World Wide Stereo Your Home Entertainment Needs
World Wide Stereo’s showrooms set the bar for consumer electronics shopping experiences. They offer everything from televisions to smart home systems, audio equipment to turntables, and media furniture.
Working with stereo width during music mastering is a delicate balance that requires skill. The best way to make sure your song has plenty of width is to use a correlometer.
About Us
World Wide Stereo is the place to go for all of your home entertainment needs. Their showrooms are not only amazing shopping experiences, but they offer expert design services and compelling in-person demos. They are manufacturer authorized retailers for all of the products they sell.
The company focuses on audio, video, and smart home integration. They offer a wide selection of speakers and accessories, televisions and media furniture, headphones and turntables, and home Wi-Fi systems.
Bob, Ron and the rest of the crew make it their mission to bring all the best consumer electronics together in one store. They do this by hiring people who love technology and have a passion for making customers happy. Their dedication to their work is what has made them successful.
Televisions
The name television combines the Greek words tele (meaning “far off”) and visio (meaning “sight”). At first, the concept was so new that its inventor gave it the nickname telly.
In the 1920s, Scottish innovator John Logie Baird used a Nipkow disk to transmit silhouette images in motion. Because his system didn’t have enough contrast to render human faces, he televised a ventriloquist’s dummy instead.
By 1956, color television became practical when RCA engineers solved the technical issues that had prevented the transmission of color signals using existing black and white console sets. Today, standard-definition TV is available in both digital and analog formats in North America with either a 4:3 or 16:9 aspect ratio. It is also available in PAL and SECAM formats.
Headphones
Headphones are electroacoustic transducers worn on or around the ears to listen to audio. They provide a personal and immersive listening experience, in contrast to loudspeakers that broadcast sound for all to hear.
With a lightweight frame and pressure-relieving ear pads, these headphones are made for long listening sessions. Adaptive Sound Control automatically adjusts ambient sound settings for your environment, providing an optimized listening experience.
Featuring a new four-microphone noise cancelling system, the WH-1000XM5 is designed to remove external noise and let you focus on your music or phone calls.
Home Theater
Most households have a TV and media device but to transform it into a home theater there are a few extra components needed. To start with you’ll need speakers that aren’t the ones built into your TV and an AV receiver. The AV receiver acts as a central control unit for the system connecting all your devices to each other via HDMI, component video, digital optical, RCA audio and more. It will also amplify the input signal and send it out through your speaker set up.
You can purchase the individual components one by one or go with a Home Theater in a Box (HTIB) which will include a TV, projector or flat-screen HDTV and a DVD or Blu-ray player with surround sound amplifier and speakers. You’ll also want to invest in a surge protector to protect your equipment from power fluctuations.
Smart Home
When smart home technology is mentioned, most people think of George Jetson’s futuristic abode or Bill Gates’ high-tech mansion. But the smart home is a real thing that’s becoming more commonplace.
Smart homes use the internet of things (IoT) to connect and control appliances and devices through a smartphone app. These systems are also able to learn users’ routines, which can save time and energy. Some can even notify the owner of security threats when they’re away from their house.
Smart technology includes smart lights, programmable thermostats and appliances, and voice-activated TVs. Many of these products can work together through compatible hubs. However, there are multiple operating standards for smart devices and some brands aren’t compatible with other brands. Some smart home products are vulnerable to an internet outage, too.