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JH Audio JH16 Pro IEMs, with a custom-molded hard acrylic shell Elize Ryd wearing in-ear monitors during a concert in 2018. In-ear monitors, or simply IEMs or in-ears, are devices used by musicians, audio engineers and audiophiles to listen to music or to hear a personal mix of vocals and stage instrumentation for live performance or recording studio mixing.
Logo used from early 2004 [2] to 2017. Still used at its Irvine, CA headquarters. Ultimate Ears is an American custom in-ear monitor (IEM), speaker, and earphone manufacturer based in Irvine and Newark, California, United States.
In-ear monitors, devices used by musicians, audio engineers and audiophiles to listen to music; Incredible Expanding Mindfuck (Music) Information Engineering Methodology; Institute of Electronic Music and Acoustics (Institut für Elektronische Musik und Akustik), part of the University of Music and Performing Arts, Graz
Jerry Harvey (born 1961) is an American sound engineer best known for inventing, along with Karl Cartwright, a series of customized dual-speaker in-ear monitors in 1995. He founded Ultimate Ears that same year, and in 2007, founded JH Audio.
Lack of sound from the environment can be a problem when sound is a necessary cue for safety or other reasons, as when walking, driving, or riding near or in vehicular traffic. [43] Some in-ear headphones utilize built-in microphones to allow some outside sound to be heard when desired.
Latency refers to a short period of delay (usually measured in milliseconds) between when an audio signal enters a system, and when it emerges.Potential contributors to latency in an audio system include analog-to-digital conversion, buffering, digital signal processing, transmission time, digital-to-analog conversion, and the speed of sound in the transmission medium.
Make Listening Safe is promoting the development of features in PLS to raise the users' awareness of risky listening practices. In this context, the WHO partnered with the International Telecommunication Union to develop suitable exposure limits for inclusion in the voluntary H.870 safety standards on "Guidelines for safe listening devices/systems."
In audio applications these high-pass and low-pass filters are frequently termed low cut and high cut, respectively, to emphasize their effect on the original signal. For instance, sometimes audio equipment will include a switch labeled high cut or described as a hiss filter (hiss being high-frequency noise).