1st April 2013, Sydney Australia – Australian-based microphone designer RØDE has announced the i16, a surround sound microphone for iPhone, iPad and iPod touch that combines sixteen discrete microphone capsules to capture the user’s surrounding audio environment in broadcast quality.
RØDE’s iXY stereo microphone for iOS devices was released in January, and has already gained critical praise from both musical and mainstream media, including a recent Red Dot product award.
The company is quickly emerging as the leader in microphones for Apple’s portable devices, and the i16 aims to consolidate this reputation.
RØDE’s founder and president, Peter Freedman, explains: “When developing the iXY we were focused on providing the ultimate in stereo audio capture for iOS devices. But during the project it became that there was a large proportion of the market who wanted to record in complete surround. We’ve taken that seriously and produced the i16.”
The new microphone uses RØDE’s own field recording app, RØDE Rec, to record the sixteen tracks simultaneously at quality up to 24-bit/96kHz. At the heart of the i16 is an incredible sixteen individual gold-sputtered cardioid condenser capsules, which allows the user a high amount of freedom to record in either surround, stereo, mono, or anywhere in between.
“Once the user records the surrounding environment, software processing inside RØDE Rec will allow them to cancel background noise through phase manipulation of the other channels, working much in the same way as noise-cancelling headphones.” explained Mr Freedman. “In this way the i16 is even more effective at recording dialogue than a traditional shotgun microphone.”
Once the user records the surrounding environment they can then use that track to phase cancel any background noise, very much like noise-cancelling headphones. This results in highly intelligible dialogue and crystal-clear audio.
The i16 is available with both Apple Lightning (iPhone 5, iPad mini) and 30-pin connections. Both are shipping now, with a MSRP of US$399. Definitely sounds like an April Fool's joke..
Daan Gray
Bloom is the only fool around here.
maghoxfr
I'd buy it LOL!!!
Paul
funny Ha Ha!
Surround mic arrays are a bit more complicated than this. The "gold-sputtered cardioid condenser capsules" won't give a tight enough pattern rejection for that small of distance between each capsule. And you can't beam form your way to noise reduction with that configuration.
Good one! April fools.
freiheit
i want i32!
mando
whoa, um. That's just crazy, and if it's legit I dunno if I would want one, but I dunno!
Mike C
@Ron...clearly.
Apostolos
Good one! They even went so far as to make the prop. That's a dedicated prankster!
scottrellwi
It is ridiculous that someone would actually think this is real.
A) It would never stay on with just the connecting power of the connector.
B) No current iOS device could possibly have enough processing power to collect that much data (wav)
C) RODE is brilliant for making us all comment about a RODE product.
Nice play RODE. Free advertising is good.
Wendy P
Totally an April Fools prank. Phillip Bloom called it beautiful and that thing was morbidly obese.
Marvin
Looks like an April fools joke.
Ron Baselice
An April's fools joke perhaps, it has Mr. Bloom in it, known for his brilliant April Fools pranks?!