I was thinking, what might next generation surround sound be like? With 2.1, the sound can only appear to be coming from somewhere between the two speakers. 5.1, 6.1, and 7.1 solve that by adding speakers all around to get a 360 degree sound image. The only problem is that their is an empty void above and below the listener's head. Everything is located in a horizontal plane running through the listener's head. While movie producers can do some neat tricks to make it seem like something is travelling over head without speakers at different heights, these definitely don't give any real sense of immersion. If, however, there were speakers at different hieght levels (and recordings that could take advantage of that fact) the listener would be able to close their eyes and easily form a 3d image (not planar like with current surround sound formats).

There are eight woofer/midrange/tweeter speakers each located in each corner of the room. The four speakers with the red dots are subwoofers (to allow for more effective directional effects). The listener is in the exact center of the room (in width, length, and height) and the room is as close to a cube as possible.
In the future, more standards such as 14.6 (an aditional surround on each of the four walls and on the ceiling and floor and a subwoofer directly above and below the listener) could be added, making the speakers closer and closer to forming a sphere.
So, what do you think? Should this be adopted as a new standard? What should be different about it?

There are eight woofer/midrange/tweeter speakers each located in each corner of the room. The four speakers with the red dots are subwoofers (to allow for more effective directional effects). The listener is in the exact center of the room (in width, length, and height) and the room is as close to a cube as possible.
In the future, more standards such as 14.6 (an aditional surround on each of the four walls and on the ceiling and floor and a subwoofer directly above and below the listener) could be added, making the speakers closer and closer to forming a sphere.
So, what do you think? Should this be adopted as a new standard? What should be different about it?





















