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Best in Show at AXPONA 2026: Must Hear High-End Audio

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AXPONA 2026 didn’t feel like a show. It felt like a controlled demolition of your free time.

More than 750 brands, thousands of products, and three days that were not nearly enough. We had six people on the ground and still missed entire floors, rooms, and systems that probably deserved attention. That is not poor planning. That is scale. At this point, you could make a serious argument that AXPONA needs another two days just to keep it honest.

Two things hit hard the minute you started opening doors.

First, the money. Six figure systems were not rare. They were the baseline in a lot of rooms. In fact, there were more systems pushing past $200,000 than there were setups under $50,000. Let that sink in for a second. And yes, there were systems that were seven figures or damn close to it, because apparently restraint did not get an invite this year. The industry needs to have a conversation with itself because the next generation is not spending that kind of money anytime soon.

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Second, despite all that excess, there were still real finds. We came across genuinely impressive gear under $5,000. The kind of products that do not require a second mortgage or a forgiving spouse. They did not dominate the floor, but they mattered, and we made sure to track them down.

2026 is not lacking for ambition. From Europe to Asia to North America, the level of engineering and execution across two channel and personal audio is on another level right now. Whether you are chasing a reference system or a killer headphone rig, the options have never been deeper or more expensive.

ATC EL50 Anniversary Edition 

ATC EL50 Anniversary Active Speakers at AXPONA 2026

The ATC EL50 Anniversary makes its case quickly. At $99,999, this isn’t a passive tower that needs help. It’s a fully active three-way system where the amplification, crossover, and drivers are designed to work as one. The crossover is handled at line level using a fourth-order Linkwitz-Riley design at 380Hz and 3.5kHz, which gives ATC tighter control over each driver than a traditional passive network. Each driver has its own dedicated Class A/B MOSFET amplification channel, 200 watts for bass, 100 watts for midrange, and 50 watts for the tweeter, all running fanless with convection cooling. ATC also builds its own drivers in-house, which has been central to its design philosophy for decades. On paper, it covers 32Hz to 25kHz (-6dB), with very low distortion, tight pair matching, and enough output to handle large rooms without strain.

What stood out to me was how it behaved in a room that should not have worked. The space was small, and logic says a speaker like this should overload it. It didn’t. The bass was controlled, evenly distributed, and quick. No bloom, no sense of excess. The presentation had real scale and presence without turning aggressive. It felt composed, which is not something I say often about large systems in hotel rooms. Placement flexibility is always relative, but this demo suggests the EL50 is more forgiving than its size would imply.

I don’t usually get worked up over six-figure speakers. Reality tends to intervene. But this one earns the attention. The U.S. pricing will spark arguments, and not all of them will be wrong. Still, if you’ve been telling yourself that everything above $20K is just diminishing returns and marketing fluff, this is the kind of system that quietly ruins that narrative. Fair warning.

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Devore Fidelity Orangutang O/Reference

DeVore Fidelity Orangutan O/Reference Loudspeaker System at AXPONA 2026

The DeVore Fidelity Orangutan O/Reference didn’t try to win AXPONA the usual way. John DeVore wasn’t chasing spectacle. In a show full of six-figure systems, this room didn’t lean on volume or flash. It just played music with weight, tone, and a sense of control that held up past the first few minutes. That alone separates it from a lot of rooms that impress quickly and then start to fall apart.

It’s a four-piece system with clear roles. The A module handles the main range with a 10-inch paper cone woofer built around an AlNiCo motor, copper Faraday rings, and a bronze phase plug. Above that, a silk dome tweeter and super tweeter are horn loaded in machined bronze for sensitivity and control without pushing the top end. The B module takes care of the low end with an 11-inch aluminum woofer and passive radiator, powered by a 700-watt Class D amplifier with analog controls for crossover, phase, and EQ. The key is integration. The bass section takes its signal from the same amplifier driving the A module, so it follows the same tonal structure instead of acting like a separate system.

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What I heard was consistent from top to bottom. Piano had weight. Voices carried texture without being pushed forward. Nothing felt exaggerated or dissected. It didn’t behave like a microscope. It behaved like a system that understands how music is supposed to move in a room. And here’s where it gets uncomfortable. If you’re sitting there thinking the jump from this to a $500K or $1M system is going to unlock some hidden level of truth, it’s probably not. At that point, you’re not chasing better sound. You’re negotiating with your ego.

Quad ESL 2912X

QUAD ESL 2912X Electrostatic Speaker System at AXPONA 2026

The QUAD ESL 2912X, shown by MoFi Distribution at AXPONA 2026, does something most electrostatics don’t bother trying. It keeps the clarity and speed intact, but adds just enough weight to make it feel like music instead of a lab demo. At $18,000, it’s a long way from the original QUAD panels in both price and expectation, but the core idea is still there. Strip away the noise and let the signal speak. The difference is that here, it doesn’t leave everything hanging in midair. There’s a sense of physical presence that grounds it without turning it into something it’s not.

They still look like QUAD electrostatics. Tall panels, about 58 inches, no attempt to hide what they are. In the room, they didn’t feel as imposing as that size suggests. The new all-black finish helps keep them visually restrained, and more importantly, they didn’t dominate the space sonically. What I heard was scale. Not from cabinet volume, but from how the speaker projects and organizes sound. There was width, height, and depth, but it never felt forced.

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That’s what separates this from a lot of the oversized systems at the show. Bigger cabinets, bigger claims, and a lot of effort spent trying to prove something. The 2912X doesn’t play that game. It delivers presence without pushing, and connection without excess. If you think you need something twice the size and five times the price to get closer to the music, you might want to spend some time in front of these first. It won’t flatter your assumptions, but it might save you a lot of money.

Dynaudio Legend

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The Dynaudio Legend felt like one of the more important “real world” debuts at AXPONA 2026. In a show dominated by systems that cost more than most homes, this was one of the few new speakers that landed in a price range people might actually stretch for. Built in Denmark with hand-finished rosewood veneer and Jatoba hardwood accents, the Legend looks far better in person than the photos suggest. Online complaints about the finish miss the point. Up close, the fit and texture are exactly what you expect at this level.

It’s a compact two-way with a 28mm Esotar 3 tweeter and a 15cm MSP mid/bass driver, crossed at 3.5kHz. On paper, the 60Hz low-end spec and 83dB sensitivity don’t scream “room filler,” but that’s not how it played out. In the room, with proper amplification, I heard real bass presence. Not subwoofer territory, but far from the “nothing below 70Hz” takes floating around online. The midrange leans slightly warm but stays controlled, with vocals and instruments carrying proper weight. Up top, the Esotar 3 does what it always does. Open, extended, detailed, and clean without turning sharp. The overall presentation had more scale than I expected from a speaker this size, with a soundstage that pushed well beyond the cabinets.

Driven by a MOON by Simaudio network amplifier, the pairing made sense. These need current, and they reward it. For smaller rooms, offices, or a serious nearfield setup, this is one of the more complete packages I heard. If we’re talking about the “best” new affordable loudspeaker at the show, this is right there alongside Paradigm’s latest. And for the forum crowd losing their minds over the price, what exactly were you expecting, $2,500? That ship sailed a long time ago. These are the speakers I’m most likely to buy in 2026. That should tell you everything.

Western Acoustics Type 2.1

Western Acoustics Type 2.1 Bookshelf Speakers at AXPONA 2026

The Western Acoustics Type 2.1 didn’t look like a typical hi-fi play, and that was the point. New brand, simple Baltic birch cabinet, plywood stand, maple horn up front. Nothing about it screamed for attention. At $6,000 per pair, it sat in a system that wasn’t exactly modest either, anchored by an Accuphase integrated, a Technics turntable with a Dynavector moving coil, and a Nagra phono stage. It would have been easy for the speakers to get lost in that chain. They didn’t.

What I heard was unforced. No hype, no exaggerated bass, no artificial width. Just a stable, well-organized presentation that held together when things got busy. The combination of the Purifi PTT6.5X04 woofer and the FaitalPRO compression driver on a wide 110° waveguide explained a lot of that. Imaging was solid beyond a single seat, and the tonal balance stayed consistent as you moved around. The spec sheet lines up with what I heard. Real low-end reach into the high 30s, enough output to scale without strain, and a 4-ohm load that makes it clear these want proper amplification.

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They’re also honest about placement. Rear-ported means you give them some room or you deal with it. Six inches or more off the back wall on a credenza would be a good starting point. These aren’t lifestyle speakers trying to fake credibility. They’re also not trying to be traditional hi-fi jewelry. This feels like a brand figuring out its identity in real time, and starting from the right place. If this is the baseline, Western Acoustics is worth keeping an eye on.

Amphion Argon7LX

Amphion Stereo System AXPONA 2026

The Amphion Argon7LX doesn’t try to win you over with drama. It’s a straightforward design on paper. Two-way, dual 6.5-inch aluminum woofers, a 1-inch titanium tweeter, and a passive radiator handling the low end. What Amphion Loudspeakers brings is execution. Clean, controlled, and consistent. With expanded U.S. distribution through Playback Distribution, these aren’t a niche import anymore, and that matters.

In the room, the presentation leaned toward precision rather than spectacle. Imaging was stable, placement stayed locked in, and nothing shifted when the material got dense. The bass was controlled, but more importantly, it connected properly with the midrange and top end. That sense of cohesion is what stood out. It didn’t feel like drivers handing things off to each other. It felt like a single system doing its job without drawing attention to itself.

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On the practical side, it’s a 4-ohm load with 91dB sensitivity, so it’s not difficult to drive, but it benefits from an amplifier with real current. Amphion’s 50 to 300 watt recommendation feels realistic. The rated 28Hz to 55kHz extension is more than enough for full-range listening in most rooms without a sub. No tricks here. Just a speaker that focuses on getting the fundamentals right. If you’re looking for fireworks, look elsewhere. If you want something that stays composed and gets out of the way, this is exactly that.

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Michell Audio Gyro

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The Michell Gyro has always been one of the more recognizable designs in analog. This new version doesn’t mess with that identity, but underneath, almost everything has been reworked. The acrylic base is gone, replaced by a solid aluminium slab, and the main chassis moves to a precision-machined 19mm aluminium tooling plate. It’s stiffer, better damped, and clearly aimed at reducing resonance. Brass weights are embedded for balance and vibration control, foam inserts manage reflections around the tonearm mount, and the whole structure sits on Sorbothane isolation feet. The motor remains freestanding, connected only by the belt, with both the motor and PSU housed in machined aluminium enclosures to limit interference. Add in the inverted bearing with improved lubrication, re-tuned suspension, and updated tonearm coupling, and it’s clear Michell didn’t just tweak this. They rebuilt it.

Visually, it still looks like a Gyro, but more substantial. More serious. From an industrial design standpoint, it’s hard to argue with. It was the anchor of the Opera/Unison Research system at the show and did exactly what it needed to do. Stable, quiet, and controlled, without drawing attention to itself. That’s the job. It let the rest of the system speak.

The bigger conversation is price. At $8,999 without a tonearm and $10,998 with the TA2, cartridge extra, this is a very different proposition than older Gyros. Michell is clearly aiming at the same buyers looking at VPI Industries, Clearaudio, Thorens, and Kuzma. Whether it earns that spot comes down to performance, and that’s not something a show floor can fully answer. It looks the part. It’s built like it belongs. But at this price, it has to prove it over time. 

Opera Callas Diva Edizione Speciale

Opera Callas Diva Special Edition Loudspeakers at AXPONA 2026

The Opera Callas Diva Special Edition leans into what Italian brands tend to do well. Materials, finish, and a clear voicing philosophy that favors tone and texture over clinical precision. At $13,999, this is a substantial, reflex-loaded floorstander with a rear-firing dipole element. Built with hand-crafted wood cabinetry and leather-clad baffles, it feels more like something out of an atelier than a factory. Distributed in the U.S. by Fidelity Imports, it’s also physically serious at 65 kg per speaker. Plan accordingly. This is not a solo lift unless you enjoy bad decisions.

The design combines a forward-facing array with a rear dipole tweeter system. Up front, there’s an 8-inch long-throw woofer, a 7-inch midrange with a polypropylene cone and phase plug, and a 1-inch Scan-Speak 9700 tweeter run without ferrofluid and using a double decompression chamber. Around back, dual 1-inch tweeters add ambient high-frequency energy. The crossover uses 12 dB per octave slopes at roughly 200 Hz and 2 kHz, which points to a focus on phase coherence rather than aggressive filtering. On paper, it runs 30 Hz to 25 kHz with 90 dB sensitivity and a 4-ohm load, so it’s reasonably friendly but still wants an amplifier with some stability and current.

In the room, the presentation followed that philosophy. Not neutral in the strict sense, but balanced in a way that emphasizes flow and texture. The rear array added space without turning things diffuse, and the timing stayed intact. It didn’t shout to get your attention, which is the whole point. If you’re looking for something analytical, this isn’t it. If you want a speaker that leans into musicality without losing control, it makes a strong case.

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Focal Mu-so Hekla

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The Focal Mu‑so Hekla doesn’t pretend to be a soundbar, even if it lives in the same spot. At $3,600, it’s a single-box system built around Naim Audio’s Pulse platform, with Focal’s ADAPT room correction handling setup. Inside is a 15-driver array firing forward, sideways, and upward, designed to handle both stereo and Dolby Atmos without relying on external speakers. Setup is simple. No sweeps, no tones. You enter room dimensions in the app, and the system adjusts from there.

In use, it works. Atmos material has real width and height, and it doesn’t collapse into a front-heavy presentation. There’s enough spatial information that you start second-guessing where the sound is coming from. Bass extension is stronger than expected for the size, reaching into the low 30 Hz range, and it stays controlled. The overall presentation is composed. Effects move when they should, not because the system is trying to show off. Imaging holds together, and nothing drifts out of place.

Build quality is in line with the price. Brushed and bead-blasted aluminum, solid fit and finish, nothing flashy for the sake of it. It replaces a rack of gear, but the intent is performance, not convenience. It’s not cheap, and it doesn’t try to be. But it delivers in a way most soundbars don’t, which is probably the bigger point.

Advance Paris A-i190

Advance Pari Nova Integrated Amplifier at AXPONA 2026

The Advance Paris NOVA A-i190 gets the balance right between design and function. Metal, glass, and VU meters that feel intentional and for the type of listener who favors a vintage look. The optional rotary remote is overbuilt in the best way. Heavy, solid, and clearly designed to last.

Inside, it’s a hybrid design with an ECC81 tube stage feeding a Class A/B output section. The ESS9017 DAC runs in Quad mode, backed by a 4-channel DSP handling EQ and up to dual subwoofer integration with proper crossover control. Connectivity is complete. HDMI eARC, USB with DSD, multiple digital inputs, five RCA inputs, MM phono, pre-outs, and dual sub outputs. Add the optional A-NTC streaming or A-BTC Bluetooth modules and you get full network audio or bi-directional wireless without adding boxes.

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In the room, it sounded composed. Slight warmth through the midrange, open top end, and controlled low end with real weight. More importantly, it never felt pushed. There’s enough headroom here to run a serious system without stress.

Ruark Audio Talisman R

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The Ruark Audio Talisman R was one of the more surprising debuts at AXPONA 2026. It’s Ruark’s first floorstander in about 20 years, and if pricing holds under $2,000 when it lands in the U.S. through Fidelity Imports, it’s going to get a lot of attention. At roughly 85 cm tall (about 33.5 inches), it’s compact for a floorstander, and details were limited. No full driver breakdown yet, with more expected when it shows in Vienna. It didn’t feel like a prototype, though. Fit, finish, and overall presentation looked ready.

In the room, driven by the Ruark R610, it came across bold, crisp, and articulate. The soundstage was wider than expected, especially with electronic material, and it held together well. This isn’t a laid-back tuning. It has some energy, and it benefits from proper amplification. Pair it with something in the $1,000 to $2,500 range with decent current and you’ll be in the right zone.

I wanted a pair within a few minutes, which usually tells me enough. Some of the older crowd didn’t love the music choice. That’s their problem. Ruark isn’t playing it safe here, and that’s a good thing. If this is where they’re heading, they’re back in the conversation. Just don’t expect them to wait politely for permission.

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The Metaxas & Sins Tourbillon T‑RX MK.II is not subtle. At $52,000, it doesn’t try to be. This is an evolution of the original Tourbillon, with a redesigned output stage derived from the flagship Papillon studio deck and upgraded silver capacitors in both the output and EQ sections. Distributed by Reel Sound Distribution, it sits firmly in the “no compromises” corner of analog sources. The build reflects that. Dense, over-engineered, and visually unlike anything else at the show or anywhere this side of Coruscant.

I’ve spent time with the earlier version at Jeff Garshon’s place, so this wasn’t my first exposure. Jeff may look like he just discovered tape last week, but he’s been deep into this for decades. That system, running through Metaxas amplification and MartinLogan electrostatics, made a strong case for what high-end reel-to-reel can do when everything is aligned. The MK.II builds on that. It’s still built like a tank, still unapologetically mechanical, and still one of the most convincing analog sources I’ve heard.

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The room at AXPONA reflected that interest. Tape fans were stacked at the front like it was an open house at Willy Wonka’s factory, minus the chaos. And honestly, it makes sense. This isn’t just about playback. It’s about presence. Compared to something like the Innuos Nazaré, which is a very well-engineered digital box, the Tourbillon T‑RX MK.II is something you interact with. You don’t just listen to it. You end up staring at it.

At AXPONA, it was paired with the Metaxas Emperor Omni, a full-range electrostatic design that looks as unconventional as the deck itself and carries a $159,000 price tag. The pairing made the intent clear. This is a system built to push analog playback to its limits, both in presentation and execution.

REL S/550

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REL’s subwoofer demo was one of the more interesting rooms at AXPONA, and not for the usual reasons. Most sub demos chase impact. More slam, more pressure, more low-end theatrics. REL went in a different direction. Their focus was height. Not treble. Not volume. The vertical scale of the presentation and how much space the music occupies in the room.

The system didn’t exactly ease you into it. Wilson Audio WATT/Puppy speakers, a Dan D’Agostino Momentum MxV Integrated Amplifier, and a WADAX Studio Player put the room well past $200K before adding subs. REL added six REL S/550 units, about $20K more, stacked three per side.

REL kept the demo simple. Subs on, subs off. With the subs off, the soundstage didn’t just lose bass. It shrank. The presentation flattened and lost height. Turn them back on and the room opened up again. Vocals stood taller. Instruments had more air above them. It sounded bigger, not louder.

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The room wasn’t large, which made the setup more surprising. Six subs in that space should have been too much. It wasn’t. The S/550s blended cleanly with the speakers and never drew attention to themselves. No bloat, no excess, no sense they were taking over.

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Improving a system at this level is not easy. In this case, REL didn’t change the character. They extended it. And once you hear what happens when the subs go off, it’s hard to ignore.

VPE Elevon

vpe-elevon-axpona-2026

The VPE Elevon is the first active speaker from VPE Electrodynamics, a brand I’ve mostly associated with subwoofers. At $15,000 per pair, the slim floorstander didn’t stand out visually in a crowded show, but the engineering behind it is worth noting. It’s a three-way collaboration between VPE, SpeakerPower, and Orchard Audio.

Each speaker has 1,000 watts of built-in amplification. The driver layout uses a 7.5-inch SB Acoustics Satori coaxial driver and a 9.5-inch Satori woofer that fires downward through a front slot. The cabinet can also be configured as a dipole with removable side panels, but I didn’t hear that version.

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In the room, the presentation was consistent and controlled. Anette Askvik’s “Liberty” can expose issues with balance and detail. The Elevon kept the vocal centered, with good separation and stable imaging. Low-level detail was there without being pushed forward.

These also managed to disappear in the room, which isn’t easily done. The soundstage extended beyond the cabinets with reasonable depth and width, and nothing felt exaggerated or disconnected. It’s a straightforward execution. The Elevon doesn’t lean on a specific sonic signature. It focuses on control, balance, and integration, and that came through in this setup.

Legacy Audio Talos

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The Legacy Audio Talos ($65K-$75K/pair ) doesn’t try to hide what it is. My first impression was simple. Big, yet the Valor are even bigger. At nearly 4.5 feet tall and close to 250 pounds each, Talos are not speakers you casually reposition. The cabinets are well finished and the design is clean, but the scale dominates the room.

The driver array reflects that approach. Dual 12-inch woofers, dual AMT tweeters, a coaxially mounted 3-inch midrange, and dual 12-inch passive radiators, which are all powered by 3,000 watts of Class D amplification.

On paper, it reads like brute force. In the room, it didn’t come across that way.

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Listening, the presentation was controlled and balanced rather than aggressive. The internal DSP, built around a 56-bit processor with a two-stage room correction process, is clearly doing a lot of the work. Instead of pushing the room, the system seemed to adapt to it.

What stood out most to me was imaging. There was a clear sense of height, width, and depth, and it didn’t feel tied to the cabinets. At times, it was hard to pin the sound to the speakers themselves, which is not what I expected walking in. The Talos is physically imposing and technically complex, but the result isn’t overwhelming. It’s measured, controlled, tonally accurate, and focused on placing everything where it should be in the space.

Acora Acoustics MRC 5.2D

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The Acora Acoustics MRC 5.2D caught my attention for a simple reason. It didn’t look like everything else. After walking through room after room at AXPONA, you start to notice how many speakers rely on the same formula. MDF cabinets, wood veneer, some variation of black or walnut. It works, but it all starts to blend together. A few brands tried to shake that up with painted finishes and custom artwork. That might land with a younger crowd, but it’s not for me.

Acora goes in the opposite direction. Stone. Granite and marble cabinets, machined and polished into something that looks more like sculpture than typical hi-fi gear. Every pair is cut from natural material, so no two are exactly the same. Even sitting idle, they draw attention. And they sound as gorgeous as they look!

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What stood out to me is that the design isn’t just visual. Working with stone at this level is not trivial, and it shows in the execution. The cabinets feel solid and inert, which translates into a clean and controlled presentation in the room. No obvious cabinet coloration, no added resonance.

Even at $58,000 per pair the MRC 5.2D sit near the less expensive end of the Acora line which stretches up to $318,000 per pair for their flagship VRC in granite. Having heard both at different shows over the years, the MRC 5.2D gets dangerously close to the VRC’s flagship level performance, which actually makes them seem more accessible than expected.

Prodigio Audio WR2

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The Prodigio Audio (formerly Popori Acoustics) room stood out because the large Hungarian electrostatic/ribbon speakers (model WR2, $35K/pair) were paired with one of the more interesting technologies at the show. The pyramid placed between the roughly 5-foot-tall speakers housed the BACCH 3D system, and it fundamentally changed how the system presented sound.

This is very much a one-seat experience. Even sitting just off center, the effect drops off quickly. In the sweet spot, though, it’s unlike anything else I heard at the show. Sounds didn’t just extend beyond the speakers, they moved around the room in a way that felt deliberate and trackable. At one point, I heard a sound begin behind me to the left and travel forward across the room to the right. That’s not typical stereo imaging.

The BACCH 3D system is doing the heavy lifting here, creating a level of spatial control that goes well beyond traditional two-channel playback. Calling it a new dimension isn’t far off, but it’s also highly dependent on positioning and setup.

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Without BACCH 3D engaged, the speakers stood on their own as a strong electrostatic design. I heard good bass extension for the type, along with clean mids and treble. There’s enough here for those who want a more conventional listening experience, but the real story is what happens when the BACCH system is in play.

In a home theater context, this kind of spatial manipulation could open up some interesting possibilities, assuming the setup and seating are dialed in correctly.

Noble Kronos IEM

Noble Kronos IEM with Cable

The Noble Audio Kronos took Best in Show for wired in-ears, and it wasn’t hard to see why. It combines design and engineering in a way that stands out even at a show like AXPONA.

The design starts with the titanium Damascus faceplates. They look striking, but they’re also difficult to execute. Working with titanium is already challenging, and applying a Damascus-style process adds another layer of complexity. It’s not just for show. It reflects a level of craftsmanship that most brands don’t attempt. The inner shells are also milled from titanium, which keeps the structure rigid without adding unnecessary weight.

Inside, the layout is just as ambitious. Each earpiece uses a multi-driver configuration that includes dynamic drivers for bass and sub-bass, balanced armatures for mids and highs, electrostatic drivers for the upper frequencies, and a bone conduction driver for added resonance. Getting that many driver types to work together in a small enclosure is not trivial, and the crossover design has to do a lot of work to keep things coherent.

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What I heard was a detailed and controlled presentation that didn’t fall apart under that complexity. There’s a reason John Moulton has the “Wizard” nickname. The Kronos doesn’t rely on one aspect to stand out. It’s the combination of execution, materials, and tuning that makes it work.

T10 Bespoke

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The Ear Micro Bespoke T10 will strike some people as expensive audio jewelry. I get that reaction, but it misses the point. What I heard and saw felt more like an early version of where wearable audio is going.

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Bear Clark calls them ear-computers, not earphones, and that framing makes more sense once you understand the intent. The T10 isn’t just about playback. It’s built around a sensor suite and input methods that go beyond taps on a shell. The idea is subtle, low-visibility control. Small physical cues, like jaw or head movement, can be used to interact with the system. Some of the functionality is still in development, but the direction is clear.

In practice, that opens up use cases that current in-ears don’t address well. Discreet notifications, the ability to check or respond without pulling out a phone, or triggering actions without obvious gestures. There are also broader safety and accessibility angles. Quiet ways to signal for help or control connected devices without drawing attention. None of this is fully realized yet, but the foundation is there.

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That’s why it stood out to me for innovation. The ceiling is defined more by software and ecosystem than by the hardware itself. As wearable tech continues to move toward connected, body-area systems, devices like this start to make more sense as part of that network.

It also works as an in-ear. The sound quality was solid, and the ability to tailor tuning to the user adds practical value beyond the concept. The design leans premium, and the price will limit the audience, but this feels less like a finished product and more like a preview of what could be standard down the line.

Jones & Ceretta Troubadour

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Andrew Jones has a long and storied history of loudspeaker design. From a pair of bookshelf speakers at Pioneer that sold for $129.99/pair to the flagship TAD tower speakers, the Reference One at $80,000/pair, Jones’ designs have run the gamut of price ranges and form factors, but all have offered exceptional sound quality. At Axpona, Jones announced his latest project – the Troubadour ($33,900/pair) – a floorstander with impressive dynamic range and extended frequency response. He also launched a new company, Jones and Cerutta, to make and sell the speakers. 

The Troubadour uses an innovative concentric field coil driver architecture and a unique cabinet configuration which leads to precise imaging, extended bass and high sensitivity (95 dB @1W/1m)). As we have seen in Jones’ work at both KEF and ELAC, the designer favors concentric (coaxial) two-way drivers for midrange and treble for their time alignment, which allows the two speaker drivers to act as a single point source, thereby improving imaging. And by using an innovative powered field coil design, instead of a permanent magnet, the speaker is able to reach higher magnetic flux densities, reducing hysteresis of the driver which then leads to lower distortion as well as extremely high efficiency. You can power these bad boys with a single-ended tube amp, if that’s your cup of tea. 

Jones explained the tech and demonstrated the new speakers to endless standing room only crowds at Axpona. The Troubadours offered precise imaging with a wide and deep soundstage, with exceptional dynamic range. And while they sell for nearly $34,000, they offer meticulous fit and finish and come with a free pair of floorstands to aim the drivers at the usual listening position. If there is a “rock star” among speaker designers, Andrew Jones is that guy, and the Troubadour will likely be a successful addition to his rich portfolio, built over 40+ years in the business.

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Aretai Contra 200F

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High-end speakers that look like plain black boxes sort of miss the point. If you’re going to charge upwards of $30,000/pair for speakers, you had better make sure they sound great, and look as good as they sound. Latvian speaker maker, Aretai, clearly understood the assignment as their Contra 200F tower speaker unites elegant cabinet design with impeccable sound.  

Featuring a three-way design and a tweeter waveguide that looks like a horn instrument, the Aretei throws a realistic soundstage and can reach all the way down to about 25 Hz. It’s also highly efficient at 96 dB (@1W/1m) allowing it to be driven by virtually any high quality amplifier, tube or solid state. We got to see (and hear) the Aretai 200F with both its white gloss tweeter module and a wood-veneered tweeter, which was unveiled at Axpona.

Aretai’s new US distributor DreamScapes A/V paired the Aretai speakers with US-based amplifier maker Benchmark. At the show, the Aretai Contra 200F loudspeakers were driven by two Benchmark AHB2 power amplifiers, paired with a Benchmark HPA4 pre-amp/headphone amp. Benchmark is headquartered in Syracuse, NY, not far from DreamScapes A/V’s showroom. 

It was clearly a successful pairing as the speakers presented a punchy and dynamic representation of everything from jazz to classical to EDM. And that 25 Hz bass extension made itself known, not just in your ears, but deep in your gut with visceral impact. 

Arendal 1610 Tower 8

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A small town in Norway houses a speaker company with big ambitions: to make some of the finest loudspeakers on the planet. And while our experience with the brand is admittedly fairly limited, they certainly made some of the best-sounding speakers we heard at Axpona 2026. Arendal is a direct to consumer company, now selling in the U.S. market to audiophiles who want something different from the traditional mainstream speaker brands. 

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The Arendal 1610 Tower 8 ($7,600/pair) is the company’s latest flagship tower loudspeaker, but not their largest. It features 3-way design with 1″ aluminum-magnesium tweeter and triple 8″ aluminum cone bass drivers. In the demos we heard at Axpona, these substantial speakers managed to virtually disappear, providing a deep soundstage with instruments and voices floating disembodied in three dimensional space. Micro and macro dynamics were excellent with fine details in piano, guitar and violin presented naturally, while also being able to reproduce the deep thunderous kick of a bass drum or tympani in a symphony orchestra.

The company offers other more affordable models, including the Bookshelf 8 ($3,600/pair), Slim 8 ($2,800/pair), and Center 8 ($2,100 each). While there are no showrooms in which you can audition the Arendal speakers, the company does offer free shipping and a full 60-day audition period with free return shipping in the unlikely event that you decide not to keep them. The company also offers a generous 10-year warranty on their products so you can feel comfortable in your investment. 

Paradigm Premier 820F V2

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Walking from million dollar room to million dollar room, with some speaker systems alone selling for high six figures, it’s easy to get jaded at Axpona. That’s why walking into Paradigm’s room was such a revelation. The company’s new Premier Series 820F v2 tower loudspeaker offered up tight extended bass, precise imaging, and effortless reproduction of male and female vocals as well as excellent dynamic range on some pretty demanding music tracks. And their price was among the lowest we saw at the show. These elegant-looking tower loudspeakers sell for just $1,299/each ($2,598/pair). That leaves room in the budget for a nice integrated amp or A/V receiver to drive them. 

The Premier Series feature trickle down technology from the company’s flagship Founder Series speakers which sell for up to $9,000/pair. This includes the company’s ALMAC (aluminum, ceramic, magnesium) concentric tweeter/midrange modules and ALMAG (aluminum magnesium) woofers. Company reps tell us the new towers can put out usable bass as low as 18 Hz, which is impressive for such an affordable speaker. If your needs are simpler (or your room is smaller), you can get into the Premier Series v2 starting at $798/pair for Premier 120B v2 bookshelf speaker. There are a total of six models in the new line-up including a new center channel speaker (Premier 620C v2) for $1,299, which features identical drivers to the 820F V2 tower but laid out differently for horizontal positioning. Home theater fans may want to check out the Premier 520LCR v2 (LCR Channel) which is priced at $899/each.

Paradigm’s Premier Series v2 speakers are expected to begin shipping in the United States in June, 2026. 

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Best Budget Subwoofer: SVS 3000 Micro R|Evolution

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It wouldn’t be an audio show without something new from SVS, and for Axpona the latest entry was the company’s 3000 Micro R|Evolution powered subwoofer. We first saw this compact little dynamo at CES 2026, but now the company has officially launched the production version. Housed in a compact cube, measuring just 11 inches on each side, with dual opposing 9-inch drivers, SVS says the 3000 Micro can extend to 20 Hz. And the list price is just $999. This makes it the most affordable sub in the SVS line to feature trickle down power and processing tech from the company’s much larger (and much more expensive) flagship subwoofers. 

SVS was showcasing the 3000 Micro with a pair of their smaller bookshelf speakers in the Ultra Evolution series, doing A/B comparisons with their flagship SVS Ultra Evolution Pinnacle tower speakers ($5,000/pair) to show just how close a bookshelf/subwoofer combo can come to a much larger, more expensive set of tower speakers for those with more limited space (and more limited budgets). 

Loewe Stellar OLED TVs

Loewe Stellar OLED TV 77-inch at AXPONAN 2026

I admit I have a bit of a soft spot for German TV maker Loewe as I owned one of their first HDTVs, a 38-inch 16:9 CRT TV which provided exceptional picture quality in its day (2002) and tipped the scales at over 200 pounds. With the demise of CRT and the rise of the flat panel, Loewe faded from the U.S. market, eventually filing for bankruptcy and insolvency. But in 2019, fresh investments brought the brand back from the brink with a revitalized operation, new factory in Germany and a whole new suite of products. Last year, the company announced their intention to return to the U.S market with both luxury TVs and headphones. 

Built using the latest OLED panels from LG Display, and assembled by hand in Germany, Loewe has introduced a full line of OLED TVs sized from 42 to 97 inches. The sets support Dolby Vision HDR and Dolby Atmos sound with self-emissive OLED pixels providing outstanding contrast, color saturation and black levels. But Loewe’s TVs are more than just boring black rectangles that hang on your wall. They are built to be visible from all sides and feature luxury touches like motorized rotating stands that can give you the best picture performance from anywhere in your room, an elegant perfectly balanced aluminum remote with intuitive operation, and unique chassis design touches like lava-based concrete back plates on their models up to 65 inches. If you want your TV to look as good when it’s off as it does when it’s on, then Loewe’s new Stellar OLED TV line is worth a look.

Best Home Theater Sound: Theory Audio 9.2.4 Home Theater

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As a CI (custom installation) brand, Theory Audio isn’t as well known as the standard consumer speaker brands, but they may be one of the best kept secrets of home theater and whole home audio. The company’s high-efficiency compression drivers are the standout feature of the lineup, delivering punchy, dynamic sound for both music and movies. The speakers are available in on-wall, in-wall, in-ceiling, and pendant designs. All models require the company’s Distributed Loudspeaker Controllers (DLCs), which provide power, EQ, and DSP to optimize performance.

We’d previously only seen and heard Theory Audio speakers at CEDIA and have been impressed with what we’ve heard. And now we know that the magic captured at CEDIA carries over to other environments as well, even in a tiny little hotel suite. Custom installation firm DreamScapes A/V installed a full 9.2.4-channel Theory Audio system that rocked the walls of the little hotel room suite they were installed in. Because drilling big holes in the walls and ceilings at a hotel is generally frowned upon, the company built a cage structure out of 2x4s to support all 13 speakers and tossed in a couple of powered subwoofers for good measure. 

Driven by a Kaleidescape Strato E 4K movie player and Mini Terra Prime SSD hard drive loaded up with a few dozen 4K movies in Dolby Vision and Dolby Atmos, the Theory Audio system sounded better than some premium movie theaters I’ve been in and superior to any other home theater speaker set-up we heard at the show.

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Credit also goes to Dreamscapes A/V’s installation and engineering team. They managed to get the system installed, calibrated, and optimized to a very high level with less than a day to work with. If that’s what they can do in a hotel room, it raises expectations for what’s possible in a properly set up home.

Weirdest Looking Speaker System That Also Sounded Great: Fourier Sound

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There were a whole lot of boring rectangular boxes at Axpona this year, but Fourier Sound’s Fourier Series 1 “Founders Edition” speaker system was anything but that. Featuring a tapering pyramid-like structure with horizontally mounted midrange drivers and front-firing tweeters, the Series 1 put out some of the most realistic sounding drum and percussion music I heard at the show, with outstanding dynamic punch and a wide expansive soundstage that filled the room. Vocals also came through cleanly and articulately in mellower singer/songwriter fare and the bass and synth notes of EDM tracks like “Alive” from Kx5/deadmau5 shook visitors to their core. 

The system includes two multi-driver tower loudspeakers as well as the Fourier Foundation Bass Modules, which feature 8 separate bass drivers, delivering 4,000 total watts of power to the subwoofers.

The Fourier Founders System is priced at approximately $50,000 USD for the entire set. We don’t normally grant “best in show” awards to prototype systems (the Fourier Series 1 system is not yet in general production), but we felt that this system’s unique looks, innovative design and exceptional performance earned an exception. We hope the company managed to get some interest at Axpona to get these beauties into the hands of diehard music-lovers looking for something different from the usual black boxes.

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Meta to cut 8,000 jobs to bankroll its AI ambitions

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The move reflects a broader pattern across major technology companies, where AI spending is rising even as headcount declines. Meta has projected record capital expenditures this year and announced several multibillion-dollar AI partnerships in recent months. Internally, employees have been encouraged to use AI agents in day-to-day work, including software…
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Authorities arrest special forces soldier who allegedly made $400K on Polymarket bet involving Maduro operation

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A special forces soldier involved in the operation that captured Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro has been indicted by the U.S. Justice Department. His alleged crime? Making numerous bets on the prediction market Polymarket that Maduro would be removed from power, for which he is said to have made upwards of $400,000.

Authorities claim Gannon Ken Van Dyke, who was involved in the “planning and execution” of Operation Absolute Resolve (the stratagem that toppled and captured the Venezuelan leader), made bets on Polymarket about whether the U.S. would deploy forces into Venezuela and remove Maduro from power.

Van Dyke was arrested on Thursday, CBS reports, citing a law enforcement source.

Federal officials say that Van Dyke’s wagers were informed by classified information he had access to as a result of being a government insider. The government notes that Van Dyke signed nondisclosure agreements prohibiting him from ever divulging, publishing, or revealing “by writing, words, conduct, or otherwise . . . any classified or sensitive information” related to the military operations he was involved with.

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In December, Van Dyke created a Polymarket account and began making wagers involving “Maduro- and Venezuela-related markets,” officials say. Between December 27, 2025 and January 26 of this year, he allegedly made 13 bets totaling some $33,034 in total on things like “U.S. Forces in Venezuela . . . by January 31, 2026” and “Maduro out by . . . January 31, 2026.” Officials say that, after collecting his winnings, Van Dyke also took steps to cover up his ties to the account that made the wagers.

Van Dyke faces a variety of charges, including violating the Commodity Exchange Act, wire fraud, and making an unlawful monetary transaction.

“Our men and women in uniform are trusted with classified information in order to accomplish their mission as safely and effectively as possible, and are prohibited from using this highly sensitive information for personal financial gain,” said Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche. “Widespread access to prediction markets is a relatively new phenomenon, but federal laws protecting national security information fully apply.”

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Prediction markets have inspired controversy ever since their launch. But over the past year, the sites have grown in prominence and influence, striking deals with media outlets and sports organizations while also seeing widespread use, including by public officials. Legislation is currently being mulled that would ban public officials from using nonpublic information to make bets on prediction sites.

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How This Former Roboticist’s Students Rebuilt ENIAC

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Tom Burick has always considered himself a builder. Over the years he’s designed robots, constructed a vintage teardrop trailer, and most recently, led a group of students in building a full-scale replica of a pivotal 1940s computer.

Burick is a technology instructor at PS Academy in Gilbert, Ariz., a middle and high school for students with autism and other specialized learning needs. At the start of the 2025–26 school year, he began a project with his students to build a full-scale replica of the Electronic Numerical Integrator and Computer, or ENIAC, for the 80th anniversary of the historic computer’s construction. ENIAC was one of the world’s first programmable electronic computers. When it was built, it was about one thousand times as fast as other machines.

Before becoming a teacher, Burick owned a robotics company for a decade in the 2000s. But when a financial downturn forced him to close the business, he turned to teaching. “I had so many amazing people help me when I was young [who] really gave me their time and resources, and really changed the trajectory of my life,” Burick says. “I thought I need to pay that forward.”

Becoming a Roboticist

As a young child in Latrobe, Pa., Burick watched the television show Lost in Space, which includes a robot character who protects the family. “He was the young boy’s best friend, and I was so captivated by that. I remember thinking to myself, I want that in my life. And that started that lifelong love affair with robotics and technology.”

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He started building toy robots out of anything he could find, and in junior high school, he began adding electronics. “By early high school, I was building full-fledged autonomous, microprocessor-controlled machines,” he says. At age 15, he built a 150-pound steel firefighting robot, for which he won awards from IEEE and other organizations.

Burick kept building robots and reached out for help from local colleges and universities. He first got in touch with a student at Carnegie Mellon University, who invited him to visit campus. “My parents drove me down the next weekend, and he gave me a tour of the robotics lab. I was mesmerized. He sent me home with college textbooks and piles of metal and gears and wires,” Burick says. He would read the textbook a page at a time, reading it again and again until he felt he had an understanding of it. Then, to help fill gaps in his understanding, he got in touch with a robotics instructor at Saint Vincent College, in his hometown of Latrobe, who let him sit in on classes. Each of these adults, he says, “helped change the trajectory of my life.”

Toward the end of high school, Burick realized that college wouldn’t be the right environment for him. “I was drawn to real-world problem-solving rather than structured coursework and I chose to continue along that path,” he says. Additionally, Burick has dyscalculia, which makes traditional mathematics more challenging for him. “It pushed me to develop alternative methods of engineering.”

recreation of a large machine arranged in a U shape. A podium in the middle reads \u201cENIAC 80\u201d The ENIAC replica Burick’s students built precisely matches what the original computer would have looked like before it was disassembled in the 1950s. Robert Gamboa

When he graduated, he worked in several tech jobs before starting his own company. In 2000, he opened a computer retail store and adjacent robotics business, White Box Robotics. The idea for the company came when Burick was building a “white box” PC from standard, off-the-shelf components, and realized there was no comparable product for robotics.

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So, he started developing a modular, general-purpose platform that applied white box PC standards to mobile robots. “The robot’s chassis was like a box of Legos,” he says. You could click together two torsos to double its payload, switch out the drive system, or swap its head for a different set of sensors. He filed utility and design patents for the platform, called the 914 PC-Bot, and after merging with a Canadian defense robotics company called Frontline Robotics, started production. They sold about 200 robots in 17 countries, Burick says.

Then the 2008 financial crisis hit. White Box Robotics held on for a couple of years, shuttering in late 2010. “I got to live my life’s dream for 10 years,” he says. After closing White Box, “there was some soul searching” about what to do next. He recalled the impact his own mentors had, and decided to pay it forward by teaching.

Neurodiversity as a Superpower

In 2013, Burick started working in a vocational training program for young adults living with autism. The program didn’t have a technical arm, so he started one and ran it until 2019, when he was hired to be a technology instructor at PS Academy Arizona.

Student using power drill on wood under instructor\u2019s guidance in workshop. Burick and one of his students assemble the base for one of ENIAC’s three portable function tables, which contained banks of switches that stored numerical constants. Bri Mason

Burick feels he can connect with his students, because he is also neurodivergent. Throughout his childhood, he was told what he wasn’t able to do because of his dyscalculia diagnosis. “People tell you what it takes, but they never tell you what it gives,” Burick says.

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In adulthood, he realized that some of his strengths are linked to dyscalculia, too, like strong 3D spatial reasoning. “I have this CAD program that runs in my head 24 hours a day,” he says. “I think the reason I was successful in robotics, truly, was because of the dyscalculia…. To me, [it] has always been a superpower.”

Whenever his students say something disparaging about living with autism, he shares his own experience. “You need to have maybe just a bit more tenacity than others, because there are parts of it you do have to fight through, but you come through with gifts and strengths,” he tells them.

And Burick’s classes aim to play to those strengths. “I didn’t want my technology program to feel like craft hour,” he says. Instead, through projects like the ENIAC replica, students can leverage traits many of them share, like the abilities to hyperfocus and to precisely repeat tasks.

Recreating ENIAC

Burick has taught his students about ENIAC for several years. While reading about it, he learned that the massive, 27-tonne computer was dismantled and partially destroyed after being decommissioned in 1955. Although a few of ENIAC’s 40 original panels are on display at museums, “there was no hope of ever seeing it together again. We wanted to give the world that experience,” Burick says.

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He and his students started by learning about ENIAC, and even Burick was surprised by how complex the 80-year-old computer was. They built a one-twelfth scale model to help the students better understand what it looked like. Seeing the students light up, Burick became confident in their ability to move onto the full-scale model, and he started ordering supplies.

ENIAC was composed of 40 large metal panels arranged in a U-shape that housed its many vacuum tubes, resistors, capacitors, and switches. Twenty of the panels were accumulators with the same design, so the students started with these, then worked through smaller groupings of panels. The repeating panels brought symmetry to ENIAC, Burick says, but it was also one of the main challenges of recreating it. If one part was slightly out of place, the next one would be too and the mistake would compound.

Group of students in a gym holding large silver patterned boards facing the camera. The students installed 500 simulated vacuum tubes in each of the panels here, for a total of 18,000 vacuum tubes.Robert Gamboa

Once they constructed the panels, they added ENIAC’s three function tables, which stored numerical constants in banks of switches, then two punch-card machines. Finally, they installed 18,000 simulated vacuum tubes. In total, the project used nearly 300 square meters of thick-ream cardboard, 1,600 hot-glue-gun sticks, and 7 gallons of black paint.

The scale of the machine—and his students’ work—left Burick in awe. “By the time we were done, I felt like I was in a room full of scientists,” he says.

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Previously, Burick’s students built an 8-foot-long drivable Tesla Cybertruck (“complete with a 400-watt stereo system and a subwoofer”) and he plans to keep the momentum with another recreation—maybe from the Apollo moon missions.

“I go to work every day, and I feel passionate about robotics [and] technology. I get to share that passion with the students,” Burick says. “I get to feel what it’s like to be in the position of the people that helped me. It closes that loop, and I find that really rewarding.”

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Apple’s Next Chapter, SpaceX and Cursor Strike a Deal, and Palantir’s Controversial Manifesto

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Brian Barrett: In terms of making things happen, so this deal’s not going to happen until later this year. It was reported recently that the reason was, then this part makes it, this is what makes most sense to me is, SpaceX is gearing up for an IPO. They’re getting close to it, and they didn’t want to close this deal because it would delay the IPO. So there’s sort of an order of operation things, like, “We need to go public before we try to close a $60 billion deal,” which again feels, like everything about these feels, I’m not going to say cursed, it just feels likely to derail at some point.

Zoë Schiffer: Yeah. The reporter in me is really excited for IPO year because I feel like this is when companies really need to get their act together.They need to have their operations, internal processes really, really, really, really dialed. You’re going public, there’s going to be a lot of scrutiny. There’s going to be a lot of shareholders. SpaceX is trying to do it. Anthropic is trying to do it. OpenAI is trying to do it. I think it’s going to be a wild, wild time, and stuff’s going to get weird along the way.

Brian Barrett: Have either of you read Palantir’s CEO Alex Karp’s book The Technological Republic or rather how many times have you read it?

Zoë Schiffer: Right. That’s the operative question.

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Leah Feiger: I have to admit I haven’t read it, but I have read way too many things about it. Unfortunately, I feel like I’ve read it at this point.

Brian Barrett: Well, and everybody sort of should by now if you follow Palantir on X, and if you don’t, that’s OK. Just to be clear, it’s not an endorsement. But this week, Palantir on X, unprompted, nobody asked them to, but they shared a 22-point summary of Alex Karp’s book. They prefaced it with, “Because we get asked a lot, here’s the technological republic in brief.” And it goes on to list Karp’s ideal vision of tech and the state working as one. There’s some points in there, some highlights, quote, “The engineering elite of Silicon Valley has an affirmative obligation to participate in the defense of the nation.” And also quote, “No other country in the history of the world has advanced progressive values more than this one.” There’s one more in there that I do want to call out.

Leah Feiger: The draft? You got to talk about the draft.

Brian Barrett: The draft is a good one. I was going to go with, “Some cultures have produced vital advances, others remain dysfunctional and regressive.”

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Leah Feiger: Yes. It’s hard to not read every single point of this manifesto out loud. By saying strong reactions ensued, though we’re kind of missing the big one, which is critics online called this fascist. They were like, “You are just giving us the point-by-point of Palantir’s dissent into fascism basically.” We spend a lot of time talking about this company. We don’t really talk a lot about its origins and how it views itself in the entire American dream or whatever that means. It was founded after 9/11. It was supposed to be after this big national consensus where fighting terrorism abroad was the be-all, end-all. The company was cofounded by tech billionaire Peter Thiel. Data aggregation analysis tool powers everything from businesses to the US military’s targeting systems, and more recently, that’s meant like targeting systems specifically on immigrants. So the way that CEO Alex Karp talks about this company as this extended arm of the US government isn’t necessarily new. I think that it’s just hitting this very specific point for critics, and critics internally as well that are going, “Wait a second, that’s not the country that I actually signed up on.” Specially this year, ICE and DHS surveillance, its support of military actions in Iran, the company has doubled down on all of these positions. We actually have a story coming tomorrow from politics reporter Makena Kelly about how internally that’s not being received super well either. And then you have Alex Karp who kind of doesn’t really appear to care, and he’s like, “No, no, no, we’re on track. We’re going to keep going here.”

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Bob Iger rejoins Thrive Capital as advisor after Disney exit

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Bob Iger is returning to Thrive Capital as an advisor, just one month after stepping down as CEO of Disney, a role he held for nearly two decades.

Iger previously served a two-month stint as a venture partner at the firm in late 2022, but left when the Disney board asked him to retake the helm of the media conglomerate, following his initial departure from the company in 2020.

“Bob leads with boldness and conviction because he knows what he is building and why. He is rejoining Thrive at a time when that kind of leadership matters most,” Thrive’s founder Josh Kushner posted on X.

Iger, who already owns a stake in the firm, will work with Thrive’s investment staff and portfolio founders, the Wall Street Journal reported. However, his advisory role will likely not require a full-time commitment.

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Thrive manages over $50 billion in assets, according to PitchBook. In February, the firm announced that it raised $10 billion in capital commitments for its 10th fund, the largest in the firm’s 17-year history. Thrive holds significant stakes in OpenAI, Stripe, and SpaceX. The firm also amassed a 7% ownership stake in Cursor, whose potential sale to SpaceX could be worth about $4.2 billion, Bloomberg reported.

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In a first, a ransomware family is confirmed to be quantum-safe

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There is no practical benefit for Kyber developers to have chosen a PQC key-exchange algorithm. The Kyber ransom note gives victims one week to respond. Quantum computers capable of running Shor’s algorithm—the series of mathematical equations that allow the breakage of RSA and ECC (elliptic curve cryptography)—are, at a minimum, three years away and likely much further.

A Kyber variant that targets systems running VMware,  meanwhile, claims to use ML-KEM as well. Rapid7 said its look under the hood revealed that, in fact, it uses RSA with 4096-bit keys, a strength that will take even longer for Shor’s algorithm to break. Anna Širokova, a Rapid7 senior security researcher and the author of Tuesday’s post, said the use or claimed use of ML-KEM is likely just a branding gimmick and that implementing it required relatively little work by Kyber developers.

In an email, Širokova wrote:

First, it’s marketing to the victim. “Post-quantum encryption” sounds a lot scarier than “we used AES,” especially to non-technical decision-makers who might be evaluating whether to pay. It’s a psychological trick. They’re not worried about someone breaking the encryption a decade from now. They want payment within 72 hours.

Second, implementation cost is low. Kyber1024 libraries (renamed to ML-KEM) are available and well-documented. Ransomware doesn’t encrypt your files directly with Kyber1024. That would be slow. Instead, it:

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  1. Generates a random AES key
  2. Encrypts your files with that AES key (fast)
  3. Encrypts that AES key with Kyber1024 (so only the attacker can decrypt it)

In Rust, there are already libraries that do Kyber1024. The developer just adds it to their dependencies and calls a function to wrap the key.

Despite the hype, Kyber suggests that PQC is attracting the attention of less technically inclined attorneys and executives deciding how to respond to ransom demands. Kyber developers are hoping the impression that the encryption has overwhelming strength will sway people to pay.

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Rednote Draws a Line Between China and the World

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Some Rednote users have reported that their accounts were automatically converted from the Chinese to the international version of the website recently. One American user, who asked to remain anonymous to avoid being punished by the platform, shared a screenshot with WIRED showing that when he logged into the platform in April, a banner appeared that read “Your account is a rednote account. We have automatically redirected you to rednote.com.”

The user says he registered his account with a Chinese phone number years ago, but suspects his account was converted because of using a non-Chinese IP address. “I have never posted from China. It’s always been in the United States. Obviously, in one glance, they can see this is an American posting in English,” he says.

Looming Split

After TikTok sidestepped a US shutdown by selling a majority stake in its American business, most of the “refugees” who had fled to Rednote went back to the video app or to other platforms. Those who stayed often did so because they value reading about and talking directly with Chinese people living in China. They now worry that a corporate split could destroy what had been one of the strongest bridges between the Chinese internet and the wider world.

Jerry Liu, a Vancouver-based TikTok influencer known for sharing funny content about Rednote itself, said in a November video that he was told by staff at the company’s Shanghai office that international users should expect to see less Chinese content and more North American content in the future. “I feel frustrated. I think it’s just gonna be less fun,” he said in the video.

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Rednote had tried the TikTok localization playbook before—it launched a slew of regionally focused apps roughly three years ago with names like Uniik, Spark, Catalog, Takib, habU, and S’More that each catered to specific countries outside China, but they failed to catch on. The effort could have been a lesson for the company about the value of its massive Chinese content ecosystem to people in other countries, but as is often the case, regulatory and political considerations appear to have taken priority.

“I don’t want to see Americans talking about Coachella. I did that on Instagram, I didn’t join Xiaohongshu to see Instagram,” says the American user who was recently redirected to Rednote.

Security Concerns

As Rednote goes global, the company is no doubt looking to Chinese predecessors like WeChat and TikTok for ideas about how to navigate the minefield of content moderation and data privacy. So far, its approach looks to more closely resemble that of WeChat.

For over a decade, WeChat has sorted users based largely on one criterion: whether they used a Chinese or a foreign number to sign up. That has allowed users to cross Tencent’s digital border by unlinking and relinking their WeChat accounts to different mobile numbers.

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Jeffrey Knockel, an assistant professor of computer science at Bowdoin College, found that Tencent censors content on WeChat and Weixin differently, even though the two platforms are integrated with one another and users can communicate across them. He says Chinese users are subject to a real-time keyword-matching filter to censor politically sensitive speech, but “if you registered for WeChat using a Canadian or an American phone number, your messages aren’t necessarily under that kind of censorship.”

Knockel says WeChat’s blended content moderation approach may have made some people wary about using the app. “Users are generally distrustful of the platform. They don’t know if they’re being watched and censored,” he says. As Rednote moves in a similar direction, it will be worth watching whether international audiences end up having similar misgivings.


This is an edition of Zeyi Yang and Louise Matsakis Made in China newsletter. Read previous newsletters here.

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Claude can now connect to lifestyle apps like Spotify, Instacart and AllTrails

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Anthropic is expanding its directory of connected services for its Claude AI chatbot. The platform can now link up with your accounts on AllTrails, Audible, Booking.com, Instacart, Intuit Credit Karma, Intuit TurboTax, Resy, Spotify, StubHub, Taskrabbit, Thumbtack, TripAdvisor, Uber, Uber Eats and Viator. Additional services will be added in the future.

More and more AI companies are trying to up their third-party integrations in a pitch to make their services as useful as possible. The benefit of having multiple apps connected means that a chatbot can theoretically execute more complicated tasks on your behalf. This expansion takes that capability from the professional and educational settings, where Anthropic’s connectors have been focused for the past year, to a personal one. So, for instance, Claude can now help plan a hike on AllTrails and then pull up a Spotify playlist that will last for the duration of your trek.

Anthropic noted that it is also reframing how apps are showing up so that an appropriate service is suggested for the task you want to perform. The apps should appear dynamically within the Claude conversation rather than needing a user to swipe between programs. As with most AI actions, Claude is supposed to check with its user before actually taking any actions like securing a reservation or making a purchase.

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Meta Adds New Live Chat Feature to Threads for NBA Playoffs, Major Events

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Engagement is a big deal in the world of social media. On Wednesday, Meta announced Live Chats, a new feature for the Instagram-supported social app Threads. It adds a real-time conversation component, letting people connect during high-interest cultural events, such as playoff or championship games, or even the drop of a highly anticipated album.

A screenshot of two Threads feeds showing how Live Chats will appear.

Live Chats, the new public chat feature on Threads, launches in time for the NBA Playoffs.

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Live Chats won’t be limited to sports, but the feature is launching during the NBA Playoffs within the NBAThreads Community, and an assortment of personalities — Malika AndrewsRachel NicholsTrysta KrickDavid Rushing and Lexis Mickens — will host Live Chats as the games unfold. 

The group chat experience includes countdowns, polls, live scores and other real-time options designed to keep the conversation active.

How to find Live Chats on Threads

Live Chats about the games will appear at the top of the NBAThreads Community, and they can also appear in your main feed on Threads if you follow a personality who has posted the link. A red circle will appear on a Live Chat host’s profile photo when they are live. More Community feeds will have the Live Chats feature in the coming months.

After you’ve entered the chat, you’ll be able to send and receive messages, attach photos, videos and links, and send reaction emoji. Anyone can join a chat, but it can reach capacity and stop accepting new users.

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“Up to 150 participants can join in the Live Chat conversation (unless the host decides to make it invite only), but anyone can watch,” a Meta spokesperson told CNET. Once a Live Chat ends, it’ll no longer be pinned in the community feed, but will remain visible through previously shared posts.

How to start a Live Chat on Threads

Live Chats are open and public, but Meta allows only a select number of creators and personalities to host them on Threads. This includes Community Champions, who are active, influential users within a Threads community who stay engaged with others and keep conversations alive. 

To schedule a Live Chat, a qualified host will tap the three-dot menu in the top-right corner and select “Schedule a Live Chat.” You can give the chat a name, select a time frame for it to be live and then invite other Threads users to join or post the link to your feed and Instagram Story to get the word out.

A bigger Live Chats experience is coming

Once Meta refines the feature, more Live Chat attributes will be rolling out in the near future, including co-hosting, play-by-play commentary content, lock screen widgets and a share option that’ll let you quote chat messages directly in your Threads feed. 

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Oppo Find X9 Ultra vs iPhone 17 Pro Max: Android or iOS?

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Oppo has announced its flagship camera smartphone, the Find X9 Ultra, but how does it compare to Apple’s iPhone 17 Pro Max?

Although we haven’t specifically reviewed the Max model, we have reviewed the iPhone 17 Pro so we’ll draw on our experiences there whenever applicable. 

Read on to see what’s the difference between the Oppo Find X9 Ultra and the iPhone 17 Pro Max, and to decide which handset will suit you best.

Once you’re finished here, make sure you visit our Oppo Find X9 Ultra vs Find X9 Pro to see how Oppo’s flagships compare. Finally, our list of the best Android phones, best camera phones and best smartphones will undoubtedly have your next purchase solved.

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Price and Availability

The Oppo Find X9 Ultra is the first of Oppo’s Ultra models to see a global launch. However, at the time of writing, we don’t have the exact pricing or release date for the UK. 

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In comparison, the iPhone 17 Pro Max is readily available to buy now and has a starting price of £1199/$1199. Considering the Oppo Find X9 Pro has a similar starting price of £1099, we expect this means the more premium Ultra will be more expensive than the iPhone 17 Pro Max – however that’s speculation at this point.

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Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 vs A19 Pro

One of the biggest differences between the Find X9 Ultra and iPhone 17 Pro Max is with their respective chips. While the Find X9 Ultra runs on Qualcomm’s flagship Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5, the iPhone 17 Pro Max is powered by Apple’s own A19 Pro chip. 

The iPhone 17 Pro also runs on Apple’s A19 Pro chip, and we found the handset offers brilliant performance across both day-to-day use and in our benchmark tests too. We also concluded the iPhone 17 Pro copes well with games too, although if that’s a necessity for your handset then you’ll be better off checking our best gaming phones guide instead. 

Call of Duty on Oppo Find X9 UltraCall of Duty on Oppo Find X9 Ultra
Gaming on Find X9 Ultra. Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)

Unsurprisingly, we found that the Oppo Find X9 Pro also offers a brilliant performance too. In fact, we especially found that the handset does a great job with ray-traced gaming too – something worth keeping in mind if you’d prefer not to opt for a gaming-specific handset. Not only that, but Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 ensures everything runs smoothly and quickly too.

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Oppo Find X9 Ultra has five rear cameras

Arguably the reason to choose the Oppo Find X9 Ultra is due to its mighty camera set-up. Created in collaboration with Hasselblad, the aptly titled Hasselblad Master Camera System is made up of five rear lenses, including dual Hasselblad 200MP main and 3x telephoto lens. In fact, the latter boasts the largest sensor of its kind and can be fitted with the 300mm Explorer Teleconverter that delivers a 300m focal length and 13x optical zoom too.

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There are also two 50MP cameras which are flanked by a True Color Camera for natural colour rendition too.

In addition, the Find X9 Ultra is fitted with Oppo’s “most advanced cinematic capabilities to date”, and can not only deliver 4K60fps Dolby Vision HDR recording, but also captures 4K120fps via the Dual Hasselblad 200MP cameras too.

Oppo Find X9 Ultra

iPhone 17 Pro

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Overall, we were blown away by the Find X9 Ultra’s photography capabilities, and concluded that its vibrant capture and multiple lenses “easily challenges Apple” for the best camera phone crown.

That’s not to say the iPhone 17 Pro Max is a slouch by any means, with its trio of rear lenses able to cope well with most lighting conditions and provide a brilliant detailed finish. While we haven’t reviewed the Pro Max, the iPhone 17 Pro has the same lenses on board and boasts the best zoom lens we’ve seen on an Apple flagship. 

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Oppo Find X9 Ultra supports faster charging 

Like many of the best Android phones, the Find X9 Ultra supports exceptionally fast charging speeds – but only when paired with a compatible charger. So, while the iPhone 17 Pro Max supports 40W wired speeds and 25W MagSafe, the Find X9 Ultra boasts significantly faster numbers.

In fact, the Find X9 Ultra supports a whopping 100W SuperVOOC wired and 50W AirVOOC speeds. However, just keep in mind that you will need to purchase adapters separately to benefit from those speeds.

Oppo Find X9 Ultra - side profile in handOppo Find X9 Ultra - side profile in hand
Oppo Find X9 Ultra in hand. Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)

Oppo Find X9 Ultra has an IP66, IP68 and IP69 ratings

Durability is important when it comes to buying a phone and, fortunately, the Find X9 Ultra isn’t taking any chances. Not only does it sport the same IP68 rating as the iPhone 17 Pro Max, which means its dust-tight and can survive water submersion, but it also benefits from an IP66 and IP69 rating too. That means the handset can withstand high pressure and high temperature water jets too.

However, do keep in mind that the iPhone 17 Pro Max’s IP68 rating realistically offers more than enough protection for everyday use. Just think about how often your phone will really be subjected to water jets.

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Oppo Find X9 Ultra has a 144Hz display

The 6.9-inch iPhone 17 Pro Max is fitted with Apple’s ProMotion technology, which means the panel has a LTPO-enabled 1-120Hz refresh rate that helps make animations, scrolling and gaming feel smooth. In comparison, the slightly smaller 6.82-inch Find X9 Ultra boasts up to a 144Hz refresh rate. 

Oppo Find X9 Ultra

iPhone 17 Pro

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Otherwise, the Find X9 Ultra is equipped with an AMOLED, QHD+ display that we found to be “impossible to fault”. Similarly, the iPhone 17 Pro Max is equipped with a Super Retina XDR (OLED), HDR display.

Early Verdict

Deciding between the Oppo Find X9 Ultra and iPhone 17 Pro Max will mainly boil down to two factors: whether you’re cemented in either the Android or iOS ecosystem and whether you want an especially versatile camera phone. While the iPhone 17 Pro Max is undoubtedly a versatile camera phone, the five rear lenses of the Find X9 Ultra and the optional teleconverter undoubtedly offer more flexibility.

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