed H series, this model has the best cost/performance ratio.

Again, Earphone Geek's review is here.

XBA-H3/H2/H1, PHA-2: Sony are on a portable audio roll!

Fujiya-Avic released the details and pre-order info for three new large-driver hybrid earphones: XBA-H3/H2/H1 as well as the new PHA-2 portable headphone amp/DAC which will support 24/192 PCM and 2,8/5,6MHz DSD. Yes, DSD audio.  
 
Sony EU have more details about the new XBA series. 
Here is the PHA-2's page.

PHA-2 should retail for 55.000¥. Its predecessor, the PHA-1, bookmarked the entry of mainstream audio companies into a market that, largely, has been controlled by a number of feisty boutique manufacturers. I was ecstatic about the PHA-1. If Sony has addressed the so-so performance with low-Ω earphones, the PHA-2 should kill its target market. 

PHA-2: 55.000¥

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XBA-H3: 16mm dynamic driver + 2-way balanced armature unit
37.000¥

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XBA-H2: 13,5mm dynamic driver + single balanced armature unit
26.000¥

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XBA-H1: 9mm dynamic driver + single balanced armature unit
16.000¥

This new line of portable products will debut and be ready for purchase in time for Fujiya-Avic's 2013 Fall Headphone Festival. 

 Sony is back. 

Hi-Res lives in Cypher Labs AlgoRythm Solo -dB/Android portable setups

Cypher Labs' amazing CLAS -dB can push the lethal dose -- 192.000 -- of hurts into twenty four bits if you plug it into a computer. For the tech literate out there, this is one of the recipes for hi-res audio. (It is also bleeding, awkward sentence structure.) 

However, You'll need a recent Android device with capability for USB hosting, an SD card, a minimum screen size, and the USB Audio Recorder app. Cypher Labs' main man, David Maudlin, has detailed the procedure on his blog.