SBE Chapter 48 Monthly Meeting
Join us June 21, 2023 at 11:30 AM MDT

Michael Uhl from Angry Audio
This month, on Wednesday June 21 at 11:30 AM, Michael Uhl from Angry Audio will be joining us.
This will be a hybrid meeting with Michael joining us over Zoom.
We will be meeting in person at the Crawford Broadcasting conference room.
If you can join us in person, please register so we can get food ordered!
There is also a Zoom link in the in person registration for those of you who cannot join in person but would still like to participate.
Please note that people attending over Zoom will not have lunch provided.
Michael Dosch is the founder and owner of Angry Audio. Known by his friends as “Catfish”, he is one of the broadcast industry’s most prolific product designers. He is probably best known for his work as founder/president of Axia (Telos) where he led the team that introduced AoIP into broadcast. Angry Audio was a side project where Catfish could create some small problem-solving products more for fun than profit. But demand was far greater than expected and he soon devoted his full time energy to it. In 2020, Angry Audio acquired the company formerly known as Radio Systems and continues to manufacture the popular StudioHub line of products alongside the Angry Audio offerings.
Cornelius Gould is a radio veteran, using his uniquely resonant voice on the mic for several stations in the Cleveland market, as well as many others and several streams beyond the OTA coverage area.But he’s a bit of a geek as well, and in fact, he’s a rocket enthusiast in his spare time. Thay geekness led him into engineering roles at the stations, and he gravitated towards getting the most out of the signal he had to work with. Eventually he became part of the development team at Omnia, and was instrumental in designing the Omnia.11 and Volt products. Taking everything he has learned over the years and programming it into a chip is his latest project.
Together they have built an entirely new product line called Chameleon. The first audio processor that relies on the program content to determine how to process it. Current audio processors require a golden ear, IT competency and a lot of time and patience to set up. The Chameleon does all that tweaking based on the music coming in – delivering consistent program level with big sound and great presence. There are currently three models in production, with several more just around the corner.