Tech
Best Sleep Trackers of 2026: Oura, Whoop, and Eight Sleep
Apple Watch Series 11 for $399: If you already have an Apple Watch Series 4 or later, you can use it to track your sleep. Between the heart rate sensor and the accelerometer, your Apple Watch can break your slumber down into four stages. Newer models can also measure blood oxygen and temperature. It feels like a general overview compared to some of the other sleep trackers I tried, and there’s no sleep score, though this is obviously by design (it’s debatable whether you need more data).
Garmin Epix Pro (Gen 2) for $1,000: All of Garmin’s fitness trackers track sleep to some extent, but the Epix Pro has what Garmin calls advanced sleep monitoring, or the ability to track sleep stages, your blood oxygen saturation, your respiratory rate, and restlessness. Contributor Adrienne So found that the Epix Pro regularly accounted for her getting a half-hour to an hour more sleep than she actually got most nights, as double-checked by a Whoop and Oura. It also doesn’t add naps to your sleep score.
Photograph: Simon Hill
Google Nest Hub Max for $229: The Nest Hub Max uses radar to track your sleep, which means you don’t need to wear a tracker; it also has a microphone to track snoring, sleep talking, and other nocturnal sounds. I love the Nest Hub on my nightstand for smart home controls, family photos, and listening to sleep sounds or podcasts in bed, but the sleep tracking consistently overestimated my REM phases and missed periods of wakefulness that other trackers recorded. When I used multiple trackers simultaneously, the Nest Hub was the outlier. The second-generation Nest Hub ($100) offers a similar sleep-tracking experience if you’re looking for something cheaper. —Simon Hill
Muse S Athena Headband for $475: This headband has sensors capable of tracking your brain activity, similar to an electroencephalogram (EEG), alongside an accelerometer and gyroscope, and a PPG sensor to measure heart rate and blood circulation. It’s chiefly a meditation aid designed to help you relax, but it can also track your sleep by recording your heart rate, respiration, time to fall asleep, and how much you moved around for an overall sleep score. Sadly, I found it uncomfortable to wear and often woke to discover the sleep tracking had failed, usually because I’d removed it during the night. —Simon Hill
Withings ScanWatch 2 for $370: Wear the Withings ScanWatch 2 to bed and you will get a sleep score out of 100 in the morning. It covers the same four stages as other trackers (awake, REM, light, and deep) but boasts a PPG sensor for measuring your respiratory rate. It can also track your heart rate, temperature, and blood oxygen levels. The ScanWatch 2 provides a wealth of data and advice in the Withings app. Some folks may find it bulky and uncomfortable for sleep, though, and it had problems distinguishing between light sleep and when I was lying awake in bed. —Simon Hill
Photograph: Simon Hill
Withings Sleep Tracking Mat for $200: Another alternative to wearables, this sensor-packed mat from Withings slips underneath your mattress where your chest rests. You need to calibrate it during the initial setup, but it’s quick and easy. It tracks your movements, breathing, and heart rate throughout the night, detects snoring or other sounds, and alerts you about potential breathing problems that might indicate sleep apnea. I have doubts about the accuracy as it assumes you are trying to sleep if you are lying still in bed watching TV or reading, and that can skew your score (though it’s best to only use your bed for sleep if you suffer from insomnia). I found it often marked periods of wakefulness as light sleep. It requires a power outlet, but that does mean you never need to worry about charging). —Simon Hill
Sleep Routine: Tracker & Alarm for $60/year (iOS/Android): Sleep Routine is a sleep-tracking app that provides a report for each night, breaking your sleep into stages. Reviewer Simon Hill says the results were somewhat accurate and broadly matched the Ultrahuman Ring Air, but the app can be a bit wonky. There were frequent occasions where he’d get an error message the morning after with no report or a brief recorded sleep. There was also no indication of why it failed. You can test Sleep Routine for a week before you need to subscribe.
Tech
CBP Commander Greg Bovino Is Taking Guest Speaker Spots At White Nationalist Conferences
from the goes-wherever-the-hate-leads-him dept
CBP Commander-at-Large Gregory Bovino made that title literal by showing up wherever Trump needed trouble started. Once he had arrived far north of the southern border he was supposed to be patrolling, Bovino (and the people he was “commanding”) found themselves on the receiving end of several lawsuits.
Not only did they find themselves on the receiving end of lawsuits, they — especially Gregory Bovino — found themselves hit with judgments and orders forbidding them from constantly violating the rights of anti-ICE protesters and journalists covering the protests.
After a couple of murders were committed by CBP officers in Minneapolis, Minnesota, the Trump administration decided Bovino was more trouble than he was worth. Sure, he was loyal and loved to personally engage in violence against protesters, but he also loved to see himself on TV and to dress like he’s auditioning for a Hitler Youth leadership position.
Now that he’s back at the border and bored, Bovino appears to be using his free time to push his own personal brand: a buzzcut bigot willing to spread hatred wherever it’s welcomed. Jeff Tischauser points out on Bluesky that Bovino recently headed overseas to help European bigots push their anti-migrant narratives.
Greg Bovino will speak at a white nationalist conference in Portugal tomorrow. He will share the stage with no fewer than five people who idolize Hitler, including one who joined a group created by two Nazi SS members. Another guy is a self-described racist who refers to women as “cockroaches.‘
RESUM26 is this year’s “Remigration Summit,” which was held in Porto, Portugal on May 30. If you’re not familiar with “Remigration” and/or RESUM26, I’ll let the organization speak for itself, even if it can’t seem to limit itself to 14 words.
Remigration is the umbrella term that designates and encompasses a set of fiscal, cultural, economic, social, political, and logistical policies whose objective is to prevent population replacement through the reversal of migratory flows, thereby restoring the sovereignty, independence, and identity of countries, through the defense of their ethnocultural specificity.
It’s almost twice as long as it needs to be at 25 words, but it’s pretty much saying the same thing Nazi supporters have been saying for years. Oh, and since literal Nazi supporters spoke at this event, here’s another reminder that Bovino himself seems to be on the supply side of Nazi sympathy.
If you can’t see the Bluesky post, It’s a screencap of Bovino’s recent X post where he’s captured giving what looks a hell of a lot like a Nazi salute while in his CBP work uniform. The accompanying text suggests Nazi salutes are just another way federal officers can visibly show their support for ICE and its activities.
Here’s one of the multiple anti-migrant luminaries Bovino joined at RESUM26: Alfonso Goncalves, as summarized by the Global Project Against Hate and Extremism:
Gonçalves is a white supremacist and misogynist who fashions himself as an authoritarian leader. He revels in descriptions of himself as “transphobic,” and proudly accepts the characterization that he is “ultranationalist, racist, and xenophobic.” Gonçalves is particularly known for his misogyny, posting bizarre rants about women’s right to vote, casual sex, and women sitting in public. He refers to women as “whores” and “cockroaches.” He has argued that women who get divorced should “not be entitled to receive money/goods” from their husbands and should be mandated to “pay for damages caused to the family.” He says abortions are a “crime against humanity” and has called for women who have the procedure to receive the death penalty. For Gonçalves, “non-traditional families” are an “aberration,” “80% of all divorces are initiated by women” and people of African descent are creating a “population replacement” of people of “native” European descent. He has argued that “African American men are 12x more likely to commit murder than white men.” His bigotry is so extreme that even Elon Musk’s Twitter, known for being lenient towards hateful accounts, permanently suspended both his main and backup accounts, in one instance for “abusive behavior.”
And that’s just one speaker at this event. Also speaking at RESUM26 were Dutch far-right activist Eva Vlaardingerbroek (great replacement theory proponent), Austrian far-right activist Martin Sellner (great replacement theory proponent), former French National Front politician Jean-Yves Gallou (more of the same), and RESUM co-founder Dries Van Langenhover (who adds some Holocaust denialism to the mix).
Greg Bovino has done this while still employed by the US federal government. Under any normal president, his resignation might have been demanded for choosing to associate with people promoting racist theories. But this isn’t a normal presidency. No one in the DHS is going to criticize Bovino. And, while no one seems all that eager to return Bovino to anti-migration front lines, he’s still going to keep being paid by the US public to cheer on racism from the sidelines, when not traveling overseas to do the same thing from the stage.
Filed Under: bigotry, cbp, gregory bovino, mass deportation, nazis, portugal, trump administration, white nationalism
Companies: resum26
Tech
QTREX is betting on the layer beneath quantum computing
The quantum computing industry has spent the last three years measured almost entirely in qubits. Willow’s 105. Nighthawk’s 120. The 540-qubit superconducting platform that integrated nearly 700 control lines into a single cryostat last year. The qubit count is the headline number, and for good reason.
But inside the labs trying to push superconducting systems past today’s ceiling, engineers spend a surprising amount of time talking about something far less photogenic: the cables.
Every superconducting qubit needs multiple control and readout lines threading from room-temperature instrumentation down to the millikelvin plate where the processor sits. Every additional line carries heat, takes up space, and introduces electromagnetic noise. At a few hundred qubits, the wiring is already hand-built artisanal work. At a few thousand, it stops fitting. At the million-qubit scale fault-tolerant computing requires, the conventional approach simply doesn’t work.
That’s the bottleneck a company called QTREX is positioning itself around.
The Wall the Industry Walked Into
The “I/O wall”, shorthand for the interconnect problem, has been flagged in the engineering world for years, and the timing is starting to bite. IBM’s roadmap targets near-term quantum advantage by the end of 2026 and a fault-tolerant machine by 2029. None of those roadmaps work if the interconnect layer can’t keep up.
QTREX’s argument is that this isn’t a cable problem. It’s an architecture problem.
The company’s approach aims to replace the conventional assembled bundle, cables, connectors, shielding, thermal anchors, mechanical routing, with one integrated structure manufactured as a single object. The capability comes from Additively Manufactured Electronics, or AME: a multi-material 3D printing platform that deposits conductive and dielectric inks together to produce 3D electronic geometries at micron-level precision. Until recently it was used for high-performance RF circuits and antennas in defense and aerospace. The Israeli company is now applying it to quantum’s hardest hardware constraint.
In plain language, the company’s pitch is that traditional quantum wiring is assembled, while QTREX’s is engineered as a single system. The company claims roughly 20 fully shielded conductors per square centimeter, a density that matters precisely because what limits a cryostat isn’t volume, it’s the thermal budget that volume carries with it.
Why This Could Become a Category
In late April, QTREX signed a joint development agreement with Qarakal Quantum, the Israeli full-stack superconducting quantum company connected to Israel Aerospace Industries and the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. Qarakal built Israel’s first domestically operated quantum computer. Under the agreement, QTREX is supplying 3D-printed structures for testing at milli-Kelvin temperatures inside Qarakal’s cryogenic development environment.
Three weeks later, the company disclosed it had moved into a joint technical evaluation with one of the top five global quantum computing companies. Engineering and integration teams from both sides are testing QTREX’s interconnect components inside the partner’s cryogenic refrigerator. If a definitive agreement follows, QTREX would sit as foundational interconnect technology beneath the partner’s forward quantum hardware roadmap.
Traction extends beyond quantum-native players. A Tier-1 US defense customer has taken delivery of an AME system, and an implementation is underway at one of the Magnificent Seven US technology companies, the cohort that increasingly owns the world’s quantum research budgets.
“Engagement with one of the top five global players in quantum systems reflects the recognition that QTREX’s interconnect approach addresses a complex bottleneck in quantum hardware,” CEO Dagi Ben-Noon said when announcing the evaluation.
The Shift the Industry Is Already Making
The first wave of quantum computing was a physics story: could a working qubit be built and controlled. Those questions are mostly answered. The next wave is an engineering story, whether the surrounding hardware can scale with the processors. In AI infrastructure, the most valuable companies turned out not to be the ones writing the models but the ones building the chips and interconnects underneath. The same shape is starting to appear in quantum.
QTREX is betting the connective layer is where one of those positions opens up. The company still needs to execute commercially, but the problem it is targeting is already recognized across the industry.
Tech
Ohio hits pause on datacenter tax breaks draining its coffers
On-Prem
Buckeye State found it had inadvertently joined the billion dollar losers’ club
The US state of Ohio has suspended tax breaks for datacenters, amid claims that the policy cost the state more than $1.5 billion in revenue during in 2025 alone.
Ohio’s Republican Governor Mike DeWine declared a pause in the state’s server farm subsidy, directing its Tax Credit Authority to stop considering new datacenter sales tax exemption requests while officials review the industry’s costs and impacts.
According to the Associated Press, the amount of money involved in Ohio’s tax break has ballooned, hugely exceeding earlier estimates, while opposition to the building of giant bit barns has also grown, as in other areas of the US that have become datacenter hotspots.
Nonprofit research org Good Jobs First puts the cost of the sales tax exemption to the state at more than $1.5 billion in 2025, about 11 times the state’s $136 million forecast. It cites figures from news network Signal Ohio, which found the figure had inflated from $555 million in lost revenue the previous year, which was itself four times more than the state government had forecast.
However, the pause is only on the approval of new tax exemptions – those projects in operation that have already had their tax breaks rubber-stamped will continue to feel the benefit.
The sales tax exemption granted by Ohio is understood to be generous, covering not only building supplies for construction of the data halls, but also the server racks, cooling facilities, and other infrastructure to fill them.
According to Good Jobs First, the revelation means Ohio joins the small club of US states now losing more than $1 billion annually on tax breaks for cloud-hosting campuses. The other three are Virginia – the “datacenter capital of the world” – Texas, and Georgia, where subsidies are projected to cost $2.5 billion this year.
The organization has been agitating for greater transparency in the concessions afforded to datacenter operators for some time, claiming that in many cases, schemes which were supposed to attract investment and create jobs were resulting in taxpayers helping some of the richest corporations on the planet buy servers, equipment, and power infrastructure.
Last November, it published a list of 36 states that exempt building materials and IT equipment for datacenters from sales and use taxes, yet only 5 states disclose estimated or actual total costs of those exemptions.
In April, it upped the ante by claiming that many US states and local authorities are violating generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP) by failing to disclose revenue lost to bit barn tax subsidy schemes.
One of those it pointed the finger at is Indiana, but the state has since come clean and confirmed the tax exemptions cost it $655 million annually. Most of that – $561 million – is going to Amazon
Back in Ohio, a campaign has started to get a constitutional ban on datacenters that consume more than 25 MW of power. The group behind it, Ohio Residents for Responsible Development, claims to have gathered 25,000 signatures in five weeks.
According to reports, communities in other parts of the US, including Nevada, California, and Maryland are planning to hold ballots on some form of datacenter ban in their areas as well. ®
Tech
Anthropic files to go public
Anthropic, the AI lab behind Claude, has filed confidentially for an initial public offering, the company said in a blog post Monday.
The company, which is valued at close to $1 trillion, submitted a draft registration statement to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission for a proposed initial public offering. Anthropic has yet to list the number of shares or set the price. Anthropic said the proposed initial public offering will depend on market conditions and other factors.
The filing comes less than a week after Anthropic raised $65 billion in a Series H funding round that pushed its valuation to $965 billion. The round, which was co-led by Altimeter Capital, Dragoneer, Greenoaks, Sequoia Capital, Capital Group, Coatue, and D1 Capital Partners, attracted a bevy of institutional and strategic investors in anticipation of an IPO.
Anthropic’s confidential filing landed in an already white-hot IPO season that includes SpaceX’s initial public offering that is targeting a $2 trillion valuation. SpaceX is seeking to raise more than $75 billion.
It also comes as its rival OpenAI continues to raise funding, notably a $122 billion round in March at an $852 billion post-money valuation, and prepares for its own IPO. OpenAI is expected to file for an initial public offering, setting the stage for an IPO season that will pit the two largest AI labs against each other and test the market’s resolve and interest in artificial intelligence.
Anthropic, now an AI powerhouse that has landed top-tier enterprise customers, was once considered an underdog in the emerging world of large language models. The startup was founded in 2021 by former OpenAI employees and was seen as a distant competitor to OpenAI and its AI chatbot, ChatGPT.
The company has gained investors and customers for the capabilities of Claude and powerful model Mythos, which has been released on a limited basis. That has translated to eye-popping revenue growth. The company said recently that its revenue run-rate had surpassed $47 billion, up from $9 billion at the end of 2025.
That revenue growth rate could accelerate as Anthropic makes its Mythos model more widely available. Anthropic unveiled Mythos in April — along with a warning to software developers that its model had discovered thousands of high-severity bugs that would need to be fixed before it could be made public.
The generative AI lab is poised to give the European Union’s cybersecurity agency access to Mythos, Bloomberg reported, citing anonymous sources.
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Tech
Zigging when most are zagging, ex-Meta CTO raises $250M climate fund
Gigascale, the venture firm led by former Meta CTO Mike Schroepfer, announced on Monday that it had raised a $250 million fund to back founders who are “rebuilding the physical economy.”
The new fund will focus on energy, grid infrastructure, and critical minerals all through the lens of climate tech. By continuing with the overt climate focus, Gigascale is bucking conventional wisdom which has soured on the “climate tech” thesis.
Gigascale’s second fund is shaping up to be a continuation of the sort of bets that Schrep, as he’s known, has made in the three years since he started Gigascale. The firm has backed some high-profile startups in the climate tech space, including Commonwealth Fusion Systems, Heron Power, Mill, and Form Energy.
Gigascale emerged from Schrep’s study of climate tech during COVID, and the new fund is the first with an early-stage focus that includes institutional investors.
Climate tech has always been a wide-ranging sector, and Gigascale’s portfolio reflects that. But in recent years, the sector has become increasingly focused on energy and infrastructure, a shift that has been largely driven by the demands of AI.
It’s no surprise, then, that power is a significant focus of the new fund. With rising demand for electricity, there’s an opportunity to invest in new energy sources and new ways to deliver that to businesses and households.
Schroepfer pointed to solar as a recent example of a clean technology that’s faster and cheaper and winning the market.
While solar and batteries have come to dominate conversations around clean power, Schroepfer clearly sees more opportunities. AI and broader trends in electrification have made it challenging for companies to connect to the grid. In response, many have been seeking to develop their own power sources, though there, too, competition is stiff. Natural gas turbines, for example, have a waitlist that stretches into the early 2030s.
The power crunch gives energy startups an opening. In energy intensive industries, bring-your-own power “is going to be a competitive advantage over time,” Schroepfer said on the Inevitable podcast last year. Startups that can supply power cheaper or more flexibly — or both — can win on those merits alone.
But Gigascale also expects its energy investments to extend beyond generation, citing grid infrastructure, critical minerals, and physical AI as other places where the company will look for opportunities.
“The companies we back win because they’re cheaper, faster, and more reliable,” Schroepfer said in a statement. “That’s how adoption scales. Climate impact is the result of better-performing systems.”
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Tech
FiiO expands its hi-fi line-up with the JT9 planar headphones leading the charge
FiiO has expanded its hi-fi line-up with three new products, headlined by the JT9 planar magnetic headphones.
The latest products from FiiO lean heavily into high-power desktop audio but keeps portability and modern connectivity in view.
The JT9 is the most immediately consumer-facing of the trio. It uses a large 95 × 86mm planar magnetic driver paired with an ultra-thin diaphragm. This design is claimed to resolution, transient response, and overall tonal accuracy. FiiO also highlights its dual-coating diaphragm technology and a uniform magnetic field structure, which aim to reduce distortion and improve detail retrieval across the frequency range.
Despite the scale of the driver system, the JT9 remains relatively lightweight at 365g for a pair of planar headphones. Unusually for this type of headphones, it includes a foldable design for easier storage. A sensitivity rating of 95 dB/mW allows it to remain usable across a range of sources, and FiiO has included both 3.5mm and balanced 4.4mm cables in the box to cover different setups.
Alongside the JT9, FiiO brings forth its LEVEL 1 desktop amplifier, which sits firmly in the high-power category with up to 2 × 300W output based on the Texas Instruments TPA3255 Class D amplifier. It supports a wide range of inputs that includes RCA line-in, USB, coaxial, and Bluetooth 6.0 with LDAC.
The LEVEL 1 also adds subwoofer and pre-out connections, and includes physical bass and treble controls that give it a slightly retro, hands-on feel. Internally, FiiO has used a six-layer immersion gold PCB and a mix of German and Japanese capacitors. The chassis combines aluminium with wood accents to soften its otherwise industrial design.
Rounding out the announcement is the fully discrete Class A headphone amplifier. It delivers 1000mW + 1000mW output through a custom 60W toroidal transformer and regulated power supply system. It includes five gain levels and a wide set of connectivity options. These include 3.5mm, 4.4mm, XLR, and RCA in/out, alongside 12V trigger support for integration into larger audio systems.
Pricing for all three products is yet known at this moment in time, but will be announced during Vienna High End later this week.
Tech
All Systems Glow for WWDC 2026
We’re excited about WWDC 2026 , and after talking to some of you, you are too! Here’s new wallpapers, an Apple Music playlist, and tips for developers, all from Apple, to keep the hype going.
For WWDC 2025, Apple announced it with the line “On the horizon,” but changed it to “Sleek peek,” with one week to go. That change was revealed by Apple’s senior vice president of Worldwide Marketing, Greg Joswiak.
Now, again exactly a week ahead of WWDC, Joswiak has revealed a change alongside a new animation. WWDC 2026 has been given the headline “All systems glow.”
Apple has also been adding to its WWDC promotion across its developer site and services. There’s a WWDC 2026 playlist on Apple Music, for instance, with more to come.
It’s also now possible to download new WWDC wallpapers. They each feature a still, typically a close-up, of the glowing, liquid logo from the latest animation, in versions for the Mac, iPhone, and iPad.
Plus a new video guides developers on how to prepare for the conference. It includes details of the newly updated Apple Developer app, plus how to sign up for WWDC’s sessions.
WWDC 2026 is a week-long developer conference that runs from June 8 to June 12. The opening keynote will be where Apple makes its major announcements for macOS 27, iOS 27, and more.
As ever, AppleInsider will be at Apple Park for the event. It’s expected that Apple will once again showcase its Apple Intelligence AI features, this time most significantly with a dramatic update to Siri.
If Apple stays true to form, the majority of the event will concern iOS 27 for the iPhone. But there will certainly be updates for at least most of Apple’s platforms, including the Apple Watch‘s watchOS and Apple Vision Pro‘s visionOS.
Tech
iPhone Fold’s production issues won’t stop September launch
Problematic hinge and motherboard claims aside, the rumor mill has decided that the iPhone Fold will be coming out in the fall of 2026. Only Apple really knows
The iPhone Fold has been a hot topic of rumors, and in later weeks, has been subject to claims that there are production problems. Despite the varying viewpoints, that hasn’t stopped more reports from surfacing about the flexible smartphone.
The newest claim is from serial Weibo leaker Fixed Focus Digital. Posting on Monday, the leaker says that, despite rumors of manufacturing issues, the release is still planned to occur in September.
Fixed Focus Digital assures their followers while acknowledging other claims that the manufacturing process is troubled ahead of the final assembly of the model. Early-stage products are experiencing “ramp-up difficulties,” they say in a machine-translated post.
On the bright side, the foldable model apparently has good heat dissipation and cooling performance. This is believed to be from Apple making a significant investment in thermally managing the product.
As with all Weibo leakers, we must warn that they tend to be less reliable than other rumor sources. This is in part due to needing to maintain their audience of followers by providing a steady flow of posts.
In the case of Fixed Focus Digital, they have a middling record for accuracy. It also doesn’t help that their comment is made with no additional evidence or reasoning to bolster its release schedule claim.
Questionable trouble
Fixed Focus Digital doesn’t specify what the apparent issues are, but there have been quite a few reports about what they could be referring to. Including their own posts.
On May 26, Fixed Focus Digital said Apple didn’t have manufacturing difficulties for the iPhone Fold. There was, however, an issue in getting the model into mass production due to an issue with a circuit board component manufacturing technique.
At the time, they said that the situation was “not optimistic.”
Earlier in the month, on May 18, Instant Digital said that there was a problem with the hinge caused through repeated opening and closing. They did not explain what the exact problem was, though a social media post that was circulating at the time alleged that there was a rattle in the hinge.
Previous rumors have also included disputes about the launch timing for the model and even the name.
While they can’t get the story straight about such a major launch, at least the rumor mill is excited about the iPhone Fold.
Tech
A top economist says there's "zero evidence" AI is killing jobs, despite thousands of actual layoffs
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Writing in a post last week titled “Zero Evidence of AI-Related Job Losses,” Sløk points to ADP employment data to support his conclusion. The report found that private companies added almost 110,000 people to their payrolls in April.
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Tech
Universal Audio Volt 876 USB Audio Interface Review: Pro-Level Polish
In the fall of 2006, I decided emo was out and IDM was in. Fueled by the hope of becoming the next Four Tet or Aphex Twin, I marched into my local Guitar Center and purchased an audio interface to convert my guitar and vocals into ones and zeroes, then mangle them in Ableton Live.
When I got home, I plugged a brand-new M-Audio Fast Track Pro into my Windows desktop and immediately hit a brick wall of audio driver configuration hell. I eventually got the thing to work after hours of troubleshooting, but latency—the gap between when you make a sound and when it hits your computer—rendered the box unusable.
I was tempted to throw the Fast Track out the window and sample the sound of it hitting the pavement with an analog tape recorder. Instead, I went back to Guitar Center, traded the interface for a Line 6 DL4 delay pedal, and set my sights on ripping off Explosions in the Sky in a proper band setting.
Had something quick and painless like the Universal Audio Volt 876 existed at the time, who knows where my life would be now. I probably wouldn’t be opening for Four Tet and Fred Again … at the O2 Academy, but my entrée into computer-based music would have gone much more smoothly than it did in 2006.
For the Masses
Audio interfaces have come a long way since then. Prices are down, quality is way up, and latency is negligible in most home studio environments. Interfaces that pair with proprietary software and drivers still exist, but the genius of class compliance—meaning you can plug a device into your computer without needing the aforementioned—makes it easy for audio gear manufacturers to build boxes that are effortlessly plug-and-play on most operating systems. Even iOS and Android, in many cases. Anyone can find a decent-sounding interface on Amazon for $200 or less and plug it into their iPhone, then plug in a cheap mic and mumble their way to TikTok superstardom.
Photograph: Pete Cottell
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