Barix Releases Upgrades for IP Audio Decoders and Amplifiers

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Zurich-based Audio over IP technology company Barix is now offering new products from within its IP Audio Client family of IP audio decoders and amplifiers.


New functionality includes integrated scheduling for recurring announcements, rotational advertisements, and background music playlists; a REST-based application programming interface (API) for integration with third-party solutions; a built-in parametric audio equalizer; and RTP stream forwarding.

The new updates are available for all products in Barix’s IPAC portfolio, including the ultra-compact IP Former TPA400 decoder with 6.5W amplified output for four-ohm loudspeakers; the Exstreamer M400 decoder with line-level analog audio output; and the Exstreamer MPA400 decoder/amplifier with up to 40-watt audio output for two- to eight-ohm analog speakers.

All Barix IPAC solutions combine integration capabilities with support for the latest formats and technology standards to form the IP audio decoders for applications ranging from emergency notifications to paging and background music.

The new scheduling features offer three types of scheduled audio playback.

Recurring “fixed time” messages such as bells and time-specific announcements can be quickly and easily scheduled across a week, while “rotations” enable multiple messages such as advertisements to be played in a specified order and interval.

Playlists of files stored in the devices’ internal storage can be scheduled for background music playout. Scheduled playback can be prioritized relative to other decoder sources such as live streams and paging messages, ensuring that critical announcements such as emergency notifications and SIP calls will take precedence over scheduled content.

The new 4-band parametric equalizer enables users to fine-tune the frequency response of the audio output from IP Former TPA400 and Exstreamer MPA400 devices, which connect directly to speakers without an external amplifier. Users can adjust the frequency, Q-factor, and gain for each band while setting different EQ curves for various sources – for example, boosting lows and highs in background music while cutting lows in higher-priority paging calls. Meanwhile, the new RTP forwarding feature enables the main audio output of an IPAC device to be streamed to a specified destination via multicast RTP. Additional IPAC devices in the same installation can be batch-configured to access and playout the forwarded content, making it easy to configure multiple Barix devices in the same installation to play out exactly the same audio as the first device.

The new features are available immediately as part of the recently released version 2.9 IP Audio Client firmware.