Please take a look at the graph below.

Red curve: A speaker measurement reflecting how the speaker actually sounds. A mixture of direct sound and room reinforced sound. This system sounds quite good without any help from audiolense. Peaks and dips 15 dB apart is not bad at all. How does it sound? A little to soft and over-ripe in the bass perhaps, but still a neutral and quite pleasant sound.

Blue curve: An audiolense correction filter. It evens out the frequency response. It's like a 24.000 band equalizer. Luckily, we didn't have to set every band manually. We drew a target curve and pressed a few buttons. Audiolense figured out the rest and the filters were ready for use in less than 5 minutes. And the sound? The bass tightened up, and - surprise surprise - the midrange became clearer.  We even discovered that the presense region had been ... too present. And the stereo perspective became so much better, as always.

There are a lot worse speaker/room combinations out there. Audiolense will make a huge and positiv impact. There are also quite a few excellent speaker/room combos around. In such instances, audiolense will likely provide suttle, but significant improvements.

Audiolense has been made to deal with all kinds of systems. Stereo, 5.1, 7.1 everything between and custom setups. Audiolense also provides digital crossovers (XO) and a number of fine-tunable parameters for the audio connoiseurs.

There is only one catch. A computer is required to enjoy the benefits of audiolense. However, a computer provides a lot of  opportunities, such as multichannel and multispeaker playback, home cinema, an electronic music library with the whole collection. But compared to separate hifi components, you simply have to pay less for more!