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Mobile Syrup

Netflix adds spatial audio to its top 700 titles

Netflix has announced that spatial audio is now available for more than 700 of its top titles.

This is a new perk for Premium subscribers ($21.99 CAD/month) at no additional cost.

With spatial audio, users streaming on devices with built-in stereo speakers or headphones will get more immersive, cinematic-esque sound quality. Spatial audio will be offered with movies and shows like Glass Onion: A Knives Out MysteryStranger ThingsWednesday and Watcher. 

To find out which content supports the audio format, look for a special ‘spatial audio’ badge on each title. Alternatively, you can type ‘spatial audio’ into the Netflix search bar.

Additionally, Premium members can now download titles on up to six different devices, up from four.

Image credit: Netflix

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Mobile Syrup

Google Pixel 7 and 6 series get spatial audio support

Alongside the January Google Pixel update and security patch, Google has released spatial audio for the Pixel 6, 6 Pro, 7 and 7 Pro.

Spatial audio is a technology that makes users feel like sounds are coming from different directions, similar to surround sound. Apple bought the feature to Apple Music and the AirPods Pro a few years back. Google introduced code for Spatial Audio alongside the Android 13 beta back in 2022.

However, the feature has been disabled until now.

While headphones or earbuds are needed to experience Spatial Audio, Google’s Pixel Buds Pro, unfortunately, don’t support technology yet.

Back in December, Google said, “you can use Spatial Audio on your Pixel phone with movies from Netflix, YouTube, Google TV, and HBOMax that have 5.1 or higher audio tracks. You must wear headphones or earbuds,” according to a report from 9to5Google. The same report says that the Pixel Buds Pro can enable “head-tracked spatial audio,” however, new firmware is needed.

Source: Google, Via: Engadget

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Mobile Syrup

Disney+ adds Dolby Atmos spatial audio to Apple TV 4K app

The Disney+ app on Apple TV 4K will now support spatial audio via Dolby Atmos, as reported by FlatPanelsHD.

The new feature comes as part of the Disney+ app update on tvOS 15 (update version 2.9.5) and allows you to watch movies and TV shows in spatial audio via Apple’s AirPods Pro, AirPods Max or the HomePod speaker.

Despite Dolby Atmos being present within the app, the Disney+ app was previously limited to 5.1 sound on the Apple TV 4K using Apple’s audio hardware.

The same update on Android TVs, on the other hand, seems to have broken Dolby Atmos. As reported by 9to5Google, Dolby Atmos has stopped working on certain Sony TVs, Nvidia Shield, Chromecast, TCL Android TVs, Hisense Android TVs, and other Android TV and Google TV devices after update version 2.9.1. The same was corroborated by Reddit users. It is unclear when a fix will be released. However, users have found that sideloading back to the Disney+ app’s 2.8.0 version seems to get rid of the issue.

Check out what’s new on Disney+ in August here. A regular Disney+ subscription costs $11.99/month in Canada; however, in an attempt to make its streaming service more attractive to non-subscribers, Disney has announced that it will introduce a cheaper ad-enabled subscription tier to Disney+. Read more about it here.

Source: FlatPanelsHD, 9to5Google

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Mobile Syrup

Crave app on iOS now supports spatial audio

Bell’s Crave app on iOS now includes support for spatial audio.

As first spotted by iPhone in Canada, the app was updated last week to add this functionality, which is ostensibly surround sound.

Per the patch notes, spatial audio is offered for “available content” on Crave. Also included in the latest update are described video (on “some content”) and improved VoiceOver support for video playback.

The Crave app can be downloaded from the App Store here.

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Mobile Syrup

More than half of Apple Music subscribers have tried Spatial Audio

Apple claims that over 50 percent of Apple Music users are ‘Spatial Audio’ listeners.

While this sounds great, the quote from Apple Music vice president Oliver Schusser doesn’t offer a lot of context. Does this mean that subscribers have listened to one Spatial Audio track, or are users regular Spatial Audio listeners?

Billboard’s report says that there are now four times as many songs mastered in Spatial Audio on Apple Music compared to last September.

These stats shine a light on Spatial Audio, but none of them are specific, and only point toward the fact that the new music format is growing.

One statistic to come out of the report that interests me is that popular artists like Post Malone and Taylor Swift experienced 40 and 50 percent gains in listeners respectively when they remasted their back catalogues in Spatial Audio. The statistic is a bit murky since those artists already have large fan bases and Apple pushes their Spatial Audio content in popular Spatial Audio playlists.

In the future, it would be great to see how many people are listening to Spatial Audio with AirPods, how many are listening with head-tracking and how many people are actively seeking out and enabling the feature in Apple Music’s settings.

That said, I’m a pretty big fan of Spatial Audio, so I am glad that it at least appears to be gaining some traction, especially since it can add a lot of depth to audio played over Bluetooth. However, Apple still needs to work out some of the audio format’s issues. For instance, when I’m using AirPods and watching YouTube on Mac or iPhone, an awful-sounding fake Spatial Audio head tracking effect will often be added to videos mastered in stereo.

As more Atmos-enabled speakers hit the market, it seems likely that Atmos-enabled content will become increasingly common. However, when I peer outside of my tech bubble, I don’t see a lot of regular consumers clamouring for new Atmos soundbars and headphones.

Source: Billboard, iMore, 9t05Mac